Graduate Certificate in TESOL

1.       A statement of the educational objectives of the program

 

The Graduate Certificate in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) in ECU’s English Department will help prepare professionals for career opportunities teaching English as a Second Language (ESL), English as a Foreign Language (EFL), English for Academic Purposes (EAP), and English for Specific Purposes (ESP) in both public and private sectors. These include (1) teaching ESL and EAP in junior and fouryear colleges in the US; teaching EFL and EAP overseas; (3) ESP training (e.g. business English) for foreign-born employees in the US; and (4) ESP training for native-born employees in businesses overseas. For those interested in teaching overseas, the Certificate will provide the necessary minimum qualifications required by many of the world’s language schools; as such, the Certificate will add an attractive option to the existing language teacher preparation programs in North Carolina.

 

2.       A statement of the admission standards for the certificate program and a statement of the academic retention standards for the successful completion of the program

 

The Graduate Certificate in TESOL will be available to qualified candidates with an interest in furthering their education in the area of teaching English to speakers of other languages.  Successful applicants will hold a BA or BS or its equivalent from an accredited college or university in the US or overseas and have some academic or practical experience in any area of English studies, linguistics, or applied linguistics which may or may not include TESOL. Nonnative speakers of English will be required to submit a TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 or higher. No other admission requirements will apply. Students seeking the certificate must be admitted to the ECU Graduate School as either degree-seeking or non-degree students. They may be, but do not have to be, concurrently enrolled in an ECU graduate degree program. In the case of concurrent enrollment, students must obtain approval of the director of the degree program in which they are enrolled.  All students must remain in compliance with all Graduate School policies and procedures. Students interested in continuing their graduate level education in this field beyond the Certificate, if admitted[i], will be able to submit a request for the three courses to be counted toward their MA-English with a concentration in Linguistics or in TESOL.

 

3.       A statement of the proposed course sequence associated with the certificate, including titles and course descriptions both for existing courses and any new courses that may be developed

 

This Certificate will consist of 3 courses (9 sh). It will not require development of any new courses. The courses included in the Certificate will not have to be taken in a sequence. As proposed, the Certificate can be completed entirely online or as a combination of online and campus-based courses. The following online courses are required:

 

ENGL 6528           TESL: Theories and Principles (3 sh) Current theories and principles of teaching English

to nonnative speakers of English.

 

ENGL 6531           TESL: Methods and Practicum (3 sh) Approaches and methods in ESL teaching. Provides ESL teaching and classroom experience.

 

The third course can be selected from the following (online or campus-based) courses:

 

ENGL 6009           Research Methods in Language Study (3 sh) Research methods in the study of

language.

 

ENGL 6526           The Structure of English: Phonology and Morphology (3 sh) Contemporary linguistic

theory and its practical application to teaching phonological and morphological components of English language.

 

ENGL 6527           The Structure of English: Syntax and Semantics (3 sh) Contemporary linguistic theory

and its practical application to teaching syntactic and semantic components of English language.

 

ENGL 6529           Applied Linguistics for ESL Teachers (3 sh) Pedagogical applications of linguistic theory.

Emphasis on teaching English as a second language

 

ENGL 7525           Language and Society (3 sh) The study of language in relation to culture and society.

 

ENGL 7530           Descriptive Linguistics (3 sh) Contemporary models employed in linguistic analysis at all

levels. Practical applications of models to wide diversity of natural languages, and evaluation of models with respect to their descriptive and explanatory adequacy and their universal and cross-cultural application.

 

ENGL 7535           Principles of Language Testing (3 sh) Principles and methods of performance and

standardized language test design, implementation, and interpretation. 

 

ENGL 7605           Discourse Analysis (3 sh). Principles governing human communicative interaction in

written and oral modalities.

 

ENGL 7680           Writing Systems of the World (3 sh) Examines writing systems and their relationship to

larger human phenomenon o f spoken language.

 

4.       The catalogue copy for the certificate program

 

CERTIFICATE IN TEACHING ENGLISH TO SPEAKERS OF OTHER LANGUAGES (TESOL)

 

The graduate certificate in TESOL is designed for qualified candidates who wish to further their education in the field of teaching English to speakers of other languages.  The certificate helps prepare professionals planning to teach English language learners (ELLs) in public/private sectors in the US or English as a Foreign Language (EFL) in such contexts overseas.

 

Applicants seeking admission to this program must hold a BA, BS or an equivalent degree from an accredited college or university in the US or overseas. Nonnative speakers of English are required to submit a TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 or higher. Students interested in pursuing the certificate can enroll as non-degree seeking students or pursue the certificate concurrently while enrolled in an ECU graduate program. Admission is based on completion of the ECU certificate application and approval by the program coordinator. 

