Course Notes / Textbooks: |
Harmer, J. (2007). How to teach English. Pearson Longman
Brown, H. D. (1994). Teaching by principles: An interactive approach to language pedagogy. USA: Prentice Hall.
Doff, A. (1990). Teach English: A training course for teachers. NY: CUP
Nunan, D. (1998). Language teaching methodology: A textbook for teachers. Hertfordshire: Prentice Hall Europe.
|
References: |
Richards, J. C. & Renandya, W. A. (2002). Methodology in language teaching: An anthology of current practice. NY:CUP.
Singhal, M. (2006). Teacing reading to adult second language learners. USA: The reading matrix, Inc.
Ur, P. A course in language teaching: Practice and theory. NY: CUP. |
|
Program Outcomes |
Level of Contribution |
1) |
Having the theoretical and practical knowledge proficiency in the discipline of industrial product design |
|
2) |
Applying professional knowledge to the fields of product, service and experience design development |
|
3) |
Understanding, using, interpreting and evaluating the design concepts, knowledge and language |
|
4) |
Knowing the research methods in the discipline of industrial product design, collecting information with these methods, interpreting and applying the collected knowledge |
|
5) |
Identifying the problems of industrial product design, evaluating the conditions and requirements of problems, producing proposals of solutions to them |
|
6) |
Developing the solutions with the consideration of social, cultural, environmental, economic and humanistic values; being sensitive to personal differences and ability levels |
|
7) |
Having the ability of communicating the knowledge about design concepts and solutions through written, oral and visual methods |
|
8) |
To identify and apply the relation among material, form giving, detailing, maintenance and manufacturing methods of design solutions |
|
9) |
Using the computer aided information and communication technologies for the expression of industrial product design solutions and applications |
|
10) |
Having the knowledge and methods in disciplines like management, engineering, psychology, ergonomics, visual communication which support the solutions of industrial product design; having the ability of searching, acquiring and using the knowledge that belong these disciplines when necessary. |
|
11) |
Using a foreign language to command the jargon of industrial product design and communicate with the colleagues from different cultures |
|
12) |
Following and evaluating the new topics and trends that industrial product design needs to integrate according to technological and scientific developments |
|