User:Eurodog/sandbox9
name | data | more data |
---|---|---|
Bruce R. Bartlett | Reaganomics: Supply Side Economics in Action | (1981) |
Harold O. J. Brown | The reconstruction of the Republic | (1977) |
Frank G. Carrington | Neither Cruel nor Unusual – The Case for Capital Punishment | (1978) |
- Bruce R Bartlett, Reaganomics : supply side economics in action (1981)
- Harold O J Brown, The reconstruction of the Republic (1977)
- Frank G. Carrington, Neither Cruel nor Unusual – The Case for Capital Punishment (1978)
- John Alexander Carroll & Odie B Faulk, Home of the brave : a patriot's guide to American history (1976)
- Bernard Lande Cohen, Law without Order: Capital Punishment and the Liberals (1970)
- Benjamin Colby, 'Twas a Famous Victory: Deception and Propaganda in War with Germany (1975)
- Michael Davies, Liturgical revolution. Part 2, Pope John's council (1977)
- Lee Edwards, You can make the difference (1980)
- Finis Farr, Fair enough : the life of Westbrook Pegler (1975)
- William F. Gavin, Street corner conservative (1975)
- Michele Stenehjem Gerber, An American first: John T. Flynn and the America First Committee (1976)
- Henry Hazlitt, A new Constitution now (1974)
- Henry Hazlitt, Economics in one lesson (1979)
- Bruce Herschensohn, The gods of antenna (1976)
- Victor Hicken, The world is coming to an end!: An irreverent look at modern doomsayers (1975)
- Thomas J Holt, Total investing (1976)
- Hal A Huggins, Why raise ugly kids? : fulfill your child's health and happiness potential (1981)
- Peter N James, Soviet Conquest from Space (1974)
- Anthony Kubek, The Red China papers: What Americans Deserve to know about U.S.-Chinese relations (1975)
- Donald Lambro, The conscience of a young conservative (1976)
- Thomas A Lane, The breakdown of the old politics (1974)
- Albert Lee, Slumlord! The true story of the man who is beating America's biggest problem (1976)
- William Lester, Morality, anyone? (1975)
- Tibor R. Machan, The pseudo-science of B. F. Skinner (1974)
- H L Mencken, A gang of pecksniffs: and other comments on newspaper publishers, editors and reporters (1975)
- Thomas Steven Molnar, Authority and its enemies (1976)
- Gary North, None Dare Call It Witchcraft (1976)
- Alexander Perry Paris, The coming credit collapse: an update for the 1980s (1980)
- Kevin P. Phillips, The Emerging Republican Majority (1969)
- John Henry Newman & Charles Frederick Harrold, A Newman treasury. Selections from the prose works (1975)
- Murray Newton Rothbard & Leonard P Liggio, A new land, a new people: the American colonies in the seventeenth century (1975)
- Murray Newton Rothbard & Leonard P Liggio, Conceived in liberty (1975)
- Murray Newton Rothbard, Advance to revolution, 1760-1775 (1976)
- Craig Schiller, The (guilty) conscience of a conservative (1978)
- Phyllis Schlafly & Chester Charles Ward, Kissinger on the couch (1975)
- Irwin A Schiff, The biggest con: how the government is fleecing you (1976)
- Harry D Schultz, Panics & crashes : How you can make money out of them (1980)
- Robert A Shakman, Poison-proof your body! : Food, pollution, and your health (1980)
- Antony C. Sutton, Wall Street and FDR (1975)
- Robert B Taylor, Doctor Taylor's guide to healthy skin for all ages (1974)
- Ralph de Toledano, Hit and run; the rise - and fall? – of Ralph Nader (1975)
- Jerome Tuccille, Who's afraid of 1984? (1975)
- Charlotte Twight, America's emerging Fascist economy (1975)
- Wayne Valis, The Future under President Reagan (1981)
- Ludwig von Mises, A Critique of interventionism: inquiries into the economic policy and the economic ideology of the present (1977)
- Richard Shaw Wheeler, Pegans in the pulpit (1974)
- James R. Whelan, Allende, death of a Marxist dream (1981)
- Victor P Whitney, How to beat the money-grabbers: the essentials of estate planning (1979)
The Intensive English Language Institute (IELI) at the University of North Texas in Denton is the largest intensive English program (IEP) in North Texas, serving international students who wish to learn academic English in preparation for university studies in the United States. Established in 1977, IELI offers English courses at seven levels of proficiency, starting in Pre-1, requiring no English proficiency, and ending in level 6, which meets English language proficiency requirement for admission to UNT without having to take the TOEFL or the IELTS.[1] Additionally, undergraduate students who are enrolled in level 6 can be conditionally admitted to UNT and take six hours of courses for college credit while finishing their level 6 requirements.[1] Organizationally, IELI is a constituent of UNT International (UNT-I), an interdisciplinary unit that serves as an exponent of globalization in higher education and a provider of leadership in support of international teaching, research, and study-abroad initiatives. As of July 2015, IELI has been located in Marquis Hall on the UNT Denton campus.
