Nov 22, 2024
OHIO University Undergraduate Catalog 2024-25

OPIE D201 - Elementary Listening/Speaking


This course is one component of full-time study of English as a second language for students at the elementary level whose ultimate aim is academic study. Four hours of classroom instruction are designed to provide students with instruction and practice in basic listening and speaking for everyday communication.

Requisites: Course is developmental PERMISSION REQUIRED Paper TOEFL: 350 min. IBT: 20 min. Placement Test: 45 min. Composition: 10 min.
Credit Hours: 4
Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 24.0 hours.
Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 lecture
Grades: Eligible Grades: ,WP,WF,WN,FN,AU,I
Learning Outcomes:
  • Given a pre-listening activity, student can discern specific information needed to respond to follow-up questions or tasks.
  • Student asks someone to repeat what he or she has said or asks him/her to speak more slowly (or write something down) to facilitate comprehension.
  • Student associates appropriate meaning with grammatical features, e.g. tense, number, question form, and basic stress and intonation patterns in carefully produced sentences.
  • Student can initiate and sustain short, general conversations about familiar topics and can respond to questions based upon discourse which contains little or no unfamiliar language.
  • Student can produce in isolated words and carefully spoken sentences: phonemes and grammatical features tense, number, question forms, and basic stress and intonation patterns that are usually comprehensible to the general public.
  • Student comprehends short conversations about familiar topics and the gist of a short narration, description or dialogue, which contains some (a modest amount of) unfamiliar language.
  • Student produces spontaneous speech in which articulation is usually comprehensible to native English speakers accustomed to speaking with English language learners.
  • Student recognizes and comprehends in isolated words and carefully spoken sentences: phonemes, inflectional markers for tense and number, question forms, basic stress and intonation patterns, contractions, reductions, and word linking.


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