NAMA : Putri komala desi
KELAS : 1EA07
NPM : 17213016
Benefit of study English for management class
KELAS : 1EA07
NPM : 17213016
Benefit of study English for management class
English is the most widely used language in the
world. It is spoken by around four hundred million people. Along with its proud
status as the top first language, it is extensively used as a second language
across the globe. For those wishing to study the subject further, for example
to A level or degree level standard, it is naturally assumed that an excellent
level of written and spoken English will already have been attained. In these
higher level courses you will be studying the great literary classics: you will
perusethe Elizabethan period, when English prose went through such a
transformation. The plays of Shakespeare, Marlowe and Webster will be studied.
Later on you may read Milton, and Dryden; and then the romantic poets such as
Shelley and Byron. In this manner of learning and studying, you will be tracing
the genesis of the language itself: how modern English came to be as it is.
From Chaucer down to Joyce, you will see how the English language, largely due
to the expansion of the empire from the seventeenth century onwards, reached
out and appropriated aspects of other languages. Thanks to this assimilation of
multifarious other tongues, English contains a staggering vocabulary. The
complete oxford English dictionary lists well over 250,000 words; and this is
excluding many more thousand scientific, technical, and slang terms. Neologisms
are being freshly formed all the time. English is a living language.
The premise here being discussed is not the noble
nature, or the global proliferation of English; the questions at hand are the
reasons for studying it further. If you are considering studying English at
degree level, you must be already aptly skilled in the language. There are many
who have a love of English literature – a love of the language, and a deep
seated fascination with those past masters (male and female), who by strength
of character, and linguistic virtuosity, have left such an indelible imprint,
that but a few lines of their oeuvre is all it takes to identify them. Their
style is their character: their voice lives on. Buildings may crumble, seeming
adamantine structures fall – the acropolis shall slowly turn to dust under the
scorching Greek sunshine; the pyramids erode away by scarifying, wind blown
sand; but the words of their times, the stories and histories of their era
shall live on. The study of English literature will bring to life a history
filled with drama and intrigue: Edward Gibbon’s great work chartingof the
decline and fall of the Roman Empire – TobiasSmollett’s history of England
–Shakespeare’s history plays. These great works bring the past back to life. A
good curriculum will likely unearth great passages you were ignorant of,
exposing and enriching you with cultural artefacts you would otherwise have
been bereft of. This is part of the prize that studying English to a higher
level will afford you: you will become a more cultured individual.
The study of English is a protean activity – it
will lead you into the realm of history through the study of the authors just
mentioned (and many more); it will inculcate you into the realm of philosophy,
via the doctrines and treatises of Berkley, Bacon and Lock; while social
criticism and artistic appreciation will be traversed by the inimitable
Hazlitt; and contemporary periodicals shall provide a sociological testament,
plus a host of miscellaneous information, from music to medicine. Literature is
the gateway to culture: for as the word binds society together through comity
and common discourse, so it leaves a fossilized record of the great flux of
civilisation; and culture is an amalgam of past modes seen through present
mores. This cultural cache is a resource you will be able to draw from all your
life. It will both enhance and enrich your life, enabling you to form aesthetic
judgements and conceptual connections across a spectrum of life experiences. By
studying English literature you will be in possession of a wide range of social
and cultural knowledge. This will be a resource, an encyclopaedia you’ll carry
all your life. Your vocabulary will be broadened by your studies, as will your
writing abilities be enhanced, and reading practices improved. European
literature of past centuries will be your library. Others may be confined to
pluck the latest celebrity confessional ghost written slice ofpuerile prose off
the shop shelves: your choice of reading shall be five hundred years of
literature. From a purely academic perspective, English A level is valued very
highly by university admission boards. With scholastic gradings being diluted
by such nebulous subjects as media studies and fashion, the value of core
subjects like English have increased in value. Whatever the discipline you wish
to pursue at university, the possession of English A level can only be
beneficial. Employers too will be impressed by the inclusion of this subject.
With so many school leavers being unskilled in the construction of basic letter
writing skills, employers are becoming more and more exasperated by this
paucity of basic abilities. An English qualification will likely be extremely
reassuring to any prospective employer. An English degree can open the doorway
to a myriad of different professions. Journalism is a fascinating occupation,
and one that demands the possession of felicitous grace with the language. Any
sort of creative writing position will likely necessitate English being studied
to a higher level. Scripting, article writing, editing – these are all dynamic,
artistic jobs, with a finite number of positions facing severe competition. The
ownership of the skills an English degree imparts cannot be feigned: these are
assets, vital additions to your arsenal, in the fight to find the right job.
English is the language of the business world. With financial centres in New
York, Wall Street and London, the language of finance is English. If you wish
to enter the financial sector, a higher qualification in its language will be
valuable indeed. Even if your aim is not one of employment, and you are simply
fascinated with English literature for it’s own sake, the studies will be a
delight. You will be in the company of teachers with a real passion and
knowledge of the subject, and will meet many people with similar interests to
your own.
References:
- Sentences: Simple, Compound, and Complex. http://www2.ivcc.edu/rambo/eng1001/sentences.htm. Accessed on September 29, 2012.
- Types of Sentences: Simple, Compound, Complex,
and Compound-Complex. http://www.ucmo.edu/ae/writing/documents/TYPESOFSENTENCES.pdf. Accessed on September 29, 2012. - Compound Sentences. http://www.esc.edu/online-writing-center/resources/grammar/ways-structure-sentences/compound-sentences/. Accessed on September 29, 2012.
- Sentence Types. http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/573/02/. Accessed on September 29, 2012.
- Kinds of Sentences and Their Punctuation. http://www.towson.edu/ows/sentences.htm. Accessed on September 29, 2012.
- Syntax – English sentence structure. http://esl.fis.edu/learners/advice/syntax.htm. Accessed on September 29, 2012.
- www.yanwariyanidwi.wordpress.com
- http://www.tutorhunt.com/articles/studying-english.asp
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