The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

Original Article

The Utility of Needs Analysis for Nondomain Expert Instructors in Designing Task‐Based Spanish for the Professions Curricula

First published: 16 August 2015
Cited by: 2

Ellen J. Serafini (PhD, Georgetown University) is Assistant Professor of Spanish Applied Linguistics, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia.

Julio Torres (PhD, Georgetown University) is Assistant Professor of Spanish Applied Linguistics, University of California, Irvine.

Abstract

The demand for Spanish for specific purposes (SSP) university courses in the United States has prompted widespread curricular change in language departments over the last two decades (Klee, 2015; Sánchez‐López, 2013). However, many instructors lack the tools and training needed to design SSP curricula that meet learners’ communicative needs in such contexts. Moreover, little SSP research to date has taken a task‐based approach to identifying learners’ specialized needs (Long, 2015), which can provide much‐needed support to instructors who are nonexperts in the particular domain of interest. The current study reports on a small‐scale, multiphase needs analysis carried out to design a university business Spanish course. In Phase 1, a small sample of business graduates and professionals generated a list of 40 target tasks in the domains of reading, writing, listening, and speaking that were relevant to their particular work. In Phase 2, 54 university business majors rated the frequency and difficulty of each task on a 40‐item Likert‐type questionnaire. During Phase 3, the researchers analyzed and grouped target tasks identified in the needs assessment to create five major target task types that informed course objectives and classroom tasks.

Number of times cited: 2

  • , Task-based needs analysis: Identifying communicative needs for study abroad students in Japan, System, 10.1016/j.system.2018.11.005, (2018).
  • , From needs analysis to task design: Insights from an English for specific purposes context, Language Teaching Research, (136216881771427), (2017).