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ACCESS TO PROFESSIONAL COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE:. COMMUNICATION AND CULTURAL BARRIERS OF HIGHLY QUALIFIED IMMIGRANT PROFESSIONALS IN WINNIPEG, MANITOBA, CANADA. Lei Wang Faculty of Education, University of Manitoba estella_88@hotmail.com Phone: 204-293-6188. Outline.
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ACCESS TO PROFESSIONAL COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE: COMMUNICATION AND CULTURAL BARRIERS OF HIGHLY QUALIFIED IMMIGRANT PROFESSIONALS IN WINNIPEG, MANITOBA, CANADA Lei Wang Faculty of Education, University of Manitoba estella_88@hotmail.com Phone: 204-293-6188
Outline • Overarching research topic • Theoretical framework • Methodology • Findings • Implication and suggestions • Future research directions
Overarching Research Topics What are the experiences and perceptions of new immigrant professionals enrolled in ELT programs of the communication and cultural challenges when trying to re-enter their professions in Canada? And what are the perceived roles the ELT programs played in their re-entry?
Background Information • Background: Language training services • - LINC (Language Instruction for Newcomers to Canada); focus on developing basic English skills for settlement;1992. • - ELT (Enhanced Language Training) initiatives; • Launched in 2003 • Starting in 2004, the federal government invest $20 million annually • Higher levelled (CLB 7-10) • Occupational-specific language training • Targeting immigrant professionals integrating into Canadian labour market (CCLB ELT project final report, 2004; CIC, 2005)
Theoretical Framework • Language Socialization theory (Gumperz, 1982; Schieffelin & Ochs, 1986; Duff, 2001) • Community of Practices theory (COP) (Lave & Wenger, 1991) • Community of practice • Apprentice and mentors • Legitimate peripheral participation (LPP)
Methodology • Research method: case study • Study contexts: (three Enhanced Language Training/ELT programs) • Framing my study: • Three professional communities of practices (COP) • Six immigrant professionals; two from each profession • Trying to re-enter their target professional COPs • Communication and cultural barriers encountered in re-entry
Methodology • Data sources • Interviews • With six immigrant professionals- two from each profession • With three ELT program instructors- one from each program • Documentation • Course descriptions • Part of the course materials • Available information about the three ELT programs on the internet
How to enter the target professional system Preparing to enter the Canadian labour market Aspects of challenges in re-entry LPP opportunities & Mentors Findings • Finding 1: Aspects of communication and cultural challenges in re-entry (blocking fully demonstrating and using professional skills) Working in Canada
Findings • Finding 2: Professional language re-socialization provided in three ELT programs
Implication and Suggestions • ELT programs: • equips immigrant professionals with the language and culturally recognized tools needed to make full use of their professional skills and talents in Canada. • should be further developed and continued; made more accessible; and ultimately benefit the Canadian economy by increasing the integration and utilization of these highly qualified skilled people.
Implication and Suggestions • LPP opportunities: a model similar to ELT Banking should be promoted across all other ELT fields, • pre-training in the classroom • followed by a paid internship in the working environment • with assigned mentors to each student • Employing this model across other ELT fields would require the active involvement of the respective employers for delivery
Implication and Suggestions • Cross-cultural education from the other end: • Employers in various fields should be made aware of the initial efforts made by the involved banks in the ELT Banking programs, and encouraged to follow-suit by educating their existing staff and increasing their cross-cultural awareness • Only through mutual efforts from both sides will an environment be created in which professionals from various socio-cultural backgrounds can thrive together.
Future Research Directions • Very little research using the Language Socialization and Communities of Practice theories has been conducted outside academic settings. • The two theories have proven very useful in the area of immigrant professionals’ integration into Canadian labor market. • There is a lot of room in this area that calls for more investigation, especially by incorporating ethnographic investigation with field observations on all aspects of the re-entry process. • Could provide a deeper understanding on issues of integrating highly skilled, internationally trained professional into the Canadian labor market, and can also extend the use of these two theories into more diverse fields.