Time for Change: Developing English Language Teaching (ELT) at Tertiary Level in Sudan Time for Change: Developing English Language Teaching (ELT) at Tertiary Level in Sudan is an edited collection of the papers presented at the ELT Conference with the same title in Khartoum, Sudan, from 1 to 3 March, 2010. The event was organised by the British Council, the Association of Sudanese Teachers of English (ASTEL), Al-Neelain University, the University of Khartoum, Omdurman Islamic University and the Open University of Sudan. It was sponsored by the British Council and held at the University of Khartoum.
Introduction * Toward a standardised EST testing framework at
Sudanese universities by Abdunasir Ibrahim Abdulhalim Sideeg * Time for
change: Developing English language teaching at tertiary level in Sudan by
Hala Salih Mohammed Nur * Making the short story long: An approach to
meeting the academic literacy needs of low-level university students in South
Africa by Susan Ntete * Summer pre-sessional courses at Ahfad University for
Women (Khartoum, Sudan) by Amna Bedri * Shedding light on the blind spots of
teaching and teacher development by Aymerou Mbaye * Towards ELT-based
co-operation between tertiary-level institutes and employers by Leonardo Mack
* What English do university students really need? by Terry Phillips * ICT
in the classroom: Driving up results without breaking the bank by Andrew
Stokes * Effective testing: An essential requirement for English programmes
by Eric Ngea Ntam * The importance of continuing professional development
training for teachers: The role of professional associations by Eric Ngea
Ntam * Developing a comprehensive language testing system in tertiary
education in Sudan by Ishraga Bashir * Changing teachers' views about
teaching and learning: A pre-requisite for improving ELT and student
proficiency in English in Sudanese universities by Michael Baffoka Alexander
Baffoka * English for the workplace: Giving students language skills for
future employment by Tohmoh by Joseph Yong * Forms of in-service teacher
development by Paul Fean * Developing an academic English curriculum for
Sudanese universities: Parameters and context by Yasir Hassan Hussein
Notes on contributors
Mark Krzanowski holds an MA in Applied Linguistics, the RSA/UCLES Dip TEFLA, a PG DMS, and is a Fellow of HEA (the Higher Education Academy). Mark has been involved in English Language Teaching since 1990. He is based in London, and his current academic affiliations include: the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), the University of London, where he lectures in English for Academic and Specific Purposes to international postgraduate students; the Language Centre, University of Arts London, where he is the Course Leader for Insessional EAP Courses; and the Department of English and Linguistics at the University of Westminster, where he lectures in TESOL and TEFL to BA and MA students. He also acts as External Assessor in ELT for Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa. Since 2003, Mark has been the Co-ordinator of the IATEFL's (International Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language) ESP (English for Specific Purposes) SIG (Special Interest Group). In addition, he is also involved in academic consultancies abroad: in the last four years, he has worked on various EAP and ESP projects in Central Asia (Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan), India, Pakistan, South Africa, China, Palestine, Oman, Bahrain and Yemen. In the past, Mark was Academic Co-ordinator for ELT in the Dept of PACE at Goldsmiths College, University of London (2002-2005); Head of ELT Unit and Senior Lecturer in EAP at the University of Hertfordshire (1997-1999-2002); and EAP Co-ordinator at UCL/University College London (1993-1997). Mark is actively involved in scholarly activity. In April 2008, he was plenary speaker at the Sultan Qaboos University ELT Conference (Muscat, Oman), and in July 2008, he was the plenary speaker at the English for Work Symposium in Johannesburg, South Africa, organized at Wits University by the British Council and SAATEIL. He is also the editor of Current Developments in English for Academic, Specific and Occupational Purposes (Publisher: Garnet Education, March 2008) and Current Developments in English for Academic and Specific Purposes in Developing, Emerging and Least-Developed Countries. Mark's professional interests include: materials design in EAP and ESP; teacher training; trainer training; academic listening; applied linguistics; academic management; learning and teaching; and teaching and teacher training via videoconferencing.