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![]() EDUCATION NEWSLETTER March 1997 - Issue No. #26 (p.4) |
The author argues that, in multicultural classrooms, the first weeks of a new semester or school year are a great time to have English students express pride in their native countries by displaying and discussing their flags. She describes a number of language activities built around the theme of flags: class presentations (in which students, individually or in groups, give 2-5 minute OHP presentations on their flag's shape, colors and symbols), bulletin board displays on the flags of students' countries, and oral questions by the teacher ("Which flags have animals on them?" "Does the Nigerian flag have a rectangle?"). For advanced students, she recommends written compositions on flag designs, meanings and customs, and oral presentations of poems, folktales and songs about students' flags.
This article describes a survey about how student interviews with native speakers can break down cultural barriers, promote intercultural learning, and develop positive attitudes towards the foreign language and its speakers. The authors criticize the "magic-carpet-ride-to-another-culture syndrome" which assumes that language study automatically leads to intercultural understanding. They describe an experiment with university students of Spanish who received lessons on cross-cultural awareness, then had to interview local native Spanish speakers as an out-of -class project. The interviews positively changed student attitudes. Student quotes: "Ben didn't show me what it was like to be a Mexican, he showed me what it was like to be a human being", "I've learned more about the Mexican way of life through Olga in one semester than I have in eight semesters of Spanish classes".
This special issue of the American journal Social Education, issued
by the National Council for the Social Studies, focusses on global
education and the teaching of world cultures and issues. The issue features
the following articles as well as a rich variety of teaching ideas and resources:
This article by Dr. Esther Lucas, an Israel-based English teacher and expert in education for international understanding, was published in the International Schools Association (ISA) magazine Skepsis. The article defines global issues, explains the rationale for dealing with these in foreign language classes, lists peace education organizations and publications, gives an overview of groups (such as JALT's Global Issues SIG) which are actively promoting global education in the language teaching profession, and finishes with a call for a global issues interest group within the ISA. The magazine also includes articles on student exchange programs, values education, the global village, and environmental education.
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