Week |
Subject |
Related Preparation |
1) |
Staff development and training - Reading: Recruitment brochure |
Vocabulary review (Job training) |
2) |
Job descriptions and job satisfaction - Writing: Brief job descriptions |
Vocabulary review (Job titles and acronyms for job titles) |
3) |
Letters of enquiry and applications - Writing: An email applying for a job |
Vocabulary review; composing an email for a job application |
4) |
Telephone skills - Listening: Telephone language |
Vocabulary review; preparation for role-playing (Talking on the phone) |
5) |
New product development - Speaking: Introducing a new product |
Vocabulary review (Marketing terms); choosing a new product and preparing the introduction speech |
6) |
Establishing relationships and negotiating - Reading: Asking questions about a product |
Vocabulary review (Terms and conditions) |
7) |
Review |
|
8) |
Financing the start-up - Speaking: (Role-play) Getting advice about starting up |
Vocabulary review; preparation for the role-play |
9) |
Presenting your business idea - Reading: Making the most of presentations |
Vocabulary review (Equipment for presentation); drafting the presentations to be made |
10) |
Reports - Speaking: Saying what charts show |
Vocabulary review ( Vocabulary for expressing changes) |
11) |
Business meetings - Listening: A business meeting |
Vocabulary review (Types of meeting, expressing opinions) |
12) |
Using the Internet - Reading Website design |
Vocabulary review (Computers and the Internet) |
13) |
Students' presentations |
Preparation for the final draft of presentations |
14) |
A staff survey - Writing: Report on staff survey to modernise the office |
Vocabulary review (Expressing numbers and percentage) |
|
Program Outcomes |
Level of Contribution |
1) |
Build up a body of knowledge in mathematics and statistics, to use them, to understand how the mechanism of economy –both at micro and macro levels – works. |
3 |
2) |
Understand the common as well as distinctive characters of the markets, industries, market regulations and policies. |
2 |
3) |
Develop an awareness of different approaches to the economic events and why and how those approaches have been formed through the Economic History and understand the differences among those approaches by noticing at what extent they could explain the economic events. |
1 |
4) |
Analyze the interventions of politics to the economics and vice versa. |
3 |
5) |
Apply the economic analysis to everyday economic problems and evaluate the policy proposals for those problems by comparing opposite approaches. |
2 |
6) |
Understand current and new economic events and how the new approaches to the economics are formed and evaluating. |
2 |
7) |
Develop the communicative skills in order to explain the specific economic issues/events written, spoken and graphical form. |
3 |
8) |
Know how to formulate the economics problems and issues and define the solutions in a well-formed written form, which includes the hypothesis, literature, methodology and results / empirical evidence. |
2 |
9) |
Demonstrate the quantitative and qualitative capabilities and provide evidence for the hypotheses and economic arguments. |
2 |
10) |
Understand the information and changes related to the economy by using a foreign language and communicate with colleagues. |
3 |