Overview of the Summer Intensive Programs
 
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Email: iep@iuj.ac.jp

 

 Summer Intensive Program

Overview of the Summer Intensive Programs

  1. Intensive English Program
  2. Intensive English Program Courses
  3. IMF Orientation Program Courses
  4. Teacher Education Program
  5. Uniqlo English Program
  6. Intensive English Program Activities
  7. Students
  8. Faculty & Staff (IEP & TEP)

1. Intensive English Program

Features

  • Small class size
  • Interactive classes
  • Individualized instruction and feedback
  • An active extracurricular schedule
  • Computer and Internet facilities
  • International and multi-cultural environment, with more than half of the students from outside Japan
  • Residential campus
  • Scenic mountainous surroundings in a rural setting

Goals

  • Develop English language skills for academic needs
  • Develop oral communication skills in and outside of the classroom
  • Develop cross-cultural awareness inside and outside the classes
  • Make use of self-access learning materials
  • Develop leadership and organizational skills
  • Participate in an "English only environment"

Basic Facts

INTENSITY:

22 hours of instruction a week, plus individual tutorials

PROFICIENCY LEVEL:

Intermediate or upwards (mostly in the TOEFL 500-600 or iBT 61-100 range)

PROGRAM LENGTH:

An eight-week session, from mid-July to mid- September

CLASS SIZE:

9-12

ENROLLMENT:

40-80

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2. Intensive English Program Courses

1.      OCSALS (Oral Communication Skills & Academic Listening Skills)

o    Oral Communication Skills [OCS]
This component focuses on two major activities: oral presentations and small group discussions. Students will develop skills for making individual and group oral presentations, participating in group discussion activities on selected academic topics, and effectively handling group dynamics in group project work.

  language needed for general classroom interactions

  language needed for oral presentations and group discussions

  effective strategies for making individual and group presentations

  effective strategies for discussing a topic at an academic level

  effective communication skills in a group

  pronunciation, stress, rhythm, and articulation of sounds, words, and sentences


Throughout the course, an emphasis will be placed on self-expression and the development of fluency.

o   Academic Listening Skills [ALS]
This component focuses on the development of comprehension skills in academic contexts and note-taking skills that aid such comprehension. Students will listen to short audio- or video-based academic lectures, take notes, and answer questions or participate in follow-up discussions.
In comprehending academic lectures, students will be able to:

  Identify the overall focus and parts of a lecture

  Distinguish between main points and supporting details

  Identify points of transition and linking words and phrases

  Distinguish repetitions and re-phrasing of ideas from new content


Some news reports and documentaries may also be included as listening materials.


Students will practice efficient note-taking skills and develop familiarity with the use of abbreviations, symbols, and outlining in listening to academic lectures.


Aural comprehension materials will be carefully sequenced in length, complexity, and authenticity, which will help to familiarize students with speech delivered at a speed considered natural for a native speaker of English.



2.      TS (Text Skills )
The Text Skills course focuses on basic academic reading and writing needs common to students in GSIR and GSIM.

In writing, students will:

o    understand the principles of organization and development

o    write paragraphs and short essays on familiar topics

o    practice editing and revising their written drafts

o    practice paraphrasing and summarizing source material


In reading, they will:

o    understand the structure and organization of academic texts

o    identify main points and locate specific information

o    distinguish between facts and opinions

o    summarize essential information


The course will also deal with basic grammar and vocabulary in the context of academic writing and reading. Students will make use of reference materials and dictionaries to develop vocabulary. The course will introduce authentic readings from selected IR and IM content courses to expose students to graduate-level reading materials used at IUJ.

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3. IMF Orientation Program Courses

The International Monetary Fund sponsors the "Orientation Program Courses" (IMF-OP), which comprise six weeks of regular IEP classes and up to four weeks of math, computing, Japanese language, and economics classes that are taught by full-time faculty in the Graduate School of International Relations. Many IMF students will begin their graduate studies at other universities in Japan after completing their summer program at IUJ.

