DHHE 0603: English Foundations 3
Effective date
September 2021
Department
Deaf & Hard of Hearing
Description
English Foundations 3 focuses on effective communication in ASL and English in multiple contexts including personal, educational, and workplace contexts of basic complexity. Learners differentiate and produce a variety of genre types used in personal, educational, and workplace contexts.
By the end of this course, learners will be able to meet the outcomes at CLB 3 in the “Profiles of Ability” columns of the competency outcomes and standards listed in the “Canadian Language Benchmarks for the Deaf."
Prerequisites
DHHE 0620, or department placement interview indicating competency in CLB 2.
Course Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
- Receptive ASL
o Understand simple social exchanges, including styles of greetings, introductions and leave-taking.
o Understand instructions and directions related to familiar, everyday situations of immediate personal relevance.
o Understand expressions used in familiar everyday situations (such as requests, permission and warnings).
o Understand short, simple, descriptive communication about a person, object, situation, scene, personal experience or daily routine.
- Expressive ASL
o Use a range of courtesy formulas and greetings in very short, casual, face-to-face interactions.
o Give simple, common, routine instructions and directions to a familiar person.
o Make and respond to an expanding range of simple requests related to everyday activities.
o Give an expanding range of simple warnings, apologies and cautions.
o Ask for and give information about immediate needs and some feelings related to common everyday activities.
o Give simple descriptions of concrete objects, people or experiences in a few short sentences.
- Receptive English (Reading)
o Understand short, personal social messages (such as invitations, thanks, apologies, updates and arrangements) within predictable contexts of daily experience.
o Read short texts to establish relationships and share a dialogue in face-to-face communication with non-signers.
o Understand short, simple clearly sequenced instructions for familiar everyday situations.
o Get information from simple formatted texts (such as forms, tables, charts, schedules and directories).
o Get basic information from short business or service texts (such as brochures, notices, form letters and flyers).
o Understand the purpose, main idea, key information and some details in short, simple texts related to familiar and personally relevant situations and topics.
o Access simple standard reference texts (such as dictionaries and encyclopedias).
o Understand simple closed captions in short television segments.
- Expressive English (Writing, typing, texting)
o Convey short, personal, informal social messages related to everyday situations (such as invitations, thanks, updates, cancellations and apologies).
o Convey short messages to establish relationships and share a dialogue in face-to-face communication with non-signers.
o Copy or record a range of information from short texts for personal use.
o Complete short simple forms that require only basic personal information and familiar responses to simple questions.
o Write short simple business or service messages in face-to-face communication with non-signers.
o Write a few sentences to describe a familiar person, object, place, situation or event.
o Share some simple information with non-signers in a face-to-face situation.
Prior Learning Assessment & Recognition (PLAR)
None
Hours
Lecture, Online, Seminar, Tutorial: 204
Clinical, Lab, Rehearsal, Shop, Kitchen, Simulation, Studio: 51
Total Hours: 255
Instructional Strategies
Modelling, coaching, focused reading, thematic instruction, journalling, stations, project-based learning.
The course may be offered online or in a hybrid format (blend of face-to-face and online instruction).
Grading System
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory
Evaluation Plan
Type
|
Percentage
|
Assessment activity
|
Portfolio
|
100
|
A range of tasks including self- and peer-assessment, writing tasks, reflective journals, writing samples, checklists, learning stories, learning photographs, poster presentations, simulations, quizzes, demonstrations.
|
Course topics
- Circles: Self, Family, Relationships
Health & Wellbeing
Employment in Canada
Canada & the World
Banking, Shopping, & Commercial Services
Notes:
- Course contents and descriptions, offerings and schedules are subject to change without notice.
- Students are required to follow all College policies including ones that govern their educational experience at VCC. Policies are available on the VCC website at:
https://www.vcc.ca/about/governance--policies/policies/.
- To find out if there are existing transfer agreements for this course, visit the BC Transfer Guide at https://www.bctransferguide.ca.