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Wednesday 9 March 2016

Syllabus: ENGLISH, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY, Four Year B.A Honours Course (First Year)





Effective from the
Session : 2009–2010
National University
Subject: English
Syllabus for Four Year B. A Honours Course
Effective from the Session: 2009-2010


Course Code:1152,
 Course Title: English Reading Skills
 Marks 100,
4 Credits,
 60 Lectures
The course seeks to develop students’ reading skills and covers the following sub-skills;
a). Guessing word meanings by using knowledge of word form (class), word function, word structure
and formation and most importantly, contextual clues.
b) Understanding ornamental expressions
c) Tackling sentence meaning,
d) Surveying text organization,
e) Reading for specific information (skimming),
f) Reading for general comprehension/gist (scanning),
g) Summarizing,
h) Predicting,
i) Interpreting.
j) Recognizing, author’s position, tone and attitude
The reading texts will be chosen from different types of writing like descriptive, narrative, expository,argumentative, journalistic, and academic texts e.g. History, philosophy etc.
Williams, E. 1984. Reading in the Language Classroom. Mcmillan.

Wallace. 1992. Reading. OUP
Barr. P. Clegg, J. and Wallace, C. 1981. Advanced Reading Skills. Longman
Walter, Catherine. 1982. Authentic Reading. CUP
Greenwood, J. 1988. Class Readers. OUP
Course Code:1153, Course Title: English Writing Skills Marks 100, 4 Credits, 60
Lectures
This course will focus on helping students develop their writing skills in English with focus on
writing correct sentences, using proper punctuation marks, writing with good organization (coherence
and cohesion), writing good topic sentences and concluding sentences in paragraphs, writing good
introduction, body and conclusion. Students will be required to write: a) Paragraphs using a variety
of techniques such as examples, listing, cause and effect, comparison,
contrast, comparison-contrast among others.
b) Descriptive, narrative, expository and argumentative essays
c) Reports
d) Formal and informal letters
e) Amplifications
f) Stories
Recommended Reading
Alice Oslima, Anna. Introduction to Academic Writing
Beverly Ingran and Carol King From Writing to Composition.
M. Knight. English Essays for GCE O level
Patricia Wilcox . Developing Writing
John Langhan. 2001. College Writing Skills ( International edition). Mcgraw-Hill
R. R. Jordon. 1995. Academic Writing. OUPH. Ramsey Fowles. 1983. The Little Brown Handbook. The Little Brown Company. (Text)
References:
.John Langhan. 2001. College Writing Skills ( International edition). Mcgraw-Hill.
Joseph Gibaldi and Walters S Achtert. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. New Delhi:
Affiliated East West Press.
Karen L Greenberg. 1994. Advancing Writer, Book 2. Harper Collins.
Mary Stephens. Practise Advanced Writing. Longman.R. R. Jordon. 1995. Academic Writing. OUP
Course Code:1154, Course Title: Introduction to Poetry Marks 100, 4 Credits, 60 Lectures
Poetry:
W. Shakespeare—Shall I Compare Thee?
John Donne—Good Morrow
Robert Herrick-- - Daylight in Disorder
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W.Wordsworth—I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud
P.B.Shelley—Ozymandias
J.Keats—To Autumn
Elizabeth B.Browning—How Do I Love Thee?
Emily Dickinson—Because I Could not Stop for Death
W.B. Yeats—No Second Troy
R.Frost—Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening
D.H. Lawrence—Snake
Dylan Thomas—Fern Hill
Ted Hughes—Pike
Adrienne Rich—Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers
Kaiser Huq— Ode on a Lungi
Literary Terms:
Simile, Metaphor, Personification, Metonymy, Symbol, Irony, Climax, Anticlimax,
Hyperbole,Paradox, Onomatopoeia, Bathos, Allusions, Conceit, Pun, Imagery and all other literary
terms
Prosody:
Accent, Foot/Measure, Blank Verse, Rhyme, Tercet, Scanning of Verse and others.
Course Code:1155, Course Title: Introduction to Prose: Fiction and Non-Fiction
Marks 100, 4
Credits, 60 Lectures
Non-Fiction:
Francis Bacon—Of Studies
A.Lincon—Gettysburg Address
R.Tagore—Letter to Lord Chelmford Rejecting Knighthood
G.Orwell—Shooting an Elephant
N.C.Choudhury—River & Rain (from The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian)
Martin Luther King—I Have a Dream
Fiction:
S.Maugham-- The Ant and the Grasshopper
James Joyce—Araby
K.Mansfield-- The Garden Party
Anita Desai—Games at Twilight
Edgar Allan Poe—The Tell-Tale Heart
E.Hemingway—Cat in the Rain
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Course Code :6203 Course Title: Introducing Sociology Marks 100, 4 Credits, 60
