Friday, April 4, 2014

Articles showing breakthrough


  1. NASA giving away code for free - wired.com
  2. 5 Year old finds a backdoor to XBOX - 10news.com

Monday, February 17, 2014

Certificate in Spoken English


The Spoken English Certificate Course aims to enhance students’ ability to speak with accuracy and fluency in a variety of social and academic situations as well as enhance the participants’ understanding of spoken discourse. It provides motivating activities and meaningful input to maximize communication, increase confidence and stimulate learning. Activities include presentation skills, pronunciation drills, fluency exercises and conversational English.

Module 1: Enhancing Pronunciation Skills
This module is intended to improve the pronunciation of the participants. It will train them to pronounce basic English sounds and help them speak the English language with a knowledge of phonetics word stress, intonation etc.
Module 2: Development of Oral Skills
This module is intended to improve and enrich students’ proficiency in spoken English by enabling them to use vocabulary to express ideas about variety of subjects like travel, personal health, food sports etc. topics to be covered are: casual conversations (greetings, providing and obtaining information), expressing feelings and emotions, introduction to public speaking, handling job interviews, discussions on current issues.
Module 3: Integrated Skills Practice
This module is intended to give students practice in the integrated skills of speaking, listening and reading with main emphasis on speaking skills.

ENGLISH SYLLABUS

Syllabus—MA English
Semester I
Study Skills: The course develops practical skills and strategies to improve academic performances such as: note-taking strategies, presentation skills, formal writing, critical thinking. It will give an introduction to the history of English literature
Classical Poetry
Chaucer: General Prologue.
Wyatt: The Long Love that in my Thought doth Harbour, Whoso List to Hunt, They Flee From Me, I Know where is an Hind, Madam, withouten many Words,
Surrey: My Friend the things that do attain love, Love that doth reign and live within my thought, Wyatt Resteth Here
Elizabethan Drama
William Shakespeare: Othello, The Winter’s Tale
Christopher Marlowe: Doctor Faustus
Greek/Classical Literature
Aristotle: Poetics
Sophocles: Oedipus Rex
Seventeenth Century Poetry
John Donne: Love and Divine Poems
John Milton: Paradise Lost (Books I/IX)
Eighteen Century Novel
Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice
Anthony Trollope: Barchester Towers

Syllabus—MA English
Semester II
Sixteenth Century Prose
Francis Bacon: Of Truth, Of Death, Of Revenge, Of Adversity, Of Simulation and Dissimulation, Of Parents and Children, Of Great Place, Of Nobility, Of Superstition, Of Friendship, Of Ambition, Of Studies
Eighteenth Century Satire
Alexander Pope: The Rape of the Lock
Jonathan Swift: Gulliver’s Travels
Nineteenth Century Romantic Poetry
William Blake: Auguries of Innocence, The Sick Rose, London, A Poison Tree, A Divine Image, From Milton: And Did those Feet, Holy Thursday (I), Holy Thursday (II), The Tyger, Ah Sun-flower
S.T. Coleridge: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan, Dejection: An Ode
John Keats: Hyperion Book—I, Ode to Autumn, Ode to Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn,
Nineteenth Century Drama
Anton Chekov: The Cherry Orchard
Henrik Ibsen: Hedda Gabler
Oscar Wilde: The Importance of Being Earnest
Twentieth Century Novel
James Joyce: The Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man
Virginia Woolf: To the Lighthouse
Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness
Victorian Novel
George Eliot: Adam Bede
Charles Dickens: A Tale of Two Cities
Thomas Hardy: The Return of the Native



