Synopses & Reviews
The Oral Communication strand is dedicated to meeting the academic needs of students by teaching them how to comprehend the spoken English used by instructors and students in college classrooms. These texts provide engaging activities for students to practice academic listening and academic speaking.
Synopsis
Dedicated to meeting the academic needs of high-intermediate-level students, this book teaches students how to comprehend the spoken English used by instructors and students in college classrooms.
The third book in the four-book Oral Communication strand of the Houghton Mifflin English for Academic Success series, "College Oral Communication 3" helps students become familiar with academic topics, concepts, and vocabulary; learn academic skills and strategies; acquire the skills needed to ask appropriate-level questions; develop note-taking strategies; participate effectively in academic situations, such as discussions, lectures, study groups, and office meetings; and use information from spoken presentations and notes for academic tasks such as tests or small group discussions. Engaging activities throughout the text help students practice both academic listening and academic speaking. Academic content excerpted from Houghton Mifflin college and McDougal Littell high school textbooks familiarizes students with academic subjects across the curriculum and teaches them the listening and speaking skills necessary to succeed in those disciplines. An overall theme, Communication and Media, unites the content.The Houghton Mifflin English for Academic Success competencies, which are based on competencies developed by ESL instructors and administrators in Florida, California, and Connecticut, provide an underlying structure for EAP courses by ensuring a clear articulation of objectives throughout the series.All materials classroom were tested and approved by a board of adjunct instructors to ensure easy-to-use for both full- and part-time instructors."Master Student Tips" are excerptedfrom the market-leading first-year-orientation book, "Becoming a Master Student."A wide variety of easy-to-implement assessment tools, designed for both instructor use and self-assessment by students, include student self-assessment at the end of each chapter, student self-assessment tests on the student web site, downloadable tests and quizzes for instructors on the instructor web site.Instructor audio CDs for testing listening comprehension can be packaged with the text.Each chapter is divided into three closely related sections that focus on Effective Academic Listening, Effective Academic Speaking, and Assessing Your Academic Listening and Speaking Skills. This format engages students in note taking, exposes them to speaking situations that mirror the college experience, and teaches them to apply information and skills to objectives in the chapter.Readings, lectures, and discussions on college materials and topics present concepts and language that students will encounter in future college courses.
Table of Contents
1. How Did Movies Get Started? 2. How'd They Do That? 3. Can You Hear Me Now? 4. Do We Watch TV for Free? 5. Does Violence in the Media Make Us Violent? 6. Are They Telling the Truth?