Course Credit: 1
Upon completion of the course, students will be able to: · demonstrate enhanced presentation skills · use primary and secondary sources · acknowledge sources of information appropriately · speak in English confidently · use multimedia effectively · handle question-answer sessions confidently Course Content and Description This course gives students an opportunity to practice oral skills. It emphasizes analyzing and synthesizing information gathered from secondary sources. The course focuses on the importance of eye contact, body language and vocal tone as well as of the conventions of using transitional signals. Various strategies of handling questionanswer sessions and of using technology in oral presentations (e.g. multimedia) are also taught in this course. Recommended Reading Berkun, Scott. Confessions of a Public Speaker. O'Reilly Media, 2009. Bradbury, Andrew. Successful Presentation Skills. Kogan Page, 2006. Steele, William R. Presentation Skills 201. Outskirts Press, 2009. Theobald, Theo. Develop Your Presentation Skills: Be Charismatic, Give a Polished Performance. Kogan Page, 2011. Weissman, Jerry. Presenting to Win: The Art of Telling Your Story. FT Press, 2003. Course Code : Eng.507 Course Title : Modern American Literature Course Credit : 4 Full Marks : 100 Aims and Objectives The course aims to introduce students to a wide variety of texts by American writers to make them conscious 56 MA HANDBOOK MA HANDBOOK 57 Grazia, Margaret de, and Stanley Wells, editors. Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare. Cambridge UP, 2001. Greenblatt, Stephen. Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare. Norton, 2004. ---. Shakespearean Negotiations.California UP, 1988. Kott, Jan. Shakespeare,Our Contemporary. Norton, 1974. McDonald, Russ, editor. Shakespeare: An Anthology of Criticism and Theory 1945-2000. Blackwell, 2004. Wells, Stanley, Gary Taylor, John Jowett, and William Montgomery, editors. The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works.Oxford UP, 1986. Course Code : 506 Course Title : Presentation and Viva Voce Course Credit : 1 Full Marks : 20 Aims and Objectives The aim of the course is to develop the oral and presentation skills of the students. The focus of this course is to make students familiar with professional presentation skills and to instill confidence in them for public speaking following academic conventions. Intended Learning Outcomes Upon completion of the course, students will be able to: · demonstrate enhanced presentation skills · use primary and secondary sources · acknowledge sources of information appropriately · speak in English confidently · use multimedia effectively · handle question-answer sessions confidently