Syllabus MA English
Semester III
Twentieth Century Criticism & Critical Theory
Raymond Williams: Modern Tragedy
Catherine Belsey: Critical Practice, Practical Application of Critical Theory
Twentieth Century Prose
Bertrand Russell: Unpopular Essays
Edward Said: Introduction to Culture and Imperialism
Seamus Heaney: The Redress of Poetry
American poetry
Adrienne Rich: Diving into the Wreck, Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers, Final Notation, Gabriel
Sylvia Plath: Ariel, Morning Song, Poppies in October, The Bee Meeting, The Arrival of the Bee Box
Richard Wilbur: Still Citizen Sparrow, After The Last Bulletin, Marginalia
John Ashbery: Melodic Train, The Painter
American Drama
Eugene O’Neil: Mourning Becomes Electra
Arthur Miller: The Crucible
American Fiction
Ernest Hemingway: For Whom the Bell Tolls
Toni Morrison: Jazz
Research Methodology: MLA Formatting, Documentation styles, Avoiding Plagiarism, Research Paper Writing Techniques

Syllabus MA English
Semester IV
Twentieth Century Poetry
Philip Larkin: Mr. Bleaney, Church Going, Ambulances, MCMXIV 1914
Seamus Heaney: Personal Helicon, The Tollund Man, A Constable Calls, Toome Road, Casting and Gathering
Ted Hughes: The Thought-fox, Chances, That Morning, Full Moon and Little Frieda
Postcolonial Fiction
Ahmed Ali: Twilight in Delhi
Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart
Modern drama
Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot
Bertolt Bretch: Life of Galileo
Edward Bond: The Sea
Specialization Courses:
Linguistics: Phonology, Morphology, Semantics, Stylistics
Literature Around the World: An Anthology of Poetry
Brian Friel: Translations
Frederico Garcia Lorca: The House of Bernarda Alba
Alexander Solzhenitsyn: One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Research Paper
(Approximately 10,000 words)

MPhil Programme
This two year programme aims at a comprehensive survey of British, American, Continental, and European and Postcolonial literatures in English.
Semesters


Semester I

§  Research Methodology
§  Critical Theory
§  Twentieth Century British Literature ?? (Poetry)
§  Tragedy
Semester II



§  Stylistics
§  European Literature ?? (Drama)
§  American Literature
§  Comedy

Semester III

§  Postcolonial Literature
§  South Asian Literature
§  Optional (any two)
§  Mid-Eastern Literature
§  Literature in Translation
§  Travel Writing
§  Feminist Literature

Semester IV
§  Thesis

Students must obtain a 2.50 CGPA for the award of the MPhil degree. Only those students who score a 3.00 CGPA may opt for the PhD Programme.


PhD Programme
Upon admission Doctoral students in English are required to undertake 18 credit hours of course work in areas such as Research Methodology, Qualitative Research Writing Skills, Critical Theory, Electronic Resource Management and Research Methods of English Studies. After completion of the course work the student undertakes to write a PhD dissertation of 40,000 to 120,000 words which is an extended scholarly work that makes an original and substantial contribution to the understanding of the its subject. The MLA documentation style is followed. The dissertation is evaluated by two external foreign experts from academically advanced countries as well as internal local examiners. Before submission of the thesis the student is also required to publish at least one research paper from his/her dissertation.
  

Postgraduate Diploma in English Language Teaching (PGD ELT)

The Department offers a one year Postgraduate Diploma in ELT. This is a one year evening programme designed for in-service college/school/university teachers as well as for those fresh graduates who intend to take up teaching as a profession. Classes are held thrice a week from 3-5 p.m. in the English Department. The admissions to this programme are completed by December and the new session begins in January every year.
The programme aims at helping English language teachers to acquire the competence needed for a change of approach from current outdated teaching practice to the application of modern strategies of teaching English. Students are required to participate in group study projects, make presentations and also write a thesis in the final semester.

