Welcome to my blog. I use it to share activities with my English students and with teachers in different training workshops. If you like what you see, why not leave a comment?
Culture of English Speaking Countries - Week 6 - Introduction to Cultural Perspectives
Introduction: Hello and welcome to Week 6 of the course Culture of English Speaking Countries for the bachelor's in English teaching at ULACIT. This week we will begin our exploration of the topic of cultural perspectives.
Today's Goals:
Describe the linguistic and extralinguistic features of a cultural act.
Identify the underlying values represented in common sayings and proverbs.
Compare traditional American and Costa Rican values and beliefs.
Guiding Questions:
What are the linguistic and extralinguistic features of a cultural act?
How are cultural perspectives represented in the language we use?
What are some of the core values in US culture and how do they appear in attitudes and practices?
Warm Up: Values in Langauge
Values are one form of cultural perspectives and they are often explicity demonstrated in the language se used everyday. Click your group link below to explore the values behind common sayings and proverbs.
Let's take a moment together to recall the topics we explored last week.
Traditional Remedies:
We talked about remedies as a combination of cultural products, practices, and perspectives. Have you though of any other examples this week?
Cultural Places:
What is a cultural place?
How do products, practices, perspectives, persons, and communities intersect in a cultural place?
What ideas have you thought of regarding your upcoming cultural place podcast?
Cultural Practices:
Operations: These are ...
Acts: These are ...
Scenarios: These are ...
Lives: These are ...
Tasks 2 and 3: Exploring Cultural Acts
Click your group link below and complete Task 2 to explore the different meanings common expressions can have and the different acts and scenarios in which they can be used. CLICK HERE to see your teacher's example.
Now, let's think more deeply about the features of communicative acts. Go back to your document and complete Task 3. CLICK HERE to see your teacher's example first.
Mark your calendar. My birthday party is on Friday!
Task 4: Exploring Cultural Perspectives
For homework this week you read Chapter 7 Cultural Perspectives in the Moran book and completed a study guide. Open your study guide and respond to the following prompts with your partners.
What are cultural perspectives?
The author says perspectives are the "hidden dimension" of culture meaning that they are typically difficult to identify. However, they can also be explicit. In what ways can perspectives be tangible?
What does the following statement mean to you and how is it related to the topic of cultural perspectives?
"If you want to know about water, don't ask a fish."
The author divides perspectives into four categories. What do they mean?
Perceptions
Beliefs
Values
Attitudes
What is the difference between emic and etic perspectives?
The chapter finishes with a review of three ways of looking at culture. Look at the pictures below and state what they mean to you.
Click the Pictures to See the Full Size View
Theory Break: Perspectives
“Perspectives are the explicit and implicit meanings shared by members of the culture, manifested in products and practices. These meanings reflect members’ perceptions of the world, the beliefs and values that they hold, and the norms, expectations, and attitudes that they bring to practices. To name the perspectives that underlie practices is to answer the question, “Why do the people of this culture do things in the way they do (p. 74)?”
Perceptions: What we perceive, what we ignore; what we notice or disregard
Beliefs: What we hold to be true or untrue
Values: What we hold to be right/wrong, good/evil, desirable/undesireable, proper/improper, normal/abnormal, appropriate
Attitudes: Our mental and affective dispositions - our frame of mind, our outlook - charged with feeling or emotion
“Understanding perspectives, in my opinion, represents the most challenging aspect of teaching culture. The task, simply put, is to identify the perceptions, values, beliefs, and attitudes of the culture. However, culture consists of numerous communities, all coexisting under the same umbrella of national culture…some of them are in opposition – sometimes in open conflict… Given shifting points of view, how can language teachers hope to offer accurate explanations of cultural perspectives (p. 83).”
It boils down to this: Culture perspectives depend on your point of view. Given shifting points of view, how can langauge teachers hope to offer accurate descriptions of cultural perspectives (Moran, p. 83)?"
"The working solution I propose is to present alternative vewpoints as part of knowing why, or discovering interpretations. In simple terms, these can be defined respectively as culture as a unified whole culture as distinct communities, and culture as competing communities (p 84)."
Functionalist: Takes the broad view of culture, most often at the national level, using the nation as the focal point.
Interpretive: Does not address the notion of a national culture community. All culture, in the interpretive view, is local.
Conflict: Accepts that each community has its own perspectives but does not assume harmonious relationships among them, rather, they are in competition, struggling for influence, power, or control over the core institutions of society.
