IB English B Course Book Pack (Print Course Book & Enhanced Online Course Book)
IB English B Course Book Pack (Print Course Book & Enhanced Online Course Book)
Features
- Each Course Book pack is made up of 1 full-colour, print textbook and 1 interactive, online textbook
- Address crucial changes to the syllabus structure via in-depth coverage of all 5 prescribed themes and all 5 concepts
- Build sophisticated reading, writing, speaking and listening skills via contemporary, international texts and accompanying activities
- Tackle the new listening component with a wide range of interactive audio exercises, embedded in your digital Course Book
- Develop the transdisciplinary skills central to long-term success with clear links to TOK, CAS and the Extended Essay, and thorough coverage of ATL and language concepts
- Your digital Course Book may be accessed by a single student or teacher, using a printed access card that is sent in the mail. If you are unable to receive a printed access card, please contact Oxford
In the new English Language Acquisition courses (first examinations 2020), learners will develop the cross-cultural skills and global perspectives they will need for studying and working in a complex, multi-cultural world.
English Language Acquisition promotes international mindedness through five overarching themes that place the course content in their global context:
- identities
- experiences
- human ingenuity
- social organisation
- sharing the planet
Structure
When developing our new English B Course Book pack, we based the 10 inquiry-led content chapters on these major five themes in a way that will fully engage both SL and HL learners.
Each chapter poses an overarching research question that provides a starting point for an initial interactive exploration of one specific aspect of Anglophone cultures and peoples.
Theme |
Chapter title |
Research question |
Identity |
Fit for life |
What ideas and images do we associate with a healthy lifestyle? |
Experiences |
Sketching our lives |
How would travelling to or living in another culture affect my worldview? |
Human ingenuity |
Celebrity |
What can we learn about a culture through its artistic expression? |
Social organisation |
Volunteers |
What is the individual’s role in the community? |
Sharing the planet |
Protecting the planet |
What environmental and social issues present challenges to the world and how can these challenges be overcome? |
Identity |
Human rights |
What ethical issues arise from living in the modern world and how do we resolve them? |
Experiences |
Life’s challenges |
Does our past shape our present and our future? |
Human ingenuity |
The impact of scientific Innovation, |
How do developments in science and technology influence our lives? |
Social organisation |
Education for the 21stcentury |
What opportunities and challenges does the 21st century bring to education and work? |
Sharing the planet |
Our rights |
How do language and culture contribute to form our identity? |
These specific inquiries give students of English B multiple opportunities to examine aspects of English speaking cultures, and then allow them to reach insights into global contexts that transcend one specific language or culture.
The global contexts that we have emphasized in the new English B Course Book include:
- Beliefs and values
- Concepts of culture and diversity
- Global engagement
- Identity and cultural diversity
- Intercultural understanding
- Interdependence and globalization
- International-mindedness and global citizenship
- Peace building and conflict resolution
- Social justice and human rights
- Sustainable futures
Each chapter is further subdivided into three inquiry-based sections, each exploring a specific topic and research question for the chapter.
For example, Chapter 3 - Celebrity - explores the syllabus theme of Human Ingenuity. The chapter asks students to inquire into three related topics and research questions: Artistic expression (What qualities do you need to become a successful musician?); Media and communication (How are celebrities affected by fame?) and Entertainment (Why do some fans hero worship some celebrities?).
In this way, the above chapter on Celebrity examines these global issues:
- Beliefs and values
- Concepts of culture and diversity
- Identity and cultural diversity
Moreover, all the global contexts listed above are visited several times over the course of the 10 chapters.
Communicating concepts
Each section of each chapter contains skills-based activities that help students to explore these global contexts while simultaneously developing language competence:
- Input: Reading/Listening
- “Before reading/listening” activities that help students to contextualize and articulate prior experiences or knowledge.
- A listening or reading text that relates directly to the specific topic and research question of each section.
- Listening or reading comprehension exercises with specific references to the concepts and global contexts within the text.
- Processing: Interaction
Follow-up interactive tasks such as discussion, debate and role-play, that reinforce students’ understanding of the global concept and subtopic under investigation and allow students to practice language related to them.
-
Output: Speaking
- Internal assessment (Standard level) – guided analysis of a visual stimulus related to the chapter theme and global context.
- Internal assessment (Higher level) – guided exploration of a literary extract related to the chapter theme and global context.
- Output: Writing
Writing tasks with guidelines and scaffolds to help students write about the chapter theme and global context while also analysing and practicing specific text types.
- Additional personal explorations
Students are also encouraged to make their own further explorations of global contexts while responding to these additional stimuli:
- ‘TOK moments’ to investigate ideas from a TOK perspective.
- ATL sidebars to encourage the development of cross-curricular skills.
- Conceptual understanding sidebars to encourage students to think about the global concepts under review from the point of view of audience, context, variation, meaning, purpose.
Coming to enduring understandings
At the end of each inquiry, students will revisit the research question and in groups, or as a class, reflect on what they have learned, draw conclusions and come to enduring understandings about the world in which they live.
For instance, Chapter 5 concludes by asking: In this chapter what have you learned about today’s environmental and social challenges and the methods of overcoming them?
By encouraging English B students to articulate the life lessons they have learned, students can develop language and communication skills, and also become wiser and more curious about the world in which they live.
Students are then challenged to take their learning to a new, independent phase beyond the chapter by reflecting on the extent and quality of their learning:
- What questions do you still have about the topic?
- What more would you like to know about the subject?
- How can you find answers to these questions?
Putting ideas into practice
Finally, in order to ensure that the lessons learned have practical applications, the concluding section of each chapter, 'Beyond the classroom', invites students to apply the ideas explored in the chapter to students’ own communities and beyond:
- Creativity – using the communication skills developed in the chapter to assist local community causes.
- Service – applying lessons learned to schools CAS projects and Service learning programmes.
- Research – conducting further reading and personal reflection on the issues raised in the chapter.
Using these combined strategies students can engage meaningfully in first Anglophone and then global contexts while simultaneously developing communicative competence in English.
In this way, the English B Course Book pack exploits the use of global contexts to the full and, thereby, supports the IB’s mission “to develop inquiring, knowledgeable and caring young people who help to create a better and more peaceful world through intercultural understanding and respect”.
Edition: 2nd Revised Edition
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Pages: 456 pages
Series: IB Diploma Programme English B SL and HL students
Year: 2018