Culture and SLA - Week 4 - Cultural Practices & Perspectives
- Compare cultural products, practices, and perspectives regarding traditional remedies.
- Describe the linguistic and extralinguistic features of a cultural act.
- Explore cultural values of the United States and compare them with values of your own culture.
- How is my culture represented in the actions people perform?
- What are the linguistic and extralinguistic features of a cultural act?
- What perspecitves give meaning to the products and practices of my culture?
- Group 1: CLICK HERE
- Group 2: CLICK HERE
- Group 3: CLICK HERE
- CLICK HERE and contribute to the Jamboard.
- 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
- Life-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).”
- Group 1: CLICK HERE
- Group 2: CLICK HERE
- Group 3: CLICK HERE
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.
- Group Link: CLICK HERE
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