Postgraduate Diploma in English Language Teaching (PGD ELT)
Semester I
Grammar (3 Credit Hours)
Prescriptive and descriptive grammar, the role of grammar in language teaching, structure, word order, classification of word classes, noun and the noun phrase (definition and structure—categories, pre and post modification), verb and verb phrase (tense and aspect, modality, conditions), adjectives, determiners and numerals, adverbs, prepositions, and types of clauses.
Error analysis (3 Credit Hours)
Types of errors, psycholinguistic theories, process of error analysis, error analysis, and second language learning/teaching, correction and remedial work
Psycholinguistics (3 Credit Hours)
The psychology of learning (behaviourism, mentalism) cognitive psychology and humanistic psychology language acquisition and language development in children. Second language acquisition: theories and problems, individual differences in language learning memory process in language learning learner strategies.
Sociolinguistics (3 Credit Hours)
The scope of sociolinguistics, language standardization, dialects, and varieties, code switching, diglossia, language and culture/language and gender, ESL in Pakistan: historical factors, lanaguge policy, bilingualism, language planning and education.
CALL (Computer Assisted Language Learning) (3 Credit Hours)
Introduction to CALL, methodology, integrating CALL into a study programme, introduction to NBLT (network-based language teaching), introduction to computer hardware/software, internet, using text tools in the classroom, exploiting world wide web resources, overview of computer based teaching/learning resources, evaluation/redesigning of internet based classroom resources.


Postgraduate Diploma in English Language Teaching (PGD ELT)
Semester II
ELT Methodology & Skills (3 Credit Hours)
Principal methods of second language teaching and their assessment, teaching of the four skills, modern methods of teaching, listening and speaking skills, micro teaching reading and the sub-skills of reading, teaching writing skills: controlled practice, guided writing and free writing.
Phonetics & Phonology (3 Credit Hours)
Introduction to phonetics: consonants and vowels of English, articulators, stress, intonation (word and connected speech), teaching pronunciation.
Research Methodology (3 Credit Hours)
Introduction to research, methodology: qualities and quantitative, types of research, approaches to educational research, interpretation and analysis of data, introduction to MLA/APA documentation styles
Semester III
Syllabus Design (3 Credit Hours)
Various models of syllabus design: structural, functional, notional, situational, process etc. Course design related to Pakistan’s educational needs, English for academic studies, English for science and technology, material design, adaptation/evaluation of materials, designing supplementary materials, management of large classes
Language Testing (3 Credit Hours)
Aims and characteristics, types of tests and their function: diagnostic tests, proficiency tests, performance tests and achievement tests, characteristics of a good language test: validity, and practicability, testing listening comprehension, oral performance, reading and writing, relating language testing and language learning/teaching.
Teaching Practice/Microteaching (6 Credit Hours)
Lesson planning, observation and evaluation of teaching through micro teaching.
Dissertation (3 Credit Hours)
Each student is required to submit a thesis of 30,000 to 40,000 words exploring significant ELT issues with specific reference to the Pakistani situation.

Diploma in Linguistics
Linguistics is the systematic study of the elements, and the principles of their combination and organization in language. The English Department offers a Diploma in Linguistics to promote the understanding of concepts and techniques of linguistic analysis and the ways in which language is used. It covers all modern linguistic movements.
The one year Diploma is a fully instructional evening programme with classes held thrice a week from 3-5 p.m. in the English Department. Admissions are completed in December and classes begin in January every year. Students are encouraged to participate in workshops and group study projects. The most notable addition is a course on ear training and performance. There is a practical examination in General Linguistics. 

Diploma in Linguistics
Semester I
Fundamental to Linguistics (4 Credit Hours)
Introduction to linguistic terms, principles on which linguistics is based, characteristics of linguistics, an inquiry into the nature of language, major themes in linguistics, branches of linguistics: synchronic and diachronic linguistics, general and descriptive linguistics, applied linguistics, historical linguistics, comparative linguistics.
Morphology and Syntax (3 Credit Hours)
Morphology: Morpheme and morph, inflectional morphology, derivational morphology, morphological processes, items and arrangement model.
Syntax: Immediate constituent analysis, phrase structure grammar, transformational—generative grammar.
Semantics (3 Credit Hours)
Philosophical semantics, structural semantics, major theories in semantics, behaviorists semantics, semantics field, speech acts, componential analysis.
Lexicography (3 Credit Hours)
How to build up dictionaries, types of dictionaries: monolingual dictionaries, bilingual dictionaries, learner dictionaries, and thesaurus.

