E634 Monchi Xiayus Needs Analysis Project Final
E634 Monchi Xiayus Needs Analysis Project Final
E634 Monchi Xiayus Needs Analysis Project Final
Introduction
This is a literature review that was completed prior to a needs analysis project. It fulfills
the requirements of E634 English for Specific Purposes course. When course developers want to
develop an effective course, they should conduct a needs analysis first. It is essential because the
needs analysis examines what the learners know already and what they need to know. It makes
sure the course contains relevant and useful knowledge to learn (Macalister & Nation, 2009,
p.24). Most needs analysis research indicates the importance of looking at tasks required of
learners and to tailor language instruction based on these tasks. Once course developers finish
the needs analysis, they are able to identify students’ learning difficulties, and then they might do
genre analysis to analyze specific language features and structures that students will encounter in
assignments. This literature review researches some methods of analyzing the needs of English
language learners (ELLs). This research helped my colleague and I understand the importance of
Literature review
Students learn English for a purpose which is connected to their future study or career, so
the ESP course-design must be based on what language skills students need. In this case, needs
analysis is very important. Needs analysis should be “concerned with the establishment of
communicative needs and their realizations”, resulting from “an analysis of the communication
in the target situation” (Chambers, 1980, p. 25). Students’ target needs can be found in the target
situation. Course designers can look at the target situation in terms of necessities, lacks and
“Necessities” means what the students have to know in a target situation. For example,
medical staff need to understand medical English; businessmen need to read business letters.
NEEDS ANALYSIS LITERATURE REVIEW 3
Students need special courses to develop skills in their career fields. However, for need analysis,
it’s not enough for a course designer to only focus on necessities. They must know what students
have already learned and know, so they can decide on the necessities students lack. Whether the
students need instruction in finishing tasks in class will depend on how well they can do it
already. Necessities, lacks and wants (what the learners think they need) may all be connected to
or reference a list of items such as competencies and skills that are needed to carry out authentic
tasks which can act as learning goals of a course (Macalister & Nation, 2009, p. 5).
As for the definition of need analysis, there are many ideas. To some extent, needs
analysis is used with needs assessment (Brown, 2016, p. 3). Both of these two terms can be
abbreviated as NA. But what is NA? According to Platt, Platt, and Richards (1992, p.242), “NA
is the process of determining the needs for which a learner requires a language and arranging the
needs according to priorities.” Needs assessments make use of both subjective and objective
information. However, this explanation is not accurate. It leaves out details. Brown (1995, p.36)
indicates that “NA is the systematic collection and analysis of all subjective and objective
information necessary to define and validate defensible curriculum purposes that satisfy
The concept of needs analysis includes these factors (Dudley-Evans & St John, 1998, p.
125):
• Knowledge of how language and skills are used in the target situation.
The ways NA are conducted, and the sources of needs analysis are closely related to each
other. There are five main sources: published/unpublished literature, learners, teachers and
applied linguists, domain experts and triangulated sources (Long, 2005, p. 25). According to
Long (2005, p. 28), triangulation is a procedure frequently used by researchers. “This process
involves the researcher comparing different sets and sources of data with one another.”
Triangulated sources are generally applied in needs analysis. One of the most direct ways to
gather information is an interview. The analysts ask people what they think and do directly.
Having interviewers of the same race, ethnicity, sex, social class and cultural background as
interviewees also increases the likelihood of obtaining good data. “Although time-consuming,
unstructured and open-ended interviews allow in-depth coverage of issues and have the
Course designers should familiarize themselves with the published and unpublished
needs analysis. Numerous written sources are in both the public and private sectors. For
example, in Basturkmen (2010), the author gave four case studies about police English, medical
English, English in academic literacies and visual communication, and English for thesis writing.
These case studies provide fully detailed examples of successful needs analysis that course
Course developers design courses for learners, so they have to know learners’ necessities,
lacks and wants. Perception and actual needs in the discussion of both teachers and students can
NEEDS ANALYSIS LITERATURE REVIEW 5
improve the level of consciousness as to why they are doing and what they are doing (Long,
2005, p.26).
Acoording to Mohammadi & Mousavi (2013), there are ten general stages of needs
analysis. Getting ready to conduct a needs analysis includes defining the purpose of NA,
delimiting the student population, deciding upon approaches and a syllabus, recognizing
constraints, and selecting data collection procedures. Then, analysts should do the NA research:
collect data, analyze data and interpret data. Finally, analysts use the NA resource to determine
objectives and evaluate the NA report. When defining the process of needs analysis, some
perspectives are suggested as the purpose of doing so. Mohammadi and Mousavi (2013) cite
Stufflebeam et al. (1985, p. 1016) to identify four philosophies behind the aim of conducting
NA:
• Discrepancy philosophy: the distance between students’ language requirements and what
• Democratic philosophy: the needs that are preferred by the majority of stakeholders
• Analytic philosophy: given learner characteristics and the learning processes, needs are
• Diagnostic philosophy: like drugs for a prescription, needs are required elements of
There are always possibilities of discrepancies and conflicts between needs, especially between
necessities defined by instructors and the wants demanded by students. This factor should be
taken into account. Jordan (1997, cited in Mohammadi & Mousavi, 2013) suggested a negotiated
NEEDS ANALYSIS LITERATURE REVIEW 6
syllabus and McDonough (1984, cited in Mohammadi & Mousavi, 2013) proposed a goal-
Needs analysis is a significant stage in the teaching process for the determination of
course objectives. In spite of its importance, there are some issues that need to be analyzed and
resolved (Mohammadi & Mousavi, 2013). Three of them are found in data collection and needs
analysis:
• When learners are asked about their needs, they may not have the required knowledge
and familiarity with the future needs and requirements. This could cause a problem when
students want and need to learn or the expectation of the course in the future, but they
may not give us satisfying answers. Their answers could be obscure. It may be due to
their learning habits and experiences. More specifically, Chinese students learn somewhat
passively; they are only guided by instructors but hardly have their own ideas.
• Language needs don’t necessarily lead to learning; hence, language analysis is needed
along with learning and teaching analysis. Some students may not understand specialist
words. Of course, this is a need, but specialist words should not be an individual module
or unit because those words can infer the meaning in context or look up the words in a
dictionary. The specialist words can be combined with academic readings in one module,
• Learners don’t have the required awareness or metalanguage to talk about needs. For
example, students may not understand some facets that directly point at them, such as
learning strategies and expectations of the course. They may have a better answer in their
native language.
NEEDS ANALYSIS LITERATURE REVIEW 7
References
Basturkmen, H. (2010). Developing courses in English for specific purposes. Berlin: Springer.
Brown, J. D. (2016). Introducing Needs Analysis and English for Specific Purpose. Abingdon:
Routledge.
Dudley-Evans, T., & St John, M. J. (1998). Developments in English for specific purposes: A
Long, M. H. (2005). Second Language Needs Analysis, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Mohammadi, V., & Mousavi, N. (2013). Analyzing needs analysis in ESP: A (re)modeling.
Platt, J., Platt, H., & Richards, J. C. (1992). Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied