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Curriculum Analysis

Dr. Antar Abdellah. Curriculum Analysis. In the language curriculum. Grammar. Components of Grammar. Parts of speech. 1. Nouns (countable – uncountable) 2. pronouns 3. prepositions 4. verbs (transitive .intransitive) 5. conjunction 6. adjectives (comparison, superlative) 7. Adverbs

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Curriculum Analysis

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  1. Dr. AntarAbdellah Curriculum Analysis

  2. In the language curriculum Grammar

  3. Components of Grammar

  4. Parts of speech • 1. Nouns (countable – uncountable) • 2. pronouns • 3. prepositions • 4. verbs (transitive .intransitive) • 5. conjunction • 6. adjectives (comparison, superlative) • 7. Adverbs • 8. interjections

  5. Sentences

  6. Indicative • Statements (present, past, future) • Negatives (present, past, future) • Subjunctive • Commands • Questions • Conditionals • Unreal past • Wishes • Exclamations

  7. Indicative Affirmative Negative

  8. Subjunctive Past, present, future; affirmative, negative

  9. Determiners

  10. In the language curriculum Phonics

  11. Phonics • The relation between sound and letter. • English has 26 letters, but 46 sounds. • This means that each letter can have more than one sound • And each sound can be represented in more than one letter. • For example, the /f/ sound can be represented in [f = fish, ph = elephant, gh =enough, eu = lieutenant] • And the letter [a] can be pronounced differently; “warm – want – man- make- car – about”

  12. Why is this the case with English? • Arabic is different from English with respect to the sound-letter problem. • 1. Arabic is an abjadic language, English is alphabetic • 2. English underwent great changes and invasions, Arabic didn’t. • 3 Arabic relied on the spoken form more than n the written form. • The only differences between sound and letter in Arabic are the ة , ى and the sun ل • Modern dialects however have remarkable changes

  13. How to overcome this problem? • IPA system: International Phonetic Alphabet • Identifying the sounds in human languages and assigning symbols form them. • You need to master these symbols in order to be able to pronounce well. • They are made easy for you by reference words • Why do not we have rules for pronunciation? • The only available rule is analogy [just like the broken plural in Arabic]

  14. Some analogy generalizations • G= /ʒ/ if g+ e, i, y • Gender, geology, ginger • G = /ɡ/ if g+ consonant , other vowels except /h/ • Good, grammar • G = /f/ , /ou/ if g+ h • Enough, although • Exceptions: girl, get /ɡ/

  15. C = /s/ if c+ i, e, y • City, receive cycle • C = /k/ if c+ other phonemes except /h/ • College, click • C = /ʧ/ if c+ /h/ • Chair, church • Exceptions: school, chemistry, Celtic, foci

  16. Two different types of sounds • Consonants • These are similar to some Arabic sounds/letters • Some other need special training • These are 24 in number, compared to 25 in Arabic • This does not mean that Arabic has more consonants, each language has a different set of consonants • Vowels • These are remarkably different from Arabic and need special care and long practice to pronounce them right. • These are 22 in number [9 short,5 long, &8 complex] compared to six in standard Arabic [3 long & 3 short vowels]

  17. In the language curriculum Vocabulary

  18. vocabulary • Semantic fields & lexical sets • Homonymy • - homophones • - homographs • Synonymy • Polsymy • antonymy

  19. Semantic fields • a set of lexemes which cover a certain conceptual domain • Fruit, vegetable, electronics, houses, people • All are examples of semantic fields

  20. Lexical sets • Lexical sets are examples of words which may be grouped under a semantic field. • “Mango, banana, apple, orange” are lexical sets under the semantic field “fruit”. • Cabbage, pepper, cress are under vegetable • Villa, chalet, cottage, bungalow, hut, apartment are under houses • Engineer, teacher, doctor, solider are under jobs.

  21. Homonomy • Homonomy refers to words that share an identical feature

  22. homophones •  two words are homophones if they are pronounced the same way but differ in meaning or spelling or both (e.g. bare and bear) • Sun, son rest, wrest • Mail, male main, mane • Ate, eight dam, damn • Read, red draft, Draught • Write, right you, ewe

  23. Homographs • One of two or more words that have the same spelling but differ in origin, meaning, and sometimes pronunciation, such as fair (pleasing in appearance) and fair (market) or wind (wnd) and wind (wnd). • Project, project close, close • Present, present desert, desert • Bow, bow house. House • Dove, dove lead, lead • Use, use live, live

  24. Synonymy • Words that share a common meaning, although there may be a difference in use; happy and glad. • Abandon discard vacate • Accord agree grant • Adversity difficulty misfortune • Affluent plentiful rich • blend combine mix • Bliss happiness joy • Bluff boast feign • Bold daring fearless • Bonus award gift

  25. Antonyms • Words that are opposite in meaning. • Absence, presence accept, refuse • accurate, inaccurate advantage, disadvantage • alive, dead always, never • Ancient, modern answer, question -query • approval, disapproval approached, departed • abundant, scarce admit, deny • advance, retreat artificial, natural • arrival, departure ascend, descend • Attack, defense attention, inattention

  26. Polsmey • Words that can have more than one meaning in different contexts; kind (sort), kind (affectionate). • Bank (building + side of river) • Position (physical + job) • Book (reading+ a hotel) • Room (house + space)

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