B2-C1 Academic English for Master's Students: Word power, critiquing skills and communicating with audiences

Target audience
Master’s students from across the university who need to be able to work in English, particularly in Master’s programmes taught entirely or primarily in English; 3rd year bachelors preparing for this; PhD students with similar needs.

Course content and method
This is an interactive workshop for practising and improving your communicative English, both through focused language work with texts and exercises and through engaging in academically challenging activities and formats typically expected of Master’s students working in or with English. You participate in spontaneous speaking and prepare and deliver more formal speaking activities catering to the needs of Master’s students with English as an additional or primary language for academic purposes. This will also require reading and writing, e.g. scripting a talk or writing presentation slides. The class builds oral confidence through regular production in English, including in four assessment tasks. Your class contributions and individual investment will support you in reaching your objectives, e.g. to be more fluent, more motivating, more informative, or more polished in your English for academic use.

Topic- or text-based language activities will be combined with practical or intellectual explorations. You compare the perspective of your studies with that of others and engage in exchanges to build ‘intercultural’ skills and knowledge. Pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary work support your prepared and spontaneous speaking activities. Use of good English language resources (e.g. quality online dictionaries) is promoted. Later activities include deepening text awareness, critiquing skills and adapting to different audiences while also promoting instructive speaking and co-operation.

Class work and individual course work outside class will make your English more accurate, more informative, and more appropriate. Topics include introducing people and explaining different kinds of research to educated non-specialists; describing observations; explaining hypotheses, purposes, and processes; reporting on events and findings; and arguing positions from various perspectives. It focuses on presentation, discussion and co-operation skills and requires explicitly acknowledging sources in all formal tasks. Students’ academic experiences are also affected by the quality of their interactions with peers. Therefore, you also work in pairs or groups and share responsibility for outcomes.

Workload and evaluation
Please attend and contribute actively and regularly. Assessment will comprise three required tasks prepared at home and delivered in class, including a researched oral presentation that draws on peer-reviewed published research on a topic related to your studies. You need to participate in and pass all three tasks and submit your work as required to pass the course and earn the credits.

Materials
There will be a mix of class materials, self-study resources and links to reference tools such as good online dictionaries. For some tasks, you will receive instructions and find your own material/sources. Materials from popular and educational sources as well as from academic publications will be used. Some may require critical examination in terms of validity, bias or assumptions. Participants are encouraged to embrace or reject, apply or question, negotiate the meaning of or politely take issue with an account. All tasks and materials will hopefully engage curiosity and energize the class.

Ziele

Activate and improve your oral English and display your growing academic voice and take. Respond to & initiate questions and co-construct discussions. Develop capacity for critical thinking & knowledge building through the medium of English. Exercise and share your academic literacy and explicitly draw on research (e.g. by selecting, evaluating & synthesizing information, citing sources). Topic- or text-based language activities will be combined with practical or intellectual explorations. You compare the perspective of your studies with that of others and engage in exchanges to build ‘intercultural’ skills and knowledge. Pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary work support your prepared and spontaneous speaking activities in the autumn semester. Use of specialist language resources (e.g. quality online dictionaries) is promoted.

Zielgruppe

Dieser Kurs richtet sich an Personen, deren Niveau den Niveaus B2 oder C1 des Gemeinsamen Europäischen Referenzrahmen für Sprachen entspricht. Schreiben Sie sich nur ein, wenn der Kurs Ihrem Niveau entspricht. Teilnehmende unserer Partnerinstitutionen und Unifr-Mitarbeitende können uns für den Einstufungstest kontaktieren, wenn sie betreffend ihres Niveaus unsicher sind. Unifr-Studierende werden bei der Kurseinschreibung auf MyUnifr automatisch zum Einstufungstest geführt.

Voraussetzungen

Es gelten die Allgemeinen Bedingungen zur Teilnahme an Kursen des Sprachenzentrums. 

Kursverantwortliche und Referierende

Kursleitung

  • Schaller-Schwaner Iris

Daten und Orte

Datum Ort
17.02.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
24.02.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
03.03.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
10.03.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
17.03.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
24.03.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
31.03.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
14.04.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
21.04.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
28.04.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
05.05.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
12.05.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
19.05.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118
26.05.2026 von 13:15 bis 15:00 S-01.118

Anmeldung

Eckdaten

Anmeldeperiode 02.02.2026 - 01.03.2026
Daten

Dienstag 13:15 - 15:00 

Dauer

16.02.2026 - 29.05.2026

Kosten

GRATIS für Unifr-Studierende und -Personal; CHF 500.– pro Semester für Mitglieder der Partnerinstitutionen

Typ Seminar / Kurs - 3 ECTS
Sprache Englisch
Code I04.00015-SP26

Ort(e)

RM-Regina Mundi

Kontakt

Centre de langues
 Email
 +41 26 300 79 99