Semester II
Modern Movements in Linguistics & Semiotics (4 Credit Hours)


Structuralism, functionalism, generativism, behaviourism
Phonetics and Phonology (4 Credit Hours)


Articulatory Phonetics: Vocal organs, places and manner of articulation, vowels and vowel like articulations, consonants.
Acoustic Phonetics: Sound waves, acoustic measurements, spectrographic analysis.
Segmental Phonology: The phoneme as a solution, phonemic analysis and restricting conditions, phonological rules.
Supra Segmental Phonology: Intonation, syllables, length, pitch, motor theory.
Interdisciplinary Areas in Linguistics: (3 Credit Hours)
Psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, ethnolinguistics.
Diploma in Linguistics
Semester III
Stylistics (3 Credit Hours)
Register: tenor, mode, domain/analysis of text at the phonological, lexical, syntactic, semantic levels/standards of texuality/metrics.
Pragmatics (3 Credit Hours)
Principles of pragmatics/speech acts.
Practical in General Linguistics, Ear Training and Performance (6 Credit Hours)

Certificate in Spoken English
The Spoken English Certificate Course aims to enhance students’ ability to speak with accuracy and fluency in a variety of social and academic situations as well as enhance the participants’ understanding of spoken discourse. It provides motivating activities and meaningful input to maximize communication, increase confidence and stimulate learning. Activities include presentation skills, pronunciation drills, fluency exercises and conversational English. This is a three month course and the class timings are from 5-7 p.m. three days a week held in the Department of English.
Module 1: Enhancing Pronunciation Skills
This module is intended to improve the pronunciation of the participants. It will train them to pronounce basic English sounds and help them speak the English language with a knowledge of phonetics word stress, intonation etc.
Module 2: Development of Oral Skills
This module is intended to improve and enrich students’ proficiency in spoken English by enabling them to use vocabulary to express ideas about variety of subjects like travel, personal health, food sports etc. topics to be covered are: casual conversations (greetings, providing and obtaining information), expressing feelings and emotions, introduction to public speaking, handling job interviews, discussions on current issues.
Module 3: Integrated Skills Practice
This module is intended to give students practice in the integrated skills of speaking, listening and reading with main emphasis on speaking skills.

MA

Syllabus—MA English
Semester I
Study Skills: The course develops practical skills and strategies to improve academic performances such as: note-taking strategies, presentation skills, formal writing, critical thinking. It will give an introduction to the history of English literature
Classical Poetry
Chaucer: General Prologue.
Wyatt: The Long Love that in my Thought doth Harbour, Whoso List to Hunt, They Flee From Me, I Know where is an Hind, Madam, withouten many Words,
Surrey: My Friend the things that do attain love, Love that doth reign and live within my thought, Wyatt Resteth Here
Elizabethan Drama
William Shakespeare: Othello, The Winter’s Tale
Christopher Marlowe: Doctor Faustus
Greek/Classical Literature
Aristotle: Poetics
Sophocles: Oedipus Rex
Seventeenth Century Poetry
John Donne: Love and Divine Poems
John Milton: Paradise Lost (Books I/IX)
Eighteen Century Novel
Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice
Anthony Trollope: Barchester Towers

