The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other

Autores
Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo; Scilipoti, Paola Mabel
Año de publicación
2012
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
documento de conferencia
Estado
versión aceptada
Descripción
We have been inspired to write this work thanks to our experiences for one academic year as Foreign Language Teaching Assistants (FLTA) in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, and Arkansas, USA; respectively granted by British Council- and Fulbright-Ministerio de Educación. Our duties as FLTAs consisted in helping in speaking and writing sessions, testing, teaching, designing materials, and being in charge of cultural activities related to food and dance in secondary schools and universities. Today’s globalized world has permeated education, and interculturality has recently been integrated in the English as a Foreign/Second Language classroom, broadening the language experience by including cultural aspects in a lesson. This is why we believe that understanding others is essential for communication and cooperation. As Sercu (2005) states, “foreign language education is, by definition, intercultural. Bringing a foreign language to the classroom means connecting learners to a world that is culturally different from their own” and promoting “the acquisition of intercultural competence in the learners” (Sercu 2005: 1). When teaching a foreign language, diverse forms of living and understanding the world get into the classroom by means of audiovisual materials, texts, talks, coursebooks and realia. Thanks to these sources, all members in the FL classroom can discover a foreign culture and contrast it with their own. The underlying aim is to work with and form pluricultural individuals, i.e. learners with the ability to recognize others and be aware of their own traditions and values. As it is not always essential to travel abroad to be pluriculturally competent, some practical ideas will be shown as a way of exemplifying lessons that are culturally focused and exploitable from a pluricultural point of view.
Fil: Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas; Argentina.
Fil: Scilipoti, Paola Mabel. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas; Argentina.
Fuente
Actas en CD del 2° Congreso Nacional El conocimiento como espacio de encuentro
Materia
Lenguas Extranjeras
Enseñanza
Lingüística
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ar/
Repositorio
Repositorio Digital Institucional (UNCo)
Institución
Universidad Nacional del Comahue
OAI Identificador
oai:rdi.uncoma.edu.ar:uncomaid/13788

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spelling The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the otherEspinosa, Gonzalo EduardoScilipoti, Paola MabelLenguas ExtranjerasEnseñanzaLingüísticaWe have been inspired to write this work thanks to our experiences for one academic year as Foreign Language Teaching Assistants (FLTA) in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, and Arkansas, USA; respectively granted by British Council- and Fulbright-Ministerio de Educación. Our duties as FLTAs consisted in helping in speaking and writing sessions, testing, teaching, designing materials, and being in charge of cultural activities related to food and dance in secondary schools and universities. Today’s globalized world has permeated education, and interculturality has recently been integrated in the English as a Foreign/Second Language classroom, broadening the language experience by including cultural aspects in a lesson. This is why we believe that understanding others is essential for communication and cooperation. As Sercu (2005) states, “foreign language education is, by definition, intercultural. Bringing a foreign language to the classroom means connecting learners to a world that is culturally different from their own” and promoting “the acquisition of intercultural competence in the learners” (Sercu 2005: 1). When teaching a foreign language, diverse forms of living and understanding the world get into the classroom by means of audiovisual materials, texts, talks, coursebooks and realia. Thanks to these sources, all members in the FL classroom can discover a foreign culture and contrast it with their own. The underlying aim is to work with and form pluricultural individuals, i.e. learners with the ability to recognize others and be aware of their own traditions and values. As it is not always essential to travel abroad to be pluriculturally competent, some practical ideas