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Course Finder

MA Teaching English as a Foreign Language

Location: Colchester Campus
Qualification: Master of Arts
Mode of study: Full-time
Duration: 12 months
Tuition fee: Home/EU, Overseas
Funding available: Find out using our scholarship finder Department: Language and Linguistics
Facebook: University of Essex
Further information: For more information, please e-mail us or see for yourself by booking a place at one of our open days.

About the course

If you are enthusiastic about teaching English as a foreign or second language, and want to develop your understanding, knowledge and skills, then our MA Teaching English as a Foreign Language/English Language Teaching (TEFL/ELT) offers you vocationally-relevant, research-led training of the highest quality, taught by academics known for their teaching excellence.

All students take modules in the Description of English for TEFL/Applied Linguistics, Language Learning and Methods used in the investigation of language learning/teaching, and choose ‘optional modules’ to suit their individual learning needs. Examples of options that are currently available are Second Language Vocabulary: Learning, Teaching and Use; Teaching and Learning Grammar; Teaching Listening and Speaking; Teaching Writing in EFL/ESL; Literature and Language Teaching; Foundations of CALL; and Materials Design and Evaluation. You will also write a dissertation on a topic of your choice. This is written between April and September.

Whether you have no prior teaching experience or are already an English language teacher, this Master’s programme will meet your needs. Students with no or little previous teaching experience will get ‘hands on’ teaching practice throughout the course. Students with at least two year’s full time teaching experience undertake specialist study instead. Our course will develop your skills including researching and research design, essay writing and teaching.

Please note that this course is also available on a part-time basis.

Why study MA Teaching English as a Foreign Language at Essex?

Our Department of Language and Linguistics offers you an outstanding teaching and research environment. In the 2012 Postgraduate Taught Experience Survey we received 87 percent overall satisfaction. At Essex you will experience a stimulating, but informal environment giving you many possibilities to pursue your own interests.

In the most recent Research Assessment Exercise (RAE, December 2008), we were rated as producing the highest proportion of world-leading linguistics research of any university in the UK. This means you will be taught, supported and supervised by staff with an international reputation for being at the forefront of research in a wide range of areas. We provide you with the ideal environment for your studies. We have a strong research group culture and run a weekly Departmental Seminar, which regularly features eminent outside speakers.

Our facilities

As a student on this course you will be able to take advantage of our extensive learning resources, including laboratories of networked computers. You will have access to our Albert Sloman Library which has a vast range of books and journals as well as more networked computers. Our Linguistics resource centre has four labs which will enhance your study. These encompass; a Eye tracking lab allowing you to monitor eye movement while performing tasks, a Psycholinguistics lab measuring how long it takes to react to words, texts and sounds, a ‘Visual World’ Experimental lab recording response times and eye movements when presented with pictures and videos and a Linguistics lab which has specialist equipment to analyse sound.

Introduction

A Masters course is an academically rigorous programme during which you explore your subject in depth, reaching a high level of specialist knowledge. You draw on knowledge and skills from your undergraduate study or your professional life to produce work of a high academic standard, informed by current thinking and debate.

This course lasts twelve months (full-time), starting in October, and consists of taught modules during your autumn and spring terms and a dissertation to be submitted in September. Your dissertation counts for 60 credits and you will take 120 credits of modules, six compulsory modules and two optional modules. (If you are from the EU, then our Masters courses are regarded as ‘second-cycle’ qualifications under the Bologna Declaration and consist of 90 ECTS credits).

Stage 1 Modules

Compulsory: Assignment Writing And Dissertation Preparation
Compulsory: English Language Teaching Methodology
Compulsory: Materials And Methods I
Compulsory: Teaching Practice Ii
Core: Ma Dissertation
Introduction To Teaching English For Academic Purposes
Introduction To Teaching Young Learners
Materials Design And Development
Teaching English For Specific Purposes

Introduction

Your postgraduate study at Essex gives you an opportunity to develop your own ideas and interests, and to engage with thinking at the leading edge of your subject as part of the research community in our Department of Language and Linguistics, and our wider academic and professional community.

As a student of linguistics your teaching mainly takes the form of lectures, practical demonstrations and teaching yourself.

Assessment for modules taught by the Department of Language and Linguistics is typically involves written coursework, class tests and practical testing. Most modules that you will take will involve only coursework as assessment. During the summer, you will work on a dissertation that’s included in your final grade.

Teaching methods and styles

Our courses are designed to provide you with an advanced knowledge of contemporary theory, develop your research skills and build practical skills. The modules you take employ a variety of teaching methods with lectures that inform you, demonstrations that teach you skills and learning by teaching to develop your skills you learned through demonstrations. Our courses include both compulsory and optional modules, so the course can be tailored to fit your interests and aspirations.

Your dissertation

Within our Department of Language and Linguistics, you are expected to start work on your dissertation, a 16,000-word dissertation on a topic of your choice, from April onwards. This enables you to gain an in depth knowledge of an area that interests you. There is a rigorous support system in place for the dissertation process, linking you with an appropriate supervisor at the earliest opportunity.

Seminars and conferences

Our Department of Language and Linguistics has a strong research group culture. We run a weekly departmental seminar, attended by both staff and students. These give you exposure to cutting-edge research on topical issues, provide a role model for your own presentations and give you the opportunity to meet up with speakers and discuss your own research and ideas with them.

Career destinations

Given the breadth of our provision within our Department of Language and Linguistics, career prospects for our graduates vary depending on the study undertaken but takers of our MA TEFL and other courses in English Language Teaching come with the specific intention of entering the ELT/TESOL profession, which they duly go on to do. Students on these courses often join us after a career in English teaching, to update their expertise and return to the classroom with a career enhancement. The specialist knowledge you gain enables you to take senior or specialist roles (eg in CALL, ESP, teaching young learners or testing), not necessarily only in the classroom but also in educational advice and management, programme evaluation, syllabus design and teacher education.

Your employability and Essex

A postgraduate qualification is a major achievement and greatly valued by employers. Recent surveys show that higher degree graduates are more likely to obtain jobs at professional or managerial level and less likely to be unemployed. For some jobs a postgraduate qualification may be essential, for others it offers a competitive edge. Our graduates go into a variety of jobs, where the key employability skills and knowledge they have gained through postgraduate study are put to good use.

Our Languages for All programme lets you study a language, alongside your course, at no extra cost. You can take one of 50 taught language modules on a part-time day-time basis, or undertake flexible web-based learning, or opt for a language module taught in the evening. As employers can struggle to find graduates able to speak more than one language, Languages for All places Essex graduates in a very advantageous position.

If you achieve your Masters, you may wish to extend your knowledge with a research degree and many who graduate from Essex choose to stay here for research study. Some of our Masters may be taken as the first part of an Integrated PhD, leading to your PhD after a further three years of full-time study.

Support for postgraduates

Our University has a range of support services designed to help you to achieve your full potential and get the most out of your studies. These form a co-ordinated network of support, and are an important part of your overall student experience at Essex.

Our staff operate an 'open door' policy so are available to discuss any concerns with you throughout the year.

Research study opportunities

Within our Department of Language and Linguistics, we offer supervision for PhD and MPhil. Comprising 24 academic staff, we offer teaching and research supervision in: language acquisition, language learning and language teaching; culture and communication; psycholinguistics; language disorders; sociolinguistics; and theoretical and descriptive linguistics.

Qualifications

Our applicants should have an Upper Second Class Honours degree, or equivalent, in relevant subject.

If English is not your first language, then we require IELTS 6.5 with 6 in writing or TOEFL iBT88.