 

The certificate requires 9 s. h. of graduate-level course work, including ENGL 6528 and 6531 (required), and 3 s.h. to be selected from ENGL 6009. 6526, 6527, 6529, 7525, 7530, 7535, 7605, and 7680.

 

 

5.       A statement of how the proposed course sequence associated with the certificate will meet the stated educational objectives

 

The proposed certificate will provide graduate level instruction in the fundamentals of teaching English to speakers of other languages. The training is designed to cover the following three components: (1) second language acquisition (SLA) theories and their intersection with TESOL practice; (2) methods, materials, and assessment in TESOL; (3) fundamentals of linguistic knowledge with practical applications to language teaching.

 

6.       A statement of the need for the proposed program and the basis for such a need supported by either externally or internally derived data

 

It is estimated that over 1 billion people are currently learning English worldwide. According to the British council, as of the year 2000 there were 750 million speakers of English as a foreign language, and 375 million speakers of English as a Second Language (About.Com: English as 2nd Language). According to the book English Next published by the British Council, at least “three-quarters of all [world] travel is between non-English speaking countries,” suggesting  “a large demand for either foreign language learning or the increasing use of English as a lingua franca (Graddol, 2006). It follows that the already strong demand for English language teachers is highly unlikely to decrease in the foreseeable future.

        Having a TESOL concentration in the English Department, we often receive requests for information about short-term TESOL preparation programs available in our state. This Certificate responds to this need. In addition, the Linguistics and TESOL concentrations in the English Department have been actively seeking opportunities that would increase our international student population, a move to benefit both our domestic and international students. Recently, we have signed Memorandums of Understanding with three South Korean Universities: Pusan, Kwandong, and Kosin. A more involved type of agreement, with University American College Skopje in Macedonia, is currently under review. Furthermore, two other universities, FON University in Macedonia and Palacky University in the Czech Republic, have expressed serious interest in a short-term TESOL certificate program as it would provide an attractive and affordable option for their students interested in earning a TESOL certificate at a US university. Last but not least, this Certificate has a potential to serve as an effective recruitment tool for our MA-English degree with the Linguistics and TESOL concentrations. As we have seen with our former ESL add-on licensure program, some students wish to continue beyond the basic certificate toward earning a master’s degree. This step-up model has worked quite well for us as it has for many other US universities (e.g., several of California State Universities, American University, Fresno Pacific College, Georgetown University, Monterey Institute of International Studies, Portland State University, San Jose State University, State University of New York at Buffalo, University of Utah, and many more).  

 

7.       The names of the faculty associated with or contributing to the certificate program, either by teaching one of more of the courses associated with the program or participating in the design of the course sequence. Adjunct faculty associated with the program should also include up-to-date curriculum vitae.

The English Department’s Interim Chair is Dr. Ron Mitchelson. Faculty associated with the program or participating in the design of this Certificate include:

Dr. Michael Aceto

Dr. Lida Cope

Dr. Slobodanka Dimova

Dr. Donna Lillian

8.       The name and curriculum vita of the faculty member who will be designated as the coordinator of the program for purposes of communication with the Graduate School. Dr. Slobodanka  Dimova, the incoming Linguistics/TESOL area coordinator, will coordinate the proposed certificate.  She may be reached at East Carolina University, Department of English, Bate Building #2201, Greenville, NC 27858. Email: dimovas@ecu.edu. This document was prepared by Lida Cope, the outgoing Linguistics/TESOL lead faculty. Email: copel@ecu.edu.

9.       If the proposed graduate certificate program contains no new courses, no new faculty, no additional costs, and maintains the admissions and academic standing requirements of a related degree program, the proposal will be given expedited review in the approval process.

The Graduate Certificate in TESOL contains no new courses, and requires no new faculty, no additional costs, and maintains the admissions and academic standing requirements of the MA-English program with a concentration in TESOL.

10.   The unit offering the certificate program must specify what professional license, if any, for which the certificate qualifies.

The Graduate Certificate in TESOL will be awarded by the Department of English. The certificate does not automatically qualify students for any professional licenses at the state or national level. The courses will assist interested candidates to successfully pass the Praxis test (ESL portion) and thus receive the add-on ESL certification awarded by the NC Department of Public Instruction.

  1. The Classification of Instructional Program (CIP) title and six-digit code

13.1401 Teaching English as a Second or Foreign Language/ESL Language Instructor



[i] Not required for Certificate seekers, the GRE or MAT scores will be part of the requirement for admission to a degree graduate program.