IELI received its initial accreditation from the Commission on English Language Program Accreditation (CEA) in 2000, making it one of the first programs in the country to do so. In 2015, IELI was reaccredited by CEA accreditation until 2025.[2] IELI is a member in good standing of the University and College Intensive English Programs (UCIEP) and EnglishUSA.[3][4]
The IELI student population consisted of international students from 40 countries in 2016. Most of them attend IELI under F-1 Visa status as full-time students.[2] A full-time course load is two classes per day, Monday through Friday, which amounts to 23 hours of in-class English instruction per week.[1] IELI offers small, student-centered classes, with an average class size of 12 and a maximum class size of 15.[4] The minimum application age is 17 years old.[5] As of 2016, more than 600 IELI alumni are pursuing undergraduate or graduate programs at UNT, and many more are studying or working in the U.S. or in other countries.[2]
IELI instructors have master's degrees in TESOL, Applied Linguistics, Secondary Language Education, or a closely-related field.
IELI offers the following domestic and international programs:
- Fast Track to UNT: Students in this program can complete levels 5 and 6 (16 weeks of instruction) during a single 10-week summer session. Level 4 students with a 73% average may apply. Also, students with a score of at least 55 on the TOEFL iBT or at least 5.5 on the IELTS may apply.[6]
- Pathway Programs: Students in this program can be conditionally admitted to a Master's Degree program in either the College of Business or the College of Merchandising, Hospitality, and Tourism at UNT. Students in this program may begin taking Master's-level courses during their final level at IELI and will remain on their original I-20.[7]
- American Culture and Communication Program (ACCP): A two-week long summer program, the ACCP serves students from ages 15 to 17 year old, offering 16 hours of in-class English instruction as well as experiential learning opportunities including trips to Dallas and Fort Worth and various activities in Denton.[8]
- Passport to the University: This summer program, serving 15- to 17-year-old high school students, focuses on familiarizing students with the admissions processes for American universities. It includes English courses which are taught by UNT faculty, seminars about university admissions, tours of 4 Texas universities, and cultural activities in and around the DFW Metroplex.[9]
- Pronunciation and Accent Reduction: This two-day-per-week evening course is designed to serve non-English speakers who have intermediate to advanced speaking skills, helping them understand and master English pronunciation.[10]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Academic English," Intensive English Language Institute, University of North Texas (retrieved December 21, 2016, via international
.unt .edu /ieli /ieli-academic-english-ieli) - ^ a b c UNT International Annual Report, 2015–2016, University of North Texas, pps. 3 & 8
- ^ "Member Listing," University and College Intensive English Programs (UCIEP) (retrieved December 21, 2016, via www
.uciep .org) - ^ a b "Intensive English Language Institute, UNT," www
.englishusa .org, American Association of Intensive English Programs (retrieved December 21, 2016, via www .englishusa .org) - ^ Listing: "UNT Intensive English Language Institute," Intensive English USA Online, Institute of International Education (retrieved December 21, 2016, via www
.intensiveenglishusa .org) - ^ "Fast Track to UNT," Intensive English Language Institute, University of North Texas (retrieved December 21, 2016, via international
.unt .edu /ieli /intensive-english-language-institute) - ^ "Pathway Programs," Intensive English Language Institute, University of North Texas (retrieved December 21, 2016, via international
.unt .edu /ieli /pathway-programs-through-ieli) - ^ "American Culture and Communication Program," Intensive English Language Institute, University of North Texas (retrieved December 21, 2016, via international
.unt .edu /ieli - ^ "Passport University," Intensive English Language Institute, University of North Texas (retrieved December 21, 2016, via international
.unt .edu /ieli) - ^ "Pronunciation and Accent Reduction," Intensive English Language Institute, University of North Texas (retrieved December 21, 2016, via international
.unt .edu /ieli)