Academic English- British and American English
A LESSON PLAN FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHERS
Lesson Plan Content:
How British is your Academic English?
Student’s instructions
Without looking at the list below, listen to your teacher define some words and expressions
etc and write the form that you would most often use. When there is more than one option,
write only the thing you use most or would be most likely to use, i.e. one thing only. If
there’s anything you have no idea about, leave it blank until you hear the options at the
second stage.
Compare with your partner, but only change what you have written if you are sure it is
actually wrong as there are many possible answers.
Listen again but this time with options to choose from. Choose just one option, only
changing your mind from the previous round if you are sure you would use that other thing
more often. If you’ve never used any of the options, just choose the one you like the sound
of.
What is the distinction between the two options each time?
Compare with your partner again. Who do you think has more British English?
Check which is which as a class and see if you were right about who had more British
English.
Do the same for spelling, making sure you still write only the form that you would use more
often.
Compare your answers in pairs and then as a class. Which of you had more British
spelling and which had more American spelling?
What are the general patterns in the words that you have checked your answers to?
Try to think of other British/ American spelling differences, e.g. other examples of the
differences above. You get one point for each correct difference, and two points for any
which are particularly academic.
Your teacher will read out some other words from their list. You get one point for each
correct statement you can make about spelling, variations, other parts of speech etc about
those words, but play passes to another person or group if you say anything wrong.
Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com © 2014
How British is your Academic English – Teacher’s Script
Choose between 15 and 20 from the lists below to dictate to your class, following the
instructions on the Student’s Instructions sheet above. The ones in bold below are British.
Part One: Academic Vocabulary
People
A new undergraduate student –first year student/ fresher/ freshman
A student in the year after that – second year student/ sophomore
Someone who continues studying after they finish their first degree – grad student/
graduate student/ postgrad student/ postgraduate student
The normal way to address a basic-level lecturer – Doctor + family name/ Professor
+ family name
A group noun for the people who have teaching and research roles in the university –
academic staff/ faculty
Places
The first school you go to, after kindergarten – elementary school/ primary school
The opposite of a private school – public school/ state school (a British “public
school” is a very expensive and historic private school)
Accommodation for students – dorm/ dormitory/ halls/ student halls
Times
The periods that academic years are divided up into – semester/ term
The time between lessons – break/ recess
The document telling you when your classes are – schedule/ timetable
A special period with no work, e.g. Xmas – holiday/ vacation
Testing
Much less important and/ or much shorter than an exam – quiz/ test
A symbol that means you got the answer right, the opposite of a cross – check/ check
mark/ tick
Look at what you have studied in order to remember it, perhaps before an exam –
review/ revise
Work that needs to be done before the next lesson – assignment/ homework
A number or letter representing how well you did your work, e.g. “B+”, “distinction” or
“63%” – grade/ mark
Miscellaneous
Money you have to pay for being taught – tuition/ tuition fees
A common abbreviation of “mathematics” – math/ maths
Another word for the most common meaning of “quite” – fairly/ very
Fill ______ a form – in/ out
Enrol(l) _______ a course – in/ on
Places where you can stay such as an apartment or a hotel – accommodation/ ac-
commodations
The punctuation mark used at the end of a statement – full stop/ period
Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com © 2014
Part Two: Academic Punctuation
The short forms of “mister”, “misses” and “doctor” – Mr Mrs Dr/ Mr. Mrs. Dr.
The walls were coated with wallpaper, paint and tiles./ The walls were coated
with wallpaper, paint, and tiles.
The man stopped: he had forgotten his hat./ The man stopped: He had forgotten
his hat.
The performance took place on the second of February 2006. – The performance
took place on 2 February 2006./ The performance took place on February 2, 2006.
(For further discussion see Richardson's excellent analysis (1999) and Danneb-
urger's survey (2000))/ (For further discussion see Richardson's excellent analysis
[1999] and Danneburger's survey [2000])
Part Three: Spelling of Academic Word List vocabulary
Choose at least ten from the list below, making sure there are at least two of each kind if
you want them to go on and make generalisations. You can define the words, give the root
forms, or just dictate the words. The first in each pair is British. Note that –ize and –ization
are also fine in British English – the point is included here because –ise and –isation is
more common and it brings out lots of lovely academic vocabulary.
-ae/ -e
A book or CD ROM that has factual entries on almost everything, e.g. Britannica and
Encarta – encyclopaedia/ encyclopedia
anaemia/ anemia
anaesthesia/ anesthesia
orthopaedic/ orthopedic
paediatric/ pediatric
-ise/ - ize and –isation/ - ization
Another way to say “use” – utilise/ utilize, utilisation/ utilization
Free up, get rid of restrictions such as red tape – liberalise/ liberalize, liberalisation, lib-
eralization
Put into order by how important they are – prioritise/ prioritize, prioritisation/ prioritiza-
tion
The increasing interconnectedness and independency across borders – globalise/
globalize, globalisation/ globalization
To list – itemise/ itemize, itemisation/ itemization
category – categorise/ categorize, categorisation/ categorization
colony – colonise/ colonize, colonisation/ colonization
computer – computerise/ computerize, computerisation/ computerization
concept – conceptualise/ conceptualize, conceptualisation/ conceptualization
context – contextualise/ contextualize, contextualisation/ contextualization
drama – dramatise/ dramatize, dramatisation/ dramatization
external –externalise/ externalize, externalisation/ externalization
institute –institutionalise/ institutionalize, institutionalisation/ institutionalization
Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com © 2014
internal – internalise/ internalize, internalisation/ internalization
maximum – maximise/ maximize, maximisation, maximization
minimal – minimise/ minimize, minimisation/ minimization
neutral – neutralise/ neutralize, neutralisation, neutralization
normal – normalise/ normalize, normalisation/ normalization
rational – rationalise/ rationalize, rationalisation/ rationalization
stable – stabilise/ stabilize, stabilisation/ stabilization
standard – standardise/ standardize, standardisation/ standardization
visual – visualise/ visualize, visualisation/ visualization
(Just) -ise/ -ize
Cause a huge change or improvement – revolutionise/ revolutionize
emphasis – emphasise/ emphasize
final – finalise/ finalize
hypothesis –hypothesise/ hypothesize
philosophy – philosophise/ philosophize
recognition – recognise/ recognize
summary – summarise/ summarize
symbol – symbolise/ symbolize
-ll/ -l
channelled/ channeled
counsellor/ counselor, counselling/ counseling
equalling/ equaling
initialled/ initialed
labelled/ labeled
libellous/ libelous
modelling/ modeling
panellist/ panelist
signalling/ signaling
-our/ -or
A word meaning manual work that is also the name of the main centre-left party in the
UK – labour/ labor
The person who lives in the house next to yours – neighbour/ neighbor
behave – behaviour/ behavior
-re/ -er
One hundredth of a metre – centimetre/ centimeter
There are 330 in a small water bottle – millilitre/ milliliter
fibre/ fiber
Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com © 2014
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