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4. Teacher Education Program

This summer program is offered for six or four weeks to junior and senior high school English teachers to develop their communication skills in English, as well as, conceptual understanding of and practical skills for English language teaching. The participants, sponsored by Niigata-ken, take both OCSALS and Text Skills courses for Weeks 1-4 or Weeks 3-4. During Weeks 5 & 6, they take a customized English Language Teaching course and attend workshop sessions in place of the Text Skills course. The ELT course and the workshop sessions are offered by specialist visiting faculty. The participants continue with the OCSALS course until the end of Week 6. Post-TEP reflections activities provide opportunities for follow-up professional self-development.

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5. Uniqlo English Program

The Uniqlo English Program is a new English program that is separate from the IEP. It has been designed exclusively to meet the needs of Uniqlo Corporation, a major international retailer based in Japan. Shop managers who will shortly be sent on assignment to overseas Uniqlo branches receive four weeks of intensive English training in shop management and daily communication. The program begins August 8 and continues until September 2.

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6. IEP Activities

The IEP provides excellent opportunities for social and group activities, mostly organized by students with support from faculty and staff. Members of the IEP Student Committee, formed by student volunteers from the IEP, IMF-OP, & TEP, take initiative in organizing the activities. Membership in the Student Committee provides opportunities for showing initiative and developing leadership and organizational skills. The surrounding areas are ideal for outdoor activities.

The activities include:

  • Parties and picnics
  • Sports (tennis, volleyball, badminton, basketball, baseball, etc.)
  • Jogging & biking
  • Driving around the mountainous countryside
  • Hiking up the mountains
  • Camping
  • Beach trips
  • Visits to restaurants and hot springs

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7. Students

Students come from various professional backgrounds, such as business companies government departments, and banks. Most of them are financially sponsored by their companies and by international and government agencies to study at IUJ.

The international and cross-cultural composition of the student body is a vital feature of the program every year.

For the IEP of 2011, about 75-80 students are expected to attend. They come from Japan and from several different countries in East and Central Asia. Students from Japan will represent about 55% of the members of this international group.

Four main groups of students will attend the IEP of 2011:

  • Students who will enter the graduate degree programs at IUJ after the IEP
  • IMF students sponsored by the International Monetary Fund (see below)
  • Summer-only professional students who will return to their corporate or government offices after the IEP
  • TEP students in the Teachers Education Program (see above)

About 30-35 students are sponsored by the IMF (International Monetary Fund).

The TEP group of students comprises English teachers at high schools and middle schools in Niigata Prefecture. This Teachers Education Program is sponsored by the Niigata Prefectural Government. For the first four weeks, the TEP group members will attend the regular IEP English classes, after which they will join a customized afternoon two-week teacher education course that is taught by a specially invited expert in second language English education. They will continue to attend the morning IEP English classes during this two-week period.

 

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8. Faculty & Staff (IEP, TEP, & UEP)

The IEP is currently conducted by three full-time IUJ English language faculty members and an administrative coordinator. In addition, experienced instructors are hired every year as summer visiting faculty to teach in different courses.

The three full-time members work together in planning and developing the various aspects of the IEP. Each member according to needs assumes specific responsibilities. There is a program director for program-level policy, academic, extracurricular, and so forth. There is an administrative coordinator for program-level administrative matters, and there are course coordinators for specific courses.

IEP Program Director: Richard Smith
IEP OCSALS (Oral Communication and Academic Listening Skills) coordinator: Mohammed Ahmed
IEP TS (Text Skills) coordinator: Christopher Murphy
IEP TS (Text Skills) Assistant coordinator: Christian Stuart

IEP Administrative coordinator: Wada, Miyoko

TEP Coordinator: Mohammed Ahmed

UEP Coordinator: Anthony Crooks


Faculty Profiles


Full-time Faculty

Mohammed Ahmed

Mohammed Ahmed
Mohammed Ahmed comes from Bangladesh. After receiving his M.A. (linguistics/EFL) and Ph.D. (concentration in applied linguistics) degrees in the U.S.A., he joined the International University of Japan in 1988. He has been teaching at IUJ since then. He has also taught ESL/EFL courses in the U.S., Bangladesh, and Sweden. His research interests include Vygotskian psycholinguictics, task-based course design, and non-native varieties of English. At IUJ, he also conducts teacher-training workshops for high school English language teachers. In his spare time, he likes listening to music, gardening, driving around the countryside, and hiking.


