syllabus
syllabus — 名詞
1. A written document that teachers give to their students at the start of a class,
課程大綱
教師提供的課程內容與要求書面計畫
A written document that teachers give to their students at the start of a class, listing which topics will be taught, what materials will be used, and what assignments or tests are required.
Professor Mathieu handed out the syllabus on the first day and explained the grading.
Mathieu 教授在開學第一天發下課程大綱並說明了評分方式。
collocation: hand out the syllabus (first-day distribution context)
Shanti checked the syllabus to see which chapters would be on the midterm exam.
Shanti 查看課程大綱,確認期中考要考的章節。
collocation: check the syllabus for [information]
The history syllabus lists five required books and two novels for the semester.
這份歷史課大綱列出了這學期五本必讀書籍和兩本小說。
Before registering for the course, Lien asked whether the syllabus included a final project.
Lien 在選課前先問了課程大綱是否包含期末專題。
Both sections of Chemistry 101 follow the same syllabus, so all students take the same exams.
化學 101 的兩個班級使用同一份課程大綱,所以所有學生都考同樣的試題。
- curriculum
broader scope: an entire program of study across a school or department, not just a single course
- course outline
more informal; often a simpler list of topics without grading policies or detailed policies
- schedule
narrower: usually just a list of due dates and exam dates, not the full course plan
文法句型
syllabus + of + [subject]
syllabus + for + [course]
the + syllabus
用法筆記
Commonly distributed at the start of a term. The plural can be either syllabuses (more frequent in everyday use) or syllabi (from Latin, common in academic writing).