Making a difference: Language teaching for intercultural and international dialogue
Language teaching has long been associated with teaching in a country or countries where a target language is spoken, but this approach is inadequate. In the contemporary world, language teaching has a responsibility to prepare learners for interaction with people of other cultural backgrounds, teac...
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Published in | Foreign language annals Vol. 51; no. 1; pp. 140 - 151 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Alexandria
Wiley-Blackwell
01.03.2018
American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Language teaching has long been associated with teaching in a country or countries where a target language is spoken, but this approach is inadequate. In the contemporary world, language teaching has a responsibility to prepare learners for interaction with people of other cultural backgrounds, teaching them skills and attitudes as well as knowledge. This article presents the main concepts involved in this view of language teaching: the notion of culture, the language‐culture nexus, and intercultural competence. It also explains the implications of the approach in terms of the skills, attitudes, and knowledge that should be taught. The article goes further: It argues that language teaching needs to be linked to other disciplines in order to develop an approach that integrates insights from citizenship education. All of this has implications for teachers’ professional identity and for cooperation across the curriculum.
The Challenge
Linguistic competence needs to be enriched with deep intercultural competence. How can world language educators help language learners to develop increasingly sophisticated linguistic and intercultural knowledge and skills and apply them in other courses and experiences so as to enact their intercultural citizenship in the here and now?
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ISSN: | 0015-718X 1944-9720 |
DOI: | 10.1111/flan.12319 |