Syllabus—MA English
Semester II
Sixteenth Century Prose
Francis Bacon: Of Truth, Of Death, Of Revenge, Of Adversity, Of Simulation and Dissimulation, Of Parents and Children, Of Great Place, Of Nobility, Of Superstition, Of Friendship, Of Ambition, Of Studies
Eighteenth Century Satire
Alexander Pope: The Rape of the Lock
Jonathan Swift: Gulliver’s Travels
Nineteenth Century Romantic Poetry
William Blake: Auguries of Innocence, The Sick Rose, London, A Poison Tree, A Divine Image, From Milton: And Did those Feet, Holy Thursday (I), Holy Thursday (II), The Tyger, Ah Sun-flower
S.T. Coleridge: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan, Dejection: An Ode
John Keats: Hyperion Book—I, Ode to Autumn, Ode to Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn,
Nineteenth Century Drama
Anton Chekov: The Cherry Orchard
Henrik Ibsen: Hedda Gabler
Oscar Wilde: The Importance of Being Earnest
Twentieth Century Novel
James Joyce: The Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man
Virginia Woolf: To the Lighthouse
Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness
Victorian Novel
George Eliot: Adam Bede
Charles Dickens: A Tale of Two Cities
Thomas Hardy: The Return of the Native

Syllabus MA English
Semester III
Twentieth Century Criticism & Critical Theory
Raymond Williams: Modern Tragedy
Catherine Belsey: Critical Practice, Practical Application of Critical Theory
Twentieth Century Prose
Bertrand Russell: Unpopular Essays
Edward Said: Introduction to Culture and Imperialism
Seamus Heaney: The Redress of Poetry
American poetry
Adrienne Rich: Diving into the Wreck, Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers, Final Notation, Gabriel
Sylvia Plath: Ariel, Morning Song, Poppies in October, The Bee Meeting, The Arrival of the Bee Box
Richard Wilbur: Still Citizen Sparrow, After The Last Bulletin, Marginalia
John Ashbery: Melodic Train, The Painter
American Drama
Eugene O’Neil: Mourning Becomes Electra
Arthur Miller: The Crucible
American Fiction
Ernest Hemingway: For Whom the Bell Tolls
Toni Morrison: Jazz
Research Methodology: MLA Formatting, Documentation styles, Avoiding Plagiarism, Research Paper Writing Techniques

Syllabus MA English
Semester IV
Twentieth Century Poetry
Philip Larkin: Mr. Bleaney, Church Going, Ambulances, MCMXIV 1914
Seamus Heaney: Personal Helicon, The Tollund Man, A Constable Calls, Toome Road, Casting and Gathering
Ted Hughes: The Thought-fox, Chances, That Morning, Full Moon and Little Frieda
Postcolonial Fiction
Ahmed Ali: Twilight in Delhi
Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart
Modern drama
Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot
Bertolt Bretch: Life of Galileo
Edward Bond: The Sea
Specialization Courses:
Linguistics: Phonology, Morphology, Semantics, Stylistics
Literature Around the World: An Anthology of Poetry
Brian Friel: Translations
Frederico Garcia Lorca: The House of Bernarda Alba
Alexander Solzhenitsyn: One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Research Paper
(Approximately 10,000 words)

