In this last issue of InterCom before the
TESOL convention, we’d like to offer you a little preview to pique your
interest in some great ICIS-sponsored events, namely the Academic
Session and InterSection panels. Check out the abstracts below for more
details.
Academic Session: "TESOL as Intercultural Communication"
Thursday, March 27, 1–3:45 pm, Room PB 256
TESOL has focused on language for communicative competence and
perhaps subsumed culture under linguistic considerations. However, in
the context of global contact among diverse communities today, some
scholars feel that intercultural competence should be the dominant
paradigm within which language concerns should be addressed. How can we
re-envision theories and practice in TESOL to involve culture as a
central concern? How would our pedagogical practices change in relation
to the emerging realizations of culture in the context of
globalization?
Carrying Experience and Identity Into New Cultural Scenarios
Adrian Holliday, Canterbury Christ Church University, England
Intercultural competence has its roots in the existing
linguistic and cultural competence we all bring from our home
environments. We need to help students explore and make use of this
experience—to carry their cultural identities into new domains with
English and make it their own. We must also work with them to put aside
the prejudices that come from long-standing us/them perceptions of
English and culture.
The Predicament of Culture in Neoliberal Multiculturalism
Ryuko Kubota, University of British Columbia, Canada
The traditional notion of culture as primordial and bounded has
been challenged by postmodern anti-essentialism and hybridity. While
this problematization has been recognized in TESOL, these postmodern
ideas now resonate with the ideology of neoliberal multiculturalism,
posing a predicament. A pluralist understanding of culture requires
critical awareness of this complicity.
What Is Intercultural Competence?
Gayle Nelson, Georgia State University, United States
The native speaker paradigm has dominated work in TESOL and
applied linguistics for several decades, often under the umbrella of
communicative competence. Researchers and English language teachers
focused on the development of native speaker norms and fluency so
students could effectively interact with native speakers of English. As
English became an international language with nonnative speakers of
English interacting with each other much more frequently than with
native English speakers, the communicative competence paradigm was
called into question. In looking for a theory or concept that represents
the current reality of English language use, some have proposed
intercultural competence. The problem is that there is no consensus in
the field about what we mean by intercultural competence. Dell Hymes
provided a foundation for communication competence. As yet, we have no
similar consensus about intercultural competence. Byram has laid out one
model. In this presentation I look at theories and definitions of
intercultural competence from the fields of intercultural communication,
psychology, education, and applied linguistics and attempt to relate
them to pedagogical practices. This discussion is informed by views of
culture that do not equate culture with nation state.
Intercultural Competence in the EFL Classroom: What Do I Focus On?
Don Snow, Shantou University English Language Center, China
While there is growing consensus that English language teachers
should try to enhance students’ intercultural competence, there is less
agreement on what this actually means for English classes.
Intercultural competence is a very broad concept that includes literally
hundreds of specific skills, attitudes, and types of knowledge, far
more than even the most zealous teacher could include in an English
course which, obviously, also has other goals to address. One key
question faced by English language teachers is: Which aspects of
intercultural competence should I focus on in the limited time I have
available? Drawn from the experience of writing a textbook designed to
teach both English and intercultural competence, this presentation
immodestly offers a limited list of intercultural skills and habits
which English courses can and should help students build, focused
primarily around the basic communication act of interpreting the
messages sent by others. The presentation is followed by discussion, and
probably a little controversy.
Researching and Facilitating Intercultural Competence: Views from Intercultural Rhetoric
Ulla Connor & Ana Traversa, Indiana University – Purdue University, Indianapolis, United States
This presentation will offer a theoretical and practical argument for preserving culture at the core of the conversations surrounding research on the dimensions of spoken and written discourse and their applications to intercultural communication in instructional and professional contexts. We explore the notion of culture in TESOL by presenting three responses to current critiques of culture: a strong defense of culture, recommendations for an alternative construction and application of culture, and partial reformulations of culture informed by intercultural rhetoric. Finally, we will illustrate pedagogical applications of the reformulations of culture in TESOL practice, more specifically in ESP contexts.
InterSection: "Building Intercultural Competence in
the Classroom: Equipping Young Learners"
Friday, March 28, 9:30–11:15 am, Room OB 201
ICIS is excited to serve as the primary Interest Section in
coordination with both Applied Linguistics and Elementary Education
Interest Sections to bring convention attendees an informative, diverse
array of perspectives on the topic of intercultural competence. The
distinguished panel will address questions such as: What do we mean by
intercultural competence? Why is it important in education? How can we
help students to develop this ability? And how does this affect identity
in young learners, families, and communities?
We are honored to have Adrian Holliday, Joe McVeigh, Thomas
Nakayama, and Bonny Norton each bringing unique strengths and
experiences to the panel. Dr. Holliday of Canterbury Christ Church
University will share from his own experience and recent article on how
we can take advantage of learners existing cultural and linguistic
backgrounds and empower them to draw from such experiences to inform
English language teaching and learning. He says, “from an early age we
all engage with and negotiate cultural difference within the small
culture formation of everyday life. This experience needs to be
researched and employed.”
Dr. Nakayama, of Northeastern University, will further
challenge us to reconsider intercultural communication and bring it
from, where he views it, being commonly situated at the margins of
language and shift our focus instead to “the potential contributions of
intercultural communication and its focus on intercultural competence to
language issues.” As he points out, “intercultural communication
scholars have problematized the notion of intercultural competence and
this reconfiguration may have important implications in
education.”
Joe McVeigh, of Middlebury College, and Dr. Bonny Norton, of
the University of British Columbia, will move the discussion to research
and practice with young learners and implications and practical
applications for teachers and young learners in regions throughout the
world. As research advisor on the African Storybook Project, Bonny “will
discuss the ways in which digital storytelling in the mother tongue and
English can help young learners in African classrooms strengthen their
intercultural identities across local and global borders. Data is drawn
from the innovative African Storybook Project, which seeks to promote
the multilingual literacy of children across sub-Saharan Africa through
the development and use of open-access
digital stories.” Joe sums up the contributions and sets our
expectations for a practical, “user-friendly, lively” panel where we can
“explore culture together.”
Remember, this is your IS and we are counting on seeing many of
you at the InterSection and our Academic Session! And for those of you
that want even more togetherness (and why not?!), we will have our
annual meeting and social on Thursday night. Times and locations for
these and other ICIS TESOL events are in the sidebar of this newsletter.
Stay tuned and stay connected for all the latest plans and
details. |