Anthony Crooks

Anthony Crooks
Anthony (Tony) Crooks was born in Melbourne, Australia. He holds a B.Ed., Grad. Dip. TESOL, MA TESOL, and is currently pursuing his doctorate in Education through Deakin University in Australia, in which he is exploring the professional identity of native speaker teachers of English in Japan. He has taught ESL in his home country at institutions including Swinburne University of Technology, and has also been involved in EFL in Thailand, South Korea, and, for the past ten years, Japan. He has recently joined IUJ, previously having worked in Sendai in the Sendai Board of Education and then later Miyagi University of Education. In his spare time he enjoys computing, music and movies, and traveling.


Christopher Murphy

Christopher Murphy
Chris Murphy comes from New York, NY. He has a BA in Communication Arts with a minor in East Asian Studies from Villanova University. He completed his M.A. in Teaching English as a Second Language (TESOL) at Columbia University, Teachers College in 2004. He has taught English in New York City and Japan. He also has volunteer English teaching experience in India and Indonesia. His academic interests include Second Language Acquisition, Critical Discourse Analysis, Sociolinguistics, and Language Policy/Planning. In his free time, he enjoys traveling, writing short fiction, and the outdoors.


Richard Smith

Richard Smith
Richard Smith grew up in London, but left the UK twenty years ago in search of a career as a language teacher. He obtained an MA in Social and Political Science from Cambridge University and worked for a period in London as a sociological field researcher, before changing his career track. He joined IUJ in 1990 after spending several years teaching company courses in Tokyo. His current research interests are productive vocabulary knowledge development and the impact of World Englishes on international English instruction. In his spare time he would like to walk in the mountains, watch movies and go cycling, and during the IEP he actually does some of them.



2011 IEP Visiting Faculty

  • Alex Harris Jr.
  • Risa Ikeda
  • Gretchen Jude
  • Michael Krapin
  • Corey Muench
  • Jeremy Sanders
  • Rachel Sardell
  • Jeremy Slagoski
  • Yvert de Souza
  • Christian Stuart
  • BarbaraThompson

 

Alexander Harris Jr.

Alex Harris Jr.
Alex Harris, Jr. was born and raised in SE Virginia. He completed his BS in Biology at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA. As an undergraduate, he began to work with International students of English and that experience led him to Japan, where he spent two years as an English Conversation Teacher for AEON Corporation. After returning to the US, he returned to his alma mater and completed his graduate studies in Applied Linguistics. He is an enthusiastic proponent of technology in the classroom and continues to introduce new ways to incorporate technology into the classroom. He describes his favorite read as a cookbook, being the owner of more than 200. His other interests include gardening and doing Japanese-style pottery.


Risa ikeda

Risa Ikeda
Risa Ikeda grew up spending half of her life in southern California, in the U.S. and the other half in Japan. She completed a BA in Environmental Information (i.e. interdisciplinary studies) at Keio University in Japan, then obtained a MATESOL at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA. Since then, she taught English to international students in Seattle and to university students in the Sultanate of Oman. She recently returned to Japan and started teaching English to university students here. Her academic interests include bilingual language acquisition and using songs in language teaching. When possible, Risa loves playing sports and listening to different kinds of music.


Gretchen Jude

Gretchen Jude
Gretchen Jude was born and raised in Boise, Idaho, USA. At 17, she moved to Philadelphia to attend Bryn Mawr College, then returned to her hometown to study TESOL at Boise State University. Soon after receiving her M.A., Gretchen moved to Tokyo, where she lived for eight years, teaching at Asia University, Tokyo Metropolitan University and Tsuda College. In 2005, she returned to Boise to teach ESL, write for the local weekly newspaper, and pursue her interests in music and theater. Gretchen currently lives in the beautiful San Francisco Bay Area. She loves to hike, swim, cook and watch classic Japanese films.


Michael Krapin

Michael Krapin
Michael Krapin comes from New York. He received an M.A. in Journalism from New York University, but later switched to a teaching career. He has since specialized in teaching English for academic and special purposes in the U.S., Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Turkey, Brazil, Montenegro, and Bulgaria. Michael is currently affiliated with Pace University in New York. In his spare time, he loves to hike, bike, and hunt mushrooms.


