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Sociocultural Awareness: Developing the 5 th Skill. Kevin Hajovsky Senior English Language Fellow Gal ápagos , Ecuador August 2013. Importance of Culture a s the 5 th Skill. English as an International Language (EIL)
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Sociocultural Awareness: Developing the 5th Skill Kevin Hajovsky Senior English Language Fellow Galápagos, Ecuador August 2013
Importance of Culture as the 5th Skill • English as an International Language (EIL) • Not “owned” by native speakers, but by anyone who uses it for their purposes • Tool for communication • Bridge between cultures • Globalization Communication requires more than just language. (McKay, 2002; Tomalin, 2008)
Objectives of this Webinar Culture • Strengthen our understanding of culture and its potential effect on our communication SPEAKING Framework • Use a framework for helping teachers analyze for and develop their own sociocultural awareness • Use a framework to develop questions or tasks that help students analyze and build their own awareness of how culture is reflected in communication
Culture: What is it? When you think about “culture”, what kinds of things generally come to mind? ~Write down and provide examples~
How much of the iceberg do you think you can see? Which part of the iceberg is more dangerous to your ship, the visible part or the hidden part?
“Big C & small c” Culture Big C: VISIBLE • Language • Food • Music • Dance • Clothes • Popular culture • Customs • Festivals • Etc. small c: HIDDEN (Bennett, 1998)
The 5th Skill in Speaking Contexts • Culturally appropriate ways to: • Greet or address people • Express gratitude • Make requests • Agree/disagree with someone • Give or accept compliments • Interpersonal skills to: • Maintain an open and non-judgmental approach • Work with uncertainty and ambiguity • Be flexible and adaptable • Foster curiosity and empathy • Adapt oneself linguistically [verbal & non-verbal] [consider one’s own & others’ conditioning] The BIG Question: How can we help?
Teacher: Kinds of Questions to Develop “Oh, I see.” • Language-based questions • Looking at language in context • Ex., how words’ meanings change depending on context • Function-based questions • Analyzing interactions and social functions of language • Ex., back channeling, language of agreement/following • Comparative questions • Comparing (own) interactional norms in given contexts • Ex., expectations of listener, similar interactions (what?) • Speculative questions • Fostering curiosity and interpretative skills • Ex., “Why do you think….?” “Oh, is that right?” (McConachy, 2009)
Hymes’ SPEAKING Framework~A Mnemonic Devicefor Contextual Awareness~ SSetting P Participants E Ends AAct Sequence KKey I Instrumentalities NNorms GGenre Questions Types: Language Function Comparison Speculation (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Setting • The time, place and physical circumstances and the potential expectations or influences on communication (ex. party, doctor’s office) • Teacher Analysis • Does the setting affect the language used? • Would the students’ culture consider the setting appropriate for such an interaction? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Location, environment, overall topic (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Participants • The people involved in the setting and/or the interpersonal dimension on the language used (ex., professor, daughter, friend) • Teacher Analysis • How are the participants related? • How might their description affect the kind of language used in any way? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Relationship, age, familiarity, gender, position/title, etc. (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Ends • The purposes or goals of the participants (ex., persuasion, equality/hierarchy gain something) • Teacher Analysis • What are the different participants trying to achieve? • Is there any connection between the ends, participants, and setting? • How does the language effectively work toward the ends? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Goals/desired outcomes, different or the same for participants, how are they negotiated (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Act Sequence • The types and sequence of speech acts or ways of interacting in a given context (ex., greeting) • Teacher Analysis • What are the different speech acts involved? • Is it important to notice the order of the speech acts? • Are there any strategies used to switch between speech acts? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Number and types of speech acts involved, the order of the speech acts, how the acts were negotiated (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Key • The general tone or spirit of conversation and how emotions and nuances are conveyed (ex., clues in manner of speech, joking, change of topic) • Teacher Analysis • Are there any clues that notify the listener of the tone in the messages being conveyed? • Are there pauses or changes in mood reflected in the participants speech patterns? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Feelings, mood, or tone of the conversation; how are they recognizable (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Instrumentalities • The style of speech and sensitivity to registers or language variation used in certain contexts (ex., casual conversation versus academic setting) • Teacher Analysis • Is the language used polite, casual, or formal? • Are there useful examples that show how this is important in the context with respect to other variables? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Examples of polite, casual, formal, etc. types of language (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Norms • The social rules for interaction and how culture influences communication (ex., interruptions, turn taking, use of titles) • Teacher Analysis • What kinds of rules of conversation or interaction are exhibited (or should be) in the conversation? • Do such rules have a potential for creating a non-linguistic misunderstanding? If so, how? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • kinds of rules that govern a given social and/or communicative context (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
Genre • The types of speech events and how they are generally characterized (ex., story, telephone, interview) • Teacher Analysis • What is the basic kind of interaction involved? • What are the common features of language found in this situation? • Potential Focuses of Questions (effect on interactions) • Differences roles or expectations of participants, or other interplays of different aspects of the framework (Hymes, 1974; McConachy, 2009)
End Goals for the Framework’s Use • AGAIN: It is NOT necessary to ask every kind of question every time. You can be selective and focus on key points for stimulating a healthy discussion. • Teachers can develop own sociocultural awareness, and pass it on to students through classroom tasks • Build socio-cultural awareness • Develop interpersonal skills • Work toward greater Socio-Linguistic Competence
Socio-Linguistic Competence in Communicative Competence Model • Having awareness of: • Social rules of language (e.g., formality, politeness, directness, etc.) • Nonverbal behaviors • Cultural references (e.g., idioms, expressions, background knowledge, etc.) (http://www.learnalberta.ca/content/eslapb/about_communicative_competence.html)
References • Bennett, M. (1998). Current perspectives of intercultural communication. In M.J. Bennett (Ed.), Basic concepts in intercultural communication: Selected readings (pp. 191–214). Yarmouth, ME: Intercultural Press • Damen, L.(1997). Culture learning: The fifth dimension in the language classroom. New York: Addison Wesley • Hymes, D. (1972). On communicative competence. In Sociolinguistics: Selected readings, edited by J. Pride and J. Holmes. Hammondsworth, UK: Penguin. • Hymes, D. (1974) Foundations of sociolinguistics: An ethnographic approach. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. • LaRay M. Barna (1994) Stumbling blocks in intercultrual communication. In Intercultural Communication : L.A. Samovar and R.E. Porter (Eds) : Belmont CA : Wadsworth Publishing Company. (pp. 337-346) • McConachy, T. (2009) Raising sociocultural awareness through contextual analysis: Some tools for teachers. ELT Journal 63(2). • McKay, S. (2002) Teaching english as an international language: Rethinking goals and approaches. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Tomalin, B. (2008). Culture - the fifth language skill. Available at http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/think/articles/culture-fifth-language-skill
Sociocultural Awareness: Developing the 5th Skill Kevin Hajovsky Senior English Language Fellow Galápagos, Ecuador August 2013 galapagoselt@gmail.com