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Page 1: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English
Page 2: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Culturally Yours

Developing and Implementing

Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching

Sevgi Can & Ayça PalancılarKoç University English Language Center

İstanbul, Turkey

SLTEP Alumni ConferenceNovember 1, 2014

SABANCI UNIVERSITY

Page 3: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Is language use associated with cultural behaviour?

One afternoon after work, a British teacher of EFL, who had recently started teaching at a college in Hong Kong, decided to visit some friends who lived in a different part of the city. She went to the appropriate bus stop, and as she walked up, a group of her students who were waiting there asked “Where are you going?” Immediately she felt irritated, and thought to herself, “What business is it of theirs where I’m going? Why should I tell them about my personal life?” However, she tried to hide her irritation, and simply answered, “I’m going to visit some friends.”

Page 4: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Several months later, this British teacher discovered that “Where are you going?” is simply a greeting in Chinese. There is no expectation that it should be answered explicitly: a vague response such as “Over there” or “Into town” is perfectly adequate. Moreover, according to Chinese conventions, the students were being friendly and polite in giving such a greeting, not intrusive and disrespectful as the British teacher interpreted them to be.

Page 5: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

How can educators raise cultural awareness and help learners produce cultural identity in foreign language teaching ?

Page 6: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Today’s Outline

How is culture defined?

What constitutes cultural values?

What is included in cultural behavior?

Why should we consider teaching of

cultural skills?

Classroom Applications

Page 7: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

How Culture is Defined?

Culture is defined as…

‘as an integrated pattern of human behavior that includes thoughts, communications, languages, practices, beliefs, values, customs, courtesies, rituals, manners of interaction and roles, relationships and expected behaviors of a racial, ethnic, religious or social group, and the ability to transmit the above to succeeding generations’

(The National Center for Cultural Competence of Georgetown University)

Page 8: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Culture

“third culture”

fifth skill

The “Big C” and “Little C”

Page 9: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

I. Cultural Knowledge

language and thought, • “dress of thought”

“non-verbal thought” Thought is completely determined by language.

Page 10: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

II. Cultural Values

the ‘psyche’ of the country

Page 11: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

How can we teach cultural values?

Page 12: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

What can be used to introduce culture in the language classroom?

Art work Commercials Videos/movies (made in the original country) Music videos News casts Pod casts Radio Field trips

Festivals Maps Songs Newspapers Anecdotes Illustrations Photographs Literature Stories Authentic materials

(Materials used by native speakers)

Page 13: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

III. Cultural behavior

“Not only is the transmission of knowledge and language important, but also are the nuances of values and attitudes.”

(Corner & Bunt-Kokhuis, 1991)

Page 14: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

IV. Cultural skills

+

Page 15: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

“Attention to cultural details doubles the usefulness of the lesson, not only in adding another dimension, but also in making the lesson more interesting and therefore easier to learn.” (Harrison, 1990)

Page 16: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Classroom Application

Communicative Language Teaching Community Language Learning

Page 17: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Activity 1: Gestures

Aims: recognizing the meaning of specific

gestures in one’s own culture identifying with the meaning of

gestures in American culture differentiating the meaning of

gestures between US culture and other cultures

Page 18: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Activity 2: Thanksgiving

Page 19: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Activity 2: Thanksgiving

Aims: discussing traditional celebrations in

one’s own culture recognizing the significance of

Thanksgiving (Friends segment) raising awareness of traditional

celebrations in US culture

Page 20: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Key Ideas to Remember

thoughts and behaviour are determined by language

third culture, fifth skill, the Big C the ultimate goal: to communicate and to be

able to use language correctly and appropriately

achieving a balance and exchange between cultural and educational experiences

Page 21: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Q & A

Questions?

Page 22: Culturally Yours Developing and Implementing Cross-Cultural Education in Foreign Language Teaching Sevgi Can & Ayça Palancılar Koç University English

Bibliography

Abrams, M. H. 1953. The Mirror and the Lamp: Romantic Theory and the Critical Tradition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Bruner, J. S., J. S. Goodnow & G. A. Austin (1956] 1962. A Study of Thinking. New York: Wiley. Corner, T. & Bunt-Kokhuis, S. 1991. The Space between words: Cross-cultural Essays in Education. Tilburg, Tilburg

University Press. Fish, S. 1980. Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretative Communities. Cambridge, MA: Harvard

University Press. Freeman, D.& Freeman, Y. 2004. Essential Linguistics: What You Need to Know to Teach Reading, ESL, Spelling,

Phonics, and Grammar. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Giroux, H, & McLaren, P. 1994. Between Borders: Pedagogy and the Politics of Cultural Studies. New York; London:

Routledge. Goode, Sockalingam, Brown, & Jones, 2000. National Standards in Foreign Language Education Project. 1996.

Standards for foreign language learning in the 21st century. Yonkers, NY: Author. Web. April 2014 <https://www.actfl.org/ >

Harrison, B. (Ed.) 1990. Culture and the Language Classroom. Hong Kong: Modern English Publications and the British Council.

Hymes, D. 1972. Models of the Interaction of Language and Social Life. In J. Gumperz & D. Hymes (Eds.), Directions in Sociolinguistics: The Ethnography of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart, Winston.

Kramsch, C. 1993. Context and Culture in Language Teaching. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Krasner, I. 1999. The Role of Culture in Language Teaching. Dialog on Language Instruction, 13(1-2), 79-88. Peterson, E & Coltrane, B. Culture in Second Language Teaching. Center for Applied Linguistics, December 2003.

Web. April 2014. <http://www.cal.org/resources/digest/0309peterson.html> Sapir, E. 1958: Culture, Language and Personality (ed. D. G. Mandelbaum). Berkeley, CA: University of California

Press. Tomalin, B. Culture – The Fifth Language Skill. British Council, 29 September 2008. Web. April 2014.

<http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/culture-fifth-language-skill> Tomalin, B. & Stempleski, S. 1993. Cultural Awareness. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Whorf, B. L. 1940 'Science and Linguistics', Technology Review 42(6): 229-31, 247-8. Also in B. L. Whorf (1956):

Language, Thought and Reality (ed. J. B. Carroll). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.