Task 5: Values in American Culture
For your Culture Learning Journal this week you were asked to read a chapter called "Traditional American Values and Beliefs". Click the link below and follow your teacher's instructions.
Task 6: Exploring Emic and Etic Perspectives on Costa Rican Values
As a final task, let's complete a brief reading on the topic of fatalism and discuss to what degree you think fatalism is represented in the cultural perspectives and practices of Costa Rica and the United States.
Introduction: In today's class we begin our two week study of Part 3: Conversations in the listening test. Complete the collaborative tasks below with your partners.
Task 1: Practice Your British Pronunciation
Remember the three tips your teacher showed you to help you better identify pronunciation features of the British accent. With those in mind, pronounce the following sentences first in your regular accent and then repeat them in your best British voice. Have fun with it.
Mark is our teacher.
I can't take a bath after class.
I asked for a bottle of water at the bar.
I hated writing letters. Email is better.
Task 2: Analyzing Conversations
Click your group link below and follow the instructions to analyze the conversation transcripts.
Some general information questions may ask you to identify the location where the conversation takes place or the occupation of the speakers. Click the link below then go to the section that corresponds to your group.
Task 3: Focused Practice - Group Quiz - ID People and Places
Have one member of your group share the screen. Click on the group quiz and complete it with your partners. The first quiz will have you identify people speaking or referred to by the speakers. The second quiz will have you identify the location of the coversation or places mentioned by the speakers. Be sure to check the transcripts for any questions you get wrong.
Introduction: Hello, and welcome to Week 5 of English III at Universidad Castro Carazo. In today's class we will discuss the topics of transportation options and problems in Costa Rica as well as the grammar topic of comparisons and superlatives.
Warm Up: Free Time Activities
Click the group link and follow along with your teacher's instructions.
Click your group link and compare the car options with your partners. Then create your own proposal for an alternative transportation option in Costa Rica.
Culture of English Speaking Countries - Week 5 - Cultural Practices
Introduction: Hello and welcome to Week 5 of the course Culture of English Speaking Countries for the bachelor's in English teaching at ULACIT. This week we will discuss the topic of cultural practices, compare traditional practices regarding remedies, describe a cultural place, and consider differences in customs between the US and Costa Rica.
Today's Goals:
Compare cultural products, practices, and perspectives regarding traditional remedies.
Create a culture map to examine the interaction between products, practices, and persons in physical space.
Describe the linguistic and extralinguistic features of a cultural act.
Guiding Questions:
How do products, practices, and persons intersect in a cultural place that I visit often?
How is my culture represented in the actions people perform?
What are the linguistic and extralinguistic features of a cultural act?
Warm Up: Folk Remedies
Many cultures have a rich and detailed repertoire of products and practices related to traditional folk remedies for common physical ailments. These products and practices are informed by cultural perspectives about the causes of illness and what keeps a person healthy. In this activty you will explore some of the folk remedies of your own local and family culture.
I was curious to learn if there were similar perspectives and practices in other countries. I asked friends from Guatemala, Dominican Republic and Finland and here is what they told me. As you listen, identify similarities and differences between the products, practices, persons, and perspectives.
What about US traditional remedies? Well, there's nothing special except for the importance of chicken soup! CLICK HERE to see an image. It's so associated with comfort, care, and feeling better that there was a famous series of self-help / motivational books with that name (CLICK HERE).
Task 1: Group Recall
Let's take a moment together to recall the topics we explored last week.
What is a cultural product?
Artifacts?
Places?
Institutions?
Art Forms?
Moran says that products can be portals to help us explore the other cultural dimensions. Think of a product and let's see what associations you can make with the other dimensions:
Product: What is it? Where do you find it?
Practices: How do you use it? When?
Persons: Which people use this?
Communities: Which groups of people use this object?
Perspectives: Why do people use this? What significance does it have in the culture?
Gun ownership is a politically and culturally divisive topic but it is an essential cultural feature of the US. CLICK HERE to read some statistics. Can you think of any issues that are as politically and culturally polarizing in your country?
How do people in your culture view the role of guns in US culture?
How does your culture view the topic of gun ownership?
Theory Break: Places
"Man-made settings are populated with numerous artifacts, arranged in particular ways within the physical space. The organization, layout, or interpretation of this physical space is a critical feature of places, just as much as the artifacts and their arrangements in these places (Moran, p. 52)."
Places are interesting cultural features to explore because of the reasons mentioned in the quote and also because it is within places that different cultural practices are carried out by communities and specific persons.
