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MEDICAL ENGLISH INTENSIVE TRAINING

Dal 5 all' 8 Novembre 2018

Perché scegliere un corso di Inglese Medico?

La conoscenza della lingua inglese è, in campo medico, un’esigenza sempre più pressante per i professionisti​​

Il corso intensivo è uno degli strumenti più efficaci per imparare, attivare e ricordare quanto appreso.

Tramite questo corso i partecipanti potranno ampliare il proprio vocabolario medico ed effettuare esperienze pratiche tramite simulazioni connesse alla relazione medico – paziente e all’analisi di casi di studio.


Al termine del corso è previsto il rilascio di un attestato di partecipazione​

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Clinical English Intensive Course

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Day 1

Hour 1

Introductions; ice-breakers

Hour 2

Is knowing grammar rules necessary to learn a language? Debunking myths. Accuracy vs. Fluency

Listening Comprehension vs. Reading Comprehension vs. Speaking vs. Writing.  Passive language skills vs. Active language skills

Hour 3

Clinical terminology: bruising, bleeding, injury, wound, gashes, scratches, sores, belching, itching, scars, sprains, joints, etc.

Hour 4

Case study: Mystery diagnosis and patient-doctor role-playing

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Day 2

Hour 1

American English vs. British English vs. Australian English

Understanding a mother-tongue vs. a foreign speaker

Hour 2

Accents vs. Stress vs. Pitch vs. Intonation.  Rise and fall in modulating speech.

Why does singing erase any foreign accent?

Tongue twisters

Hour 3 

Phrasal verbs: break-up, break-down, break-in, to get through to, to come to, to put up with, to put off, etc. A student’s nightmare and  the importance of producing your own examples.

Hour 4

Learning by explaining: the Feynman technique and teaching a Master Class.


Day 3

Hour 1

Understanding English over the phone: how lack of facial cues affects comprehension. Focus is a muscle.

Hour 2

Sectorial languages. Communication vs. information. The body of evidence; clinical terminology. How to describe pain, discomfort, and distress. Symptoms: cough, blurred vision, numbness,  tingling, seizures, wheezing, etc.

Hour 3 

Idiomatic expressions: to beat around the bush, call it a day, pushing up daisies, hit the sack,  once in a blue moon, to feel under the weather, to cut corners, etc.

Hour 4

Case study: Mystery diagnosis and patient-doctor role-playing

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Day 4

Hour 1

The role of repetition in language memorization.  How memories are encoded, stored and retrieved. Visual memory, auditory memory, kinetic memory, fine-motor skills. What’s your method?

Hour 2

False friends: how familiarity can be misleading. Rumor has it, sensible, to pretend, annoying, confrontation, casualty, actually, etc. 

Hour 3 

Recognizing what you already know. Students will be trained in hearing and identifying medical terminology that they already visually know on paper: abscess, dyspnea, supine, etc.

Hour 4

Learning by explaining: the Feynman technique and teaching a Master Class

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