
BUSINESS ENGLISH
1. Course Description
This course provides a specialized linguistic toolkit for students entering the fields of operations, production, and strategic management. Moving beyond general business English, this curriculum focuses on the technical vocabulary and rhetorical strategies required to manage resources, oversee production cycles, and communicate organizational goals effectively.
Students will analyze real-world managerial scenarios, ranging from SWOT analyses and financial forecasting to supply chain logistics and Total Quality Management (TQM). The course emphasizes managerial writing, training students to produce high-impact executive summaries, trend reports, and formal proposals. By the end of the semester, learners will have the confidence to navigate professional operations in a global, English-speaking business environment.
2. Course Objectives
By the end of this course, students will be able to:
· Strategic Articulation: Utilize specialized terminology to describe mission statements, identify SMART goals, and perform basic SWOT analyses in English.
· Operational Literacy: Explain complex processes in supply chain and production management, including concepts like lean manufacturing, lead times, and bottlenecks.
· Financial Justification: Describe financial trends and justify departmental expenditures or budget variances using persuasive professional language.
· Quality Oversight: Drafting internal communications (memos/standard operating procedures) regarding compliance, benchmarking, and continuous improvement (Kaizen).
· Professional Correspondence: Master the "Business Letter" layout and register, distinguishing between formal proposals and professional complaints.
Synthesis & Summarization: Produce concise executive summaries that translate complex operational data into actionable managerial insights
English for Research and Thesis Writing
This course is a core professional module designed for Master 1 (S2) students who are in the critical phase of designing their final degree thesis. Moving beyond intermediate general English, this module focuses on the nuanced rhetorical strategies used in high-impact Management journals (e.g., Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Business Ethics).
The course emphasizes criticality and academic positioning. Students will learn how to transition from a "descriptive" writer to an "evaluative" researcher—someone who can not only report data but also challenge existing theories, justify complex mixed-methodologies, and negotiate the limitations of their own findings using sophisticated "hedging" and "boosting" strategies.
2. Course Objectives
By the end of this module, Master's students will be able to:
- Construct a Gap-Based Argument: Utilize linguistic "gap-statements" to justify the necessity of their research within a crowded management literature landscape.
- Perform High-Level Synthesis: Demonstrate advanced "Synthesizing Power" by organizing a Literature Review around theoretical tensions rather than chronological summaries.
- Defend Methodological Rigor: Justify research design choices (sampling, reliability, and validity) using professional justificatory language.
- Report & Evaluate Data: Distinguish between reporting "Raw Results" and conducting "Interpretive Discussion," using the appropriate tenses and voices for each.
- Master Academic Integrity: Produce a complete, ethics-compliant research proposal that meets international peer-review standards.