Sunday, February 16, 2014

K-2

K-2
Mathematics:
Pre-number concept
Comparison
1.      Bigger-smaller, Longer-shorter, Biggest-smallest, Longest-shortest, Thicker-thinner, Higher-Lower, Highest-Lowest
2.      Capacity: More-Less
3.      Weight: Heavier-Lighter
4.      Concepts to be made clear by using concrete material, pictures and real objects.
Sets
1.      Intuitive concept of sets and members using concrete material and pictures, similar and dissimilar members.
2.      (1-1) matching concept of as many as, more or less by using pictures and concrete material.
3.      Concept of Empty set
Whole numbers and numerals
Natural Numbers (Counting Numbers)
1.      Introduction of Natural Numbers from 1 … 20 by associating them with the given sets of concrete objects and pictures (Similar/Dissimilar)
2.      Writing numerals from 1…20
3.      Counting members of given sets up to 20 (Concrete objects and pictures)
4.      Ordering numbers from 1 … 10. Writing number names up to ten (names in words).
Shapes
1.      Introduction of similar and dissimilar shapes using pictures of familiar objects and geometric shapes (circle, rectangle, triangle, square)
2.      Patterns of shapes
Fractions
1.      Introduction of one half, using geometric shapes
2.      Introduction of one quarter, using geometric shapes
Operations on whole numbers
Addition
1.      Addition by using combining sets: Use of concrete material and pictures
2.      Addition of two numbers (sum up to 18; Abstract)
Subtraction
1.      Subtraction by partitioning a set use of concrete and pictures
2.      Subtraction of numbers represented by digits (1 to 9; Abstract)
Whole numbers & numerals
1.      Writing numerals from 21 to 50
2.      Writing numbers names up to 20
Concept of Time
Morning, Afternoon, Evening, Night and O’clock
Pre-number concept
1.      Revision of work done in K1-B with enhanced conceptual approach
2.      Comparison of more than 3 objects
3.      Set and its members (Revision and continuation)
4.      1-1 matching and equivalent sets
Whole numbers
1.      Revision of work done in K1-B with enhanced conceptual approach
2.      Ordering numbers from 1 to 20
3.      Introduction of Ray
4.      Writing numerals on rays up to 20
5.      Writing number names up to fifty
6.      Recognition of numerals up to 100
7.      Concept of Empty Set and its linkage with zero
8.      Introduction of Place Value: units and tens up to 50 using concrete material and pictures
9.      Addition and subtraction by using ray
10.   Addition of units and tens, sum up to 50 (without exchange) by using concrete material and pictures
11.   Subtraction of units and tens, up to 50 (without exchange) by using concrete material and pictures
12.   Memorizing number names up to hundred
13.   Multiplication of single digit numbers with answers up to 50 (concrete material and pictures)
Shapes
1.      Circle, rectangle, triangle, square, oval and corresponding regions identification by showing such shapes and introducing the term ‘region’
2.      Introduction of locus as path traced by a moving point. Open and closed shapes (Recognition)
Fractions
1.      Introduction of symbols 1 / 2 and 1 /4

2.      Introduction of the concept and symbols for the fractions 1 / 3, 2 / 3, 2 / 4 and 3 / 4
3.      (Demonstration by colouring shapes showing such fractions)
4.      Fractions associated with given shapes. Colouring the portions of the shapes showing above fractions.
Time
1.      Reading and telling time, O’clock and Half past
2.      Names of the days of the week; 1 week = 7 days
3.      Names of the months (solar calendar)
Money
1.      Introduction of currency notes … Rs. 5, Rs. 10, Rs. 50, Rs. 100 and Coins: Rs. 1 and Rs. 2
Shopping
1.      Buying and selling objects by selecting the right amount of money
English:
Comprehension skills (Oral & written)
1.      Simple inferential comprehension whereby the child needs to think of possible reasons why something occurs, i.e., to analyze, reasons, “read between lines”/interpret a picture or description
2.      Finishing sentences by filling in spaces with suitable words
3.      Deciding if a statement is true or false (yes or no, selecting the right word, etc.)
Writing/language skills
1.      Basic vocabulary and correct spellings (alphabet recognition/sequence/sounds/vowels/rhyming words/naming words/adjectives, etc.)
2.      Writing simple, meaningful sentences with given words/given instructions (sentences, imaginative, sequencing a story)
3.      Writing a short description on a given topic
Reasoning:
1.      Logical problem-solving
Urdu:
1.      Oxford urdu kaida – Jugg Magg
2.      Nisabee kitab – AAO Nahalo
3.      Amlee kitab—AAO Nahalo
4.      Haroof-e-tahajee kee pehchan –
5.      Zakheera ilfaaz kee mashkain—
6.      Jorr torr—
7.      Torr jorr—
8.      Imla aur khalee jaga pur karain—
9.      Jamlay banana—
10.   Jamloon mein grammar ka istamaal—
11.   Aasaan aur makamal jumlay banana—
12.   Phaloo aur sabzeeyoon kaa naam—
13.   Gintee Urdu—
14.   Tafheem—
15.   Jasim kay hasay—
16.   Rungoon kay naam—

