1 / 19

Conceptualizing Culture : Effectively Integrating Culture into the Proficiency-Oriented Classroom

Conceptualizing Culture : Effectively Integrating Culture into the Proficiency-Oriented Classroom. Danielle Asay & Bethany Daniel Brigham Young University. What is culture?. Disclaimer!.

percy
Télécharger la présentation

Conceptualizing Culture : Effectively Integrating Culture into the Proficiency-Oriented Classroom

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Conceptualizing Culture:Effectively Integrating Culture into the Proficiency-Oriented Classroom Danielle Asay & Bethany Daniel Brigham Young University

  2. What is culture?

  3. Disclaimer! “Culture is pervasive, all-encompassing, and inescapable. The images and messages we receive and transmit are profoundly shaped by our culture. It is the framework through which we understand and interpret the world around us, in that it provides the context for a group of people to understand and interpret the world around them.” Andrea DeCapua & Ann C. Wintergerst, 2004, p. 9

  4. Why is it a challenge to teach culture?

  5. Defining culture: Providing a cultural framework “In the study of language, nothing has been discussed more and with less effect than the relationship between language and culture.” Walker and Noda, 2000, p. 187

  6. Common Approaches to Teaching Culture • The Frankenstein Approach • A taco from here, a flamenco dancer from there, a gaucho from here, a bullfight from there. • The 4-F Approach: • Folk dances, festivals, fairs, and food. • The Tour Guide Approach • The identification of monuments, rivers, and cities. • The “By-the-Way” Approach • Sporadic lectures or bits of behavior selected indiscriminately to emphasize sharp differences. Galloway, 1985, as cited in Omaggio Hadley, 2001

  7. Common Approaches to Teaching Culture • Big C/little c • Culture—great art, literature, music • culture—daily life, popular culture • Products, Practices and Perspectives (SFLL, 1996)

  8. A "New" (Old) Possibility • Omaggio Hadley stresses the need for a balanced approach to teaching culture (p. 353). • Hammerly, 1982: • Informational culture • Facts that the educated native speaker knows about his society (geography, history, heros, villains, etc.) • Achievement culture • The artistic and literary accomplishments of a society • Behavioral culture • The sum of everyday life • Revealed • Ignored • Suppressed

  9. Examples What kind of culture are these examples an example of? • Napoleon • the Great Wall • les bises • la siesta • Wienerschnitzel • Spanish Civil War • Le Petit prince

  10. Textbook Review

  11. Proficiency and Performance • ACTFL defines proficiency as “the ability to use language to communicate meaningful information in a spontaneous interaction, and in a manner acceptable and appropriate to native speakers of the language” (Swender & Vicars, 2012). • Focuses on the functional speaking ability—what students are able to DO with the language. • They need to be able to DO these things in culturally appropriate ways.

  12. Proficiency and Performance “Knowing how, when, and why to say what to whom” • All the linguistic and social knowledge required for effective human-to-human interaction is encompassed in those ten words. Standards, 1996

  13. Proficiency and Performance • “You cannot learn a foreign language, you can only learn to do things in a foreign language. The more things we learn to do, the more expert we are in that language.” Walker and Noda, 2000, p. 25

  14. Proficiency and Performance • Performed culture (Walker and Noda) • Cultural memories • Situating events: • Place • Time • Script • Roles • Audience

  15. Strategies for Integration • Achievement

  16. Strategies for Integration • Informational • Authentic, realistic images • Cultural calendar/timeline • important dates and events from target culture • Culture-oriented writing • write on a topic from the target culture point of view

  17. Strategies for Integration • Behavioral/Performed • Performances • Role plays • Contextualization • Pragmatics

  18. Examples

  19. Questions?

More Related