Corey Muench

Corey Muench
Corey Muench is originally from Missouri and grew up in a small town on the Mississippi River. He completed a BA in French and was a student at the University of Savoie in Chambery, France. He received a dual MA in French linguistics and TESOL from Indiana University. After teaching French, ESL, and applied linguistics for nearly a decade at Indiana University and briefly in Paris, France, he immigrated to Vancouver, Canada where he is currently teaching ESL at Capilano College. Corey’s specializations include English pronunciation instruction and academic writing instruction. He has presented and published several papers in these areas. In a rare moment of spare time, Corey enjoys reading anything, but he is especially interested in the fields of architecture, geography, and of course, languages.


Jeremy Sanders

Jeremy Sanders
Jeremy Sanders comes from the village of Castle Combe in the west of England. He started his academic career as a research chemist and has a PhD in inorganic chemistry. When suitable jobs in this field proved scarce, he decided to develop his language interests by training as an English-language teacher, and went on to gain a Cambridge University DELTA and an MA in linguistics from Durham University. He taught a variety of general English and EAP courses for over 7 years at the Northern University of Malaysia, and more recently has been teaching and developing ESAP and linguistics courses at the University of Bath, UK. His linguistic interests evolve around teaching EAP to business and science students, as well as various aspects of syntax, SLA and language change. He is a keen naturalist and in his spare time his pursuits encompass bird-watching, hiking and the cultivation of orchids and insectivorous plants. He also enjoys swimming and cycling, and learning about Oriental culture.


Rachel Sardell

Rachel Sardell
Rachel Sardell was born and raised in Oregon. She has completed two degrees from the University of Oregon: a BA in Spanish and an MEd in Education with emphases in teaching ESL and Spanish. She has taught at the American English Institute at the University of Oregon for five years, mostly in the intensive English program. Her professional interests include computer-assisted language learning, and she is currently working with a group of instructors on a research project to measure what listening / speaking skills are necessary for international students to know in order to succeed in American university classes. In her free time, Rachel enjoys practicing Ashtanga yoga, running, and the outdoors.


Jeremy Slagoski

Jeremy Slagoski
Jeremy Slagoski lived the first 22 years of his life in Wisconsin. After earning his BA in English from Beloit College, he and his fiancee moved to Japan to start their careers in ESL education. They returned to the United States to get married and so Jeremy could continue his education at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, where he earned his MA in ESOL/Bilingual Education. From there, Jeremy and his wife have lived and taught ESL in South Korea and Russia before returning to Wisconsin. In 2008, they had a beautiful baby daughter, and the following year they moved to Iowa where Jeremy is pursuing his PhD degree in Foreign Language and ESL Education. His research interest is in the adjustment process of expatriate EFL instructors, and his other interests are in music, cats, Eastern philosophies, and the skeptical movement.


 Yvert de Souza

Yvert de Souza
Yvert de Souza is from a mixed background. Born in Uganda of Goan-Indian parentage, he was raised in London. He has taught in Portugal, the Czech Republic and the United Kingdom and has taught ESOL, EFL and EAP. He has been working as an ESOL lecturer and CELTA teacher-trainer in a college in London for the past six years. In addition to the DELTA, Yvert has obtained an MA in English Language Teaching. His main interests are language testing and materials design. He is a test writer, examiner for different examining boards and writes and revises materials for several UK publishers. He enjoys travelling, watching films and football.


Christian Stuart

Christian Stuart
Christian Stuart was born in the San Francisco Bay Area. Upon receiving his undergraduate degree in English from a small college in Nebraska (a state in the middle of the U.S.), he went to South Korea to teach English. After this, he worked as a technical writer in several corporate settings back in the U.S., including an auditing firm and a law firm. Realizing he loved teaching English, though, he went to the University of Washington in Seattle where he earned his M.A. degree in TESOL. While there, he also taught in the university痴 ESL Center. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in English at the same university, with emphasis on second language writing. In his free time, he enjoys reading, studying languages, hiking, and watching major league baseball games.


Barbara Thompson

Barbara Thompson
Born and raised in New York State, Barbara moved to Australia for 18 years after graduating from college. She has been a teacher for more than 30 years, the last 20 of which have been teaching Adult ESL. She earned her TESOL degree from the University of Technology, Sydney, and a Masters in Educational Administration from Rutgers University. Barbara currently teaches oral language and presentation skills to international graduate students at Princeton University. She taught in China for two summers and at Cornell University for four. Barbara enjoys travelling, reading, and taking long walks.


 

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