17.   Tasweery kahanee likhnaa

K-3

K-3
Mathematics:
Pre-number
1.      Reading and writing numerals up to 1000
2.      Writing number names up to hundred
3.      Introduction of hundreds
4.      Arranging numbers (before, after, between)
5.      Introduction of Ordinal Numbers up to 10
6.      Greater and less (use of symbols >,<)
7.      Ascending and descending order up to 99
Addition and Subtraction
1.      Addition up to 99 (without and with exchange by using concrete and pictures)
2.      Addition tables up to 9+9=18
3.      Vertical addition (without and with exchange) up to 99; (Abstract)
4.      Subtraction up to 99 (without and with exchange by using concrete & pictures)
5.      Subtraction tables. Vertical subtraction (without and with exchange up to 99)
6.      Introduction of commutative property of addition by using concrete material, picture and ‘abstract’
7.      Word problems involving addition and subtraction
Money
1.      Shopping up to Rs. 99
2.      Introduction of currency notes: Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000
Multiplication
1.      Multiplication tables (2,3,4 and 5)
2.      Multiplication of single digit numbers (product up to 45) by using concrete, pictures and table (abstract)
3.      Introduction of commutative property of multiplication by using concrete, pictures and table abstract
4.      Multiplication: one number 2,3,4 or 5 and the second a two digit number (product up to 99)
Division
1.      Introduction of the concept of division as equal distribution and equal sharing by using concrete material and pictures (without remainder)
2.      Long division without or with remainder (divisors 2,3,4 or 5) and dividend up to 50 (abstract)
3.      Completing number sequences
4.      Odd and even number up to 100
Shapes
1.      Revision and further knowledge of the following shapes: square, circle, rectangle, triangle, and related regions
2.      Introduction of the terms edges, corners and boundaries of regions
3.      Concept and introduction of the terms locus, curve, open and closed curves, straight locus and line segment. Line segment as the shortest path (locus) between two points
Fractions
1.      Introduction of fractions (only) with denominators up to 9 by showing cut-outs of regions and coloured parts of regions. To introduce terms such as halves, thirds, quarters (fourths), … ,  ninths
Time
1.      Telling and reading time (complete)
2.      1 day = 24 hours, 1 week = 7 days
Calendar
Names of solar months and number of days in different months
English:
Text Books (in current use):
1.      Primary word work (Introductory book)
2.      Primary grammar and punctuation (introductory book)
3.      Primary comprehension (introductory book)
Topics:
1.      Reading
2.      Dictation
3.      Comprehension
4.      Picture composition
5.      Nouns
6.      Verbs
7.      Adjectives
8.      Pronouns
9.      Preposition
10.   Full stop
11.   Question marks
12.   Capital letters
13.   Conjunctions (and & but)
14.   Singular and plurals
15.   Rhyming words
16.   Words/opposites
17.   Jumbled words/sentences
18.   Alphabetical order
19.   Vowels and consonants
20.   Syllables
21.   Compound words
22.   Speech bubbles
23.   Recipe/users’ guide
24.   Caption for a picture
25.   Letter writing and creative writing (writing on a given topics)
Urdu:
1.      Kitab: amlee kitab
2.      Tamaam asbaaq kee parhai
3.      Mushkill ilfaaz kee mashq
4.      Ilfaaz ko tornaa aur jornaa
5.      Jamlay muqammal karna
6.      Imla
7.      Khalee jaga pur karain
8.      Wahid jama aur jamlay banana
9.      Tasweeree Khaka
10.   Tafheem
11.   Dinnoon kay naam
12.   Sabzeeon aur phooloon kay naam
13.   Rungoon kay naam
14.   Ilfaaz kee maddad say tasweery khaka mukamal karain

15.   Muzmoon nigaaree