Il corso consta di 6 crediti al primo anno del cds in Economia Aziendale suddivisi in ore di lezioni frontali ed esercitazioni, divisi in 2 CFU per la lingua inglese e 4 CFU per l’inglese specialistico dell’economia.
Il livello di partenza sarà quello del B1 del Common European Framework (CEFR) per arrivare al B1 avanzato/B2.
Il programma sarà improntato al ripasso delle funzioni linguistiche e delle strutture grammaticali e all’introduzione del linguaggio attinente alla microlingua economico-aziendalista.
Per l’esame finale di lingua inglese, gli studenti dovranno infatti, sostenere un test scritto volto a verificare le abilità di reading di primo e secondo livello, la codifica di un text, nonché la risoluzione di tasks grammaticali, ed una performance orale dove con fluency ed accuracy gli stessi riferiranno di argomenti economico-aziendalistici (e non solo) trattati nel corso.
Dal materiale presente in TEAMS, riferire in fluent English sui seguenti argomenti:
A   Essential strategies and procedures to analyse a case study
Reading skills - pre-reading activities; skimming, scanning, intensive and extensive reading.
Efficient reading strategies
Essential definition for what a text is - part I (understanding different types of text)
First step- what a text is - part II (Identifying texts and purposes)
Factual text Analysis
Types of text –Identifying purpose and text convention
Jacobson theory of Communication (sender, message, receive and code)
Graphs
Linkers or Connectors
Writing a summary
Further texts present in scrambled order in the file 
Tokyo/Karoshi: 1 in block style    2 in Indented style   3 in column   version                                                                                                   
CCTV surveillance system
Pandemic, Infodemic and Syndemic (3 files!)
B    Programma dettagliato inerente il libro di testo:
Graham Tullis, Tonya Trappe, Intelligent Business, intermediate level-course book -Longman-Person.
Unit 1 Companies
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Survival of the fittest and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 A matter of choice
 Will the corporation survive
Unit 2 Leadership
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Terrorising the talent and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 When to terrorise talent
 The art of Delegation
 We don’t need managers we manage ourselves!
Unit 3 Strategy
Comment and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts: comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: The big picture
 S.W.O.T analysis
 Nike’s Goddess
 Breaking into a new market 
Unit 4 Pay
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Because I’m worth it and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 The rewards of failure 
 A controversial court case 
Unit 5 Development
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Prosperity or preservation? Then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Gas for Peru V green imperialism
 Pag 46
Unit 6 Marketing
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Seducing the masses and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Money can buy you love 
 Saying ‘I do’ to the marketers
 That little voice in your head 
Unit 7 Outsourcing
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: The great job migration and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 The new global shift
Unit 8 Finance
 Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: The bottom line and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts: 
 The Profit and loss account/The balance sheet/the bottom line
 Europe’s Enron
Unit 10 Counterfeiting
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: The globalisation of deceit and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Imitating property is theft
Unit 11 Markets
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: The people’s company and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Going, going, gone?
 The world’s most successful auctioneer
Unit 12 Lobbies
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Finding a voice and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Of celebrities, charity and trade 
 The new networked lobbies
Unit 13 Communication
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Messaging meltdown and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Coping with infoglut 
Unit 14 Logistics
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: The invisible industry and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 The best thing since the barcode 
Unit 15 Innovation
Comment the cover of the magazine ‘The Economist’: Pushing the limits and then refer orally in fluent English the following texts:
 Failure is glorious
C)    Linguistics through a video course 
 
    Another innovative feature of Global: Global English with Professor David Crystal.         
  English as a Global Language in
Global English with David Crystal – YouTube
 Varieties of English in
David Crystal - World Englishes – YouTube
 What will be the future of English as a global language in:
David Crystal - Will English Always Be the Global ... – YouTub
 D)   Dispensa del docente
Nella Dispensa sono presenti gli argomenti di teoria commerciale discussi durante le lezioni e relative agli argomenti principali trattati in ciascuna unit del libro di testo
           Commerce and trade: a difference in meaning
           Divisions of trade
          The cycle of production
          The economic system
          To produce goods and services three things are needed
          Product identification and protection
          Demand and supply
          Types of economy
          Publicly- owned businesses
          Types of business ownership
          Merchant houses
          Corporate structure can change when companies form an alliance
          Finance and banks
          Banking services
          The stock exchange
          Speculators 
E)  Detailed Grammar programme
Analysing the English sentence
The main parts of a sentence
To be;   subject pronouns; demonstratives
To have – possession -
Possessives, reflexives, interrogatives
The Present Continuous
The Present Simple
Prepositions of Place and Time
The Imperative
The Future - four different ways to express the idea of future -
Past simple and past continuous
Present perfect and past perfect
The noun
Articles
Adjectives
Comparatives and superlatives
Indefinite pronouns and adjectives
Interrogative pronouns and adjectives
Modal Verbs I (potere)
Modal verbs II (dovere)
Conditional sentences and if clauses
The duration form
The passive voice
The subjunctive
Connectors
Direct and reported speech
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