Task 2: Culture Mapping
Let's explore the topic of places in greater detail by drawing a culture map. Choose a public place that you are familiar with and draw a map of it from a top-down perspective. Be as detailed as you can and include the cultural artifacts in their locations. If your drawing skills are not great, just use simple shapes and symbols.
Suggested Places: You can choose any public place but be sure it is a specific real place that you visit.
Exploring the Culture Maps: Now share your maps with your partners and explain the following aspects.
Where is this place located within your city or neighborhood?
Describe the physical layout of the place and the artifacts found there.
What is the significance of the location of the artifacts?
What are the "hot spots", the points in the map where actions occur?
What can you say about the products, practices, perspectives, communities, and persons associated with this place?
Task 3: Cultural Place Video Podcast (15%)
Your first group project is due on July 11 at 11:59 pm. Consier the following information about it.
Learning Objective: Demonstrate your ability to analyze a cultural place in an English speaking country by creating a 7-9 minute podcast describing its physical layout, the cultural products it contains, the practices that occur there, and the underlying perspectives that the people of the culture have about it.
Justification: Cultural products are the most visible forms of culture but they take on a wide variety of forms and do not exist in isolation from other items of the cultural pentad (practices, perspectives, persons, and communities). The analysis of a cultural space will provide the opportunity for you to demonstrate your understanding of this cultural framework as a tool to analyze the features of a cultural place in an English speaking country.
College Football Stadiums in the US
Podcast Evaluation: Now click your group link below and evaluate your teacher's sample podcast. It is not perfect so think carefully about the score it deserves for each of the criteria in the rubric.
For homework this week you read Chapter 6 Cultural Practices in the Moran book and completed a study guide. Open your study guide and respond to the following prompts with your partners.
What is a cultural practice?
What are the characteristics of the four types of practices?
Operations
Acts
Scenarios
Lives
Share the scenario you described in your study guide and say how it fits within some of the following categories:
Time-Based
Event-Based
Group-Based
Institution-Based
Live-Cycle Based
What are some examples of operations and acts within your chosen scenario?
In the chapter you also learned some new terminology for linguistic and extralinguistic features of practices. What were some of the new terms you learned?
Describe a practice you are familiar with. How can the terms be used to describe what happens (or not) during the practice?
Theory Break: Cultural Practices
“Practices are organized and implemented in preordained ways according to the expectations of members of the culture. They involve a linguistic dimension (written or spoken language), and extralinguistic dimension (paralanguage and nonverbal language), manipulation of products, and specific social circumstances, and often occur in particular physical settings or places (p. 59).”
“Operations describe practices that involve manipulation of cultural artifacts. Acts are specific communicative functions with both linguistic and extralinguistic features. Scenarios are practices enacted in specific social situations, involving operations, acts and other sets of specific practices. Lives are sets of practices organized by individuals through the ways they live their lives in the culture (p. 59).”
Task 5: Exploring Cultural Acts
Click your group link below to explore the linguistic, paralinguistic, and extralinguistic features of common cultural practices.
For your Culture Learning Journal this week you were asked to read a brief chapter called "Differences in Customs". Discuss the following prompts with your teacher and parters.
The author described an uncomfortable moment between four immigrants in the US from different cultures who decided to have a potluck dinner (US custom). What happended? Why?
The article mentions some US holidays. What are some operations and acts associated with holidays in your culture?
What do you think of the following quote? How do parents in your culture treat their children? How do your cultural values appear in the ways you communicate?
"Americans value independence and self-reliance, for example, so it is customary for them to encourage their children to speak up for themselves. They assume all people are more or less equal, so it is customery for them to talk in relatively informal ways with nearly everyone."
What else did you learn about the following US customs? How do they compare to customs in your culture?
Punctuality
Keeping your Appointments/Plans
Distance when standing and talking
Topics to avoid in polite conversation:
Politics and religion
Woman's age and weight
Personal income
Price paid for things they own
Details about one's health, especially bodily functions
Differences I Noticed
Entering a room or someone's house with "con permiso".
Saying "buen provecho" to someone who is eating.
Greating everyone in the room individually.
Greeting with a kiss.
Navigating levels of formality in 2nd person singular (usted, vos, tu*).
Showing care for others through diminuitives (papi, mami, papito, mi tata, lita).
Using diminutives for almost everything.
Making plans and never following through.
Differences in punctuality.
References:
Althen, G. (2011) American Ways: A Cultural Guide to the United States (3rd ed.) Intercultural Press.
Moran, P. (2001). Teaching Culture: Perspectices in Practice. Heinle, Cengage Learning.