Lectures
1. Definition, Nature & Scope of Sociology, relationship with other social sciences.
Development of Sociology: Contributions of Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer, Emile
Durkheim, Max Weber
2. Culture, Beliefs & Values: Norms, sanctions, symbols, language, subculture,
counterculture, hegemony & resistance
3. Globalization, Culture and Society: Globalization and its different dimensions, Cultural
globalization, global culture and social change
4. Urbanization and Social Formation: Definition of urbanization and urbanism, Process of
urbanization in developing societies and social formation, over urbanization, growth of slum
& poverty in mega cities
5. Gender and Society: Discourse of WID, WAD and GAD, Why gender is important in the
discourse of development, Gender inequality & women’s subjugation in developing societies.
6. Environmental Problems, Natural Disasters and Social Crisis: Climate change and its
impact on society, Natural disaster, social crisis and vulnerabilities, Climate change,
deforestation and mal-development.
7. Social Inequality: Dimensions of social inequality: Class, gender, age, minority group
(religious and indigenous), economic vulnerability, Social inequalities in developed &
developing countries.
8. Types of societies: Marxist view on classifying societies on the basis of type of control over
economic resources and Lenski’s view on classifying societies by their main means of
subsistence.
9. Deviance & Social Control: Definition of deviance, theories of deviance. Crime & justice
system, agencies of social control
10. Health, Illness and Society: Nature & scope of the problem, Urbanizations, acute, chronic &
life style diseases, Social, environmental & behavioural factors affecting health,
Communicable & behavioural diseases: STD, HIV/AIDS, TB, Hep-B etc
Reference
Giddens Sociology
Tony Bilton et al Introductory Sociology
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Course Code: 6212, Course Title: Introduction to Social Work Marks 100, 4 Credits, 60
Lectures
1. Social Work: Meaning, Characteristics, Scope and Importance Relationship of Social Work
with other Sciences- Sociology, Economics, Psychology and Political Science.
2. Evolution: Evolution of Social Work in UK, USA, India and Bangladesh.
3. Social Reformers and their Movements in Pre-partition India and Bangladesh: Raja
Rammohan Ray, Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, A.K Fazlul Haque, Sir Syad Ahmed, Begum
Rokeya.
4. Social Legislations Related to Social Security, Women Welfare, Child Welfare.
5. Profession and Social Work: Meaning and Characteristics of Profession, Social Work as
profession, Philosophical, Religions and Ethical Basis of Social Work.
6. Industrial Revolution: Meaning, Impact on Society, Industrialization, Urbanization, Welfare
State.
7. Social Problems and Social Services in Bangladesh.
8. Methods of Social Work: Basic and Auxiliary Methods and their Basic Issues such as
Meaning, Elements, Principles and Area of Use. Importance of Social Work Methods in
Bangladesh.
Books Recommended:
1. Barker, Robert L. :Social Work Dictionary, 3rd ed. NASW, New York, 1995.
2. Coulshed, Veronica Social Work Practice: An Introduction 2nd ed. London. Macmillan, 1991.
3. Friedlander, Walter A. : Introduction to Social Welfare. Prentice Hall, 2nd ed. New
Delhi-1967.
4. Khalid, M. : Welfare State, Karachi, Royal Book, 1968
5. Morales, A. And Shaefor, B. Social Work – A Profession of many faces, 4th ed. Allyan and
Bacan, Boston, 1986.
Course Code: 6192, Course Title: Introduction to Political Theory Marks 100, 4 Credits,
60 Lectures
Political Science : Meaning, Nature, Scope, Methods, Relations to other Social Sciences, Importance
to Study Political Science.
State : Definition, Elements, State and Government, State and Individual, State and Society, Theories
of the origin of the state.
Fundamental concepts : Sovereignty, Law, Liberty, Equality, Rights and Duties, Nation,
Nationalism, Internationalism.
Concepts of Political Sociology : Political culture, elite theory, Max Weber and Bureaucracy
Political Thinkers : Plato, Aristotle, St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke
and Rousseau.
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Books Recommended :
1. R.G. Gettell : Political Science
2. J. W. Garner : Political Science and Government
3. R. M. MacIver : The Modern State
4. G.H. Sabine : A History of Political Theory
5. William Ebenstein : Great Political Thinkers-Plato to the Present
6. H.G. Laski : A Grammar of Politics


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