2020-2021 / LANG0310-1

Computing English

Duration

5h Th, 47h Pr

Number of credits

 Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Computer Science5 crédits 

Lecturer

Christine Filot, ISLV, Adnan Vesseur

Language(s) of instruction

English language

Organisation and examination

All year long, with partial in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

This course continues the development of reading, data-gathering and -synthesizing, and note-taking using texts or sets of texts (as started during the first-year course English for Computing). It focuses also on research capacities, oral understanding and presentation skills.
PLEASE NOTE: Master bloc Zero Students have the 30 hour version of this course.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

The purpose of the course is threefold:

  • allow students to read, understand and discuss English texts or websites on computing,
  • allow students to collect data and present it in a correct and consistent way in English (both orally and in writing),
  • allow students to follow and take notes of short oral presentations.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

English for Computing (English course taught in first year of the Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science) or equivalent (e.g. IELTS 5.5-6 or Cambridge Advanced (A-C). .

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

There are no ex cathedra lectures. Each session requires individual preparation tasks which are mandatory.

Students will also be given several written assignments and have to do oral presentations during the year. Their regular and active participation in class sessions is essential and will be taken into account in the final grade.

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

The in-class course is taught for two hours a week from September to May.

Organisational adjustments related to the current health context

Code Orange
As best as possible, classes will resume normally. Those who wish to attend are more than welcome to do so. Those who do not feel comfortable attending class in such conditions will not be penalised. 
All files will be made available to all students though the usual platform. Any explanations given in class will either be transcribed or recorded for those who cannot attend.
 
Code Red
The main way forward in this scenario is through self-work though modules and texts made available to students via myuliege. Seminars or video conferences will be organised in order to maintain the current level. Additional activities will be put in place. 

Recommended or required readings

Assessment methods and criteria

Below you will find information on the evaluation methods planned for in-person and remote exams as well as those planned for hybrid sessions. Depending on how the health crisis evolves, the chosen method will be communicated to you no later than one month before the start of the exam session.

Any session :

- In-person

written exam ( multiple-choice questionnaire ) AND oral exam

- Remote

oral exam AND written work

- If evaluation in "hybrid"

preferred remote


Additional information:

Written exam in June including (a) multiple choice questions on a sight text, and (b) several written tasks (definitions, explanations ...). This test is worth 10 out of the total 20 marks.
 
An oral exam in June is worth 10 marks.
 
Due to current sanitary crisis there are only two options:
1) Business as usual, meaning a written exam (MCQs, reading, and writing) and an oral exam
2) Virtual exams. This would entail an essay to write about one of the three books and an oral exam through Discord about the other two books. Students get to decide which book they write about, eliminating that book for the oral exam.

 

Work placement(s)

Organizational remarks

Contacts

Christine Bouvy - cbouvy@ulg.ac.be and Adnan Vesseur - adnan.vesseur@ulg.ac.be