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Delta Module Three ELT specialism: needs analysis

needs

Much will depend on the focus of your Module Three report, of course, so the following can only be generic in nature.

The following is premised on the understanding that you have followed the guide to constructing a needs analysis on this site.  If you haven't yet done that, you should do it now and then return to this page when you have completed it.  If you want to refer to it as we go along, click here to open it in a new tab so you can swap between the two or display them together.
The second premise is that you are involved now in designing your needs analysis so can work on it as we go along.

Most Module Three reports are focused on a group of some sort but if you have selected a One-to-One course what follows will be relevant and probably simpler to conduct.

The suggested word count for this section is 900 words give or take 10%.


know

What do you know and what do you need to know?

There is a wide range of things that you might want to know, of course, and a list was provided on the general guide to this area.
Now you need to select from that list those areas which are important to your learner(s).
Here are two examples:

Example 1

You are focused on an examination group preparing for the IELTS Academic Format and intending to go on to study at an institute of Higher Education in the UK (a popular choice).

The first thing to note is that learners will have a common set of needs arising from the nature of the examination.  The IELTS website describes the function of the examination as

The Academic format is, broadly speaking, for those who want to study or train in an English-speaking university or Institutions of Higher and Further Education.  Admission to undergraduate and postgraduate courses is based on the results of the Academic test.
(https://www.ielts.org/test_takers_information/what_is_ielts/academic_or_general_training.aspx.  This site also gives you extensive information concerning the nature of the test items and the marking scheme, of course.)

We can already make a few judgements concerning the learners' needs because we know two crucial things already.  What are they?  Click here when you have an answer to that.

This is not the place to plan an IELTS / EAP course for you so there won't be a list here of the areas you need to investigate further.
However, the general point here is that before you conduct a needs analysis you already know what to look for because the aims of the course have been clearly set out.  In this example, the aims are:

  1. To prepare the learners for the demands of the IELTS examination
  2. To prepare the learners to function successfully in an English-medium academic setting and in an English-speaking environment generally

Example 2

You are focused on a mono-lingual (German) General English summer course for teenagers (15-17 years old).  They are coming to the UK for a 2-week, 30-hour language course mixed with some social activities and an excursion programme.  They will stay in a university residence block.

Again, we have three crucial bits of information before we start.  What are they?  Click here when you have an answer.

However, there's a lot we still don't know and will need to find out before the course can be planned.  Make a list of the things you would want to know and then click here to see if you coincide.  Obviously, there's no 'right' answer but, equally obviously, there are certain things which should be on the list.

The moral of all this is to make sure that the aims of the course (its learning outcomes) should be explicit before you conduct a needs analysis in any depth.  That way, you are armed with a short-list of things you need to know and can get on with planning how to find them out.


discover

Finding out

In what follows, the assumption is that you are not in daily contact with the learners and do not have the opportunity to interview them face to face.  The needs analysis will, perforce, be carried out on paper or online.

At this point, you need to refresh your memory concerning the various ways to ask questions that were covered in the general guide to constructing a needs analysis.
There is a guide, almost a mini-course, on this site to doing classroom research (new tab).  It will help you formulate questions and see how to do research that provides usable and objective data.  You are advised to follow that guide.
The trick, if there is one, is to make the question type match the kind of information you are after.  The following uses the two examples above of group types.
See if you can fill in the right-hand side of this table and then click on it to compare the response with your notes.

needs analysis task

Once you have constructed the questionnaire and have got someone else to proofread it for accuracy and lack of ambiguity, you can administer it and analyse the results mathematically.
For Module Three, you will need to draw out the most important results which impinge on course planning, prioritise them and then integrate them into your description of the course, justifying as you go along.

For an example of a basic needs analysis form in PDF format, click here.  Clearly, what you use will have to more sophisticated and better targeted than this little example but the principles are the same.


test

Include diagnostic testing

Part of the Needs Analysis will involve some form of diagnostic testing and you need to refer to the guide to that area (new tab).
The description and rationale for your diagnostic test needs to be included in this section, along with the outcomes of any questionnaires and so on that you have conducted.
The test itself is in the appendix, of course.

If you would like to test yourself very briefly concerning the applicability of some diagnostic testing approaches, click here.


cart and horse

Do not do this!

The Needs analysis comes first.  You cannot design a decent diagnostic test until you have a clear list of what the learners need and why they need the skills or language systems you identify.
Trying to diagnose what you can't describe is not a sane approach to course design.


write

Writing all this up

In the diagram below, the Conclusion section of the needs analysis discussion includes Identify salient outcomes.  This means you must list and prioritise the outcomes of the analysis.  It also means that you need to say what the criteria are that you used to prioritise the needs.
It will help to write two lists:

  1. A list of the essentials along the lines of
    This need is important because (insert the criteria you used to identify this fact) ... and is included in the (insert a clear reference to which part of the course design you are talking about) ... section of the Course Design (see page x).
  2. A list of aims and needs that are less vital along the lines of
    Although the need for (state the need you identify) ... is identifiable from the data, it is not included in the course because (insert criteria [lack of time, not important for the majority of participants, not feasible given the learners' level etc.]) so does not form part of the course targets although it is addressed in (state part of the course design where you address this need, if in fact, you do).

Here's a coherent way of structuring this part of your assignment.  Note the need to insert a discussion section into the heart of the description and how that is differently staged and structured.

na structure


appendix

The appendices are extra

These do not take the place of discussion in the main text.
You need to include:

  1. The questionnaires and any other documentation which informed the Needs Analysis
  2. The diagnostic tests you have conducted
  3. The results of both of the above (a table format is easiest) but the synthesis goes in the main text

You will need to design a diagnostic test of the areas you have identified as being key to the success of the course to establish the learners' current competence.
Go to the guide to testing, assessment and evaluation to see how to do that.  When you are happy that you understand the material there, go on to the guide to how to apply it to Module Three.


review

Review what you have written

This section of the assignment carries 20% of the marks available for the whole assignment so it's important to read through it again when you have finished (or think you have) and check how a reader will react to it.  In particular, will a reader know:

  1. how and why you have targeted your needs analysis
  2. that you have conducted a diagnostic testing procedure after the needs analysis and designed the tests based on the results of it
  3. what your rationale for the design of the diagnostic tests was
  4. what you have prioritised and why

If the answer to any of these questions is No or Maybe, go back and re-write some of the section.

banana skin

Avoid the obvious errors

Examiners' reports contain more or less the same catalogue of weaknesses year after year so be careful to avoid any of the following being levelled at this part of your assignment.
For this section, the most frequently cited problems are:


Test yourself on the contents of this guide.



The Module Three ELT Specialism areas:
Choosing the topic Writing the essay The introduction Needs analysis
Testing Course proposal Module 3 reading list Before you submit