English for Specific Purposes


Find an English Language Program (ESL)


The world is becoming more of a global community through air travel, Skype, Facebook and other social media. This is making the need to increase understanding and improve communication among all citizens more urgent. An international exchange of ideas addressing crucial issues is essential.

Affecting all of us are environmental issues, such as global warming and the thinning ozone layer; health and medical issues, including research, genetic engineering and the distribution of modern drug therapies; and finally the political challenges of a global economy.

For this reason, more and more individuals are seeking to improve their English language skills for highly specific academic or professional reasons. Courses that fall under the heading English for Specific Purposes (ESP) hold particular appeal with these students. These types of English courses are designed to meet the specific academic or professional needs of learners. Examples of ESP are courses in English for business or law. Each curriculum is centered on the language and culture specific to the field, while teaching grammar, vocabulary, communication style, and study skills.

 

Who Should Enroll in English for Specific Purposes Programs?

Generally, advanced students who have a specific area of academic or professional interest should consider these programs instead of a general English language course. Many programs require that applicants’ English be at a high-intermediate or advanced level.

Georgia State University – Intensive English Program

Georgia State University’s English for Professional Purposes: Law (EPP:L) program is designed for international LL.M. candidates. The program, which was created by instructors with degrees in both Law and Applied Linguistics, was developed in collaboration with Georgia State University College of Law. It includes courses in legal writing and analysis, reading and understanding legal materials, and listening and speaking in various legal forums. The program also organizes several excursions and activities such as visits to court houses, law firms, and law libraries, as well as guest lecturers (e.g. judges, lawyers, and law professors). 

International pre-law students often struggle not only with the language and academic skills needed to succeed in a law program in the U.S., but also with understanding a completely new legal system: U.S. Common Law. The Pre-LL.M program gives students an opportunity to enhance their language skills and also learn the foundations of the U.S. legal system.

“Law could be a challenge when you come from a different country and legal system. However, the EPP:L program is the perfect starting point,” explains LL.M student, Nourah Alharbi.

GSU’s Intensive English Program also offers a pre-university program for Robinson College of Business (RCB) students. The English for Professional Purposes: Business (EPP:B) program offers instruction in areas such as networking and interviewing techniques, business and U.S. classroom culture and etiquette, and business English.

Business students at RCB are expected to interact with companies and give presentations almost immediately. They are required to build connections with local companies at both informal and formal events. Many international business students lack these essential skills, don’t have the confidence to use these skills in English, or are unfamiliar with American business culture.

The EPP:B program gives incoming international students an opportunity to improve their business English in business situations. Completing the EPP:B program will help students be more competitive, effective, and confident in their interviewing, networking, and classroom interactions in the American university settings and in the business world.

Learning by Example

Yale University English Language Institute Yale Summer Session

Yale University offers a Law Seminar for non-native English speakers who are planning to enter a U.S. law school, or who are working in the field of law in an international context. Taught by attorneys and professors of law, Law Seminar students learn to analyze cases, identify issues, and understand the precedents formed in “case law,” as well as the reasoning of a court.

Seminar students have a variety of field trip opportunities that give them a direct glimpse into the world of law:

  • Trips to federal and state prisons
  • Visits to state and federal courts that often include meetings with judges, prosecutors and public defenders
  • A visit to the United States Mission to the United Nations and a meeting with its lawyers, followed by a tour of the United Nations
  • A visit to the U.S. Attorney’s Office where students meet with its lawyers and with a representative from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Meanwhile, instructors of Yale’s Business Seminar focus on readings and cases that deal with international and cross-cultural issues. This encourages the sharing of insights across nationalities and the examination of culturally based assumptions about behavior in organizations. Business Seminar students take field trips to small businesses and the New York Stock Exchange.

Custom Designed Programs

Often U.S. universities, usually through an intensive English language institute, will arrange short- or long-term specific English programs for groups. If a university does not offer English instruction focused on the field you seek, inquire about the possibility of developing such a program.

As we are brought closer together, closing the gap of time and distance, communication through a common language is becoming a pressing need. English for Specific Purposes programs present one of the unique ways to address that need.

How is ESP different from general English language courses?

  1. The English words and sentences learned, the subject matter discussed, all relate to a particular field or discipline, for example, a lawyer writing a brief, or a diplomat preparing a policy paper. The courses make use of vocabulary and tasks related to the field, such as negotiation skills and effective techniques for oral presentations.
  2. English for Specific Purposes programs use materials that are specially designed to meet the needs of a specific group of learners, usually adults.
  3. Tuition for an ESP course may be somewhat higher than that of a general English language course. (The specialized teaching, requiring professionals, the broad range of supporting activities and facilities explain this higher cost.) In general, the course will conform to the length of a school's regular English language programs, although a highly specialized course lasting only two or three weeks might be designed to meet the needs of a specific group.

Apart from differences in ESP programs' duration and cost, these courses have a common purpose: to increase students' skill and confidence in using English.

Business English for Career Advancement

Pre-Law courses and programs designed to provide international LLM students and lawyers with the language and academic skills they can use for legal purposes and to understand American laws are offered at Pace University New York City, Pleasantville, and White Plains Law School campuses. Academic work includes typical activities that transpire in an American law school class. Courses include Legal Writing, Reading Legal Materials, Listening and Speaking Skills for Law School, Introduction to U.S. Common Law, and Legal Education. Extracurricular activities include visits to courthouses and law firms.

By Margaret-Mary Palladino
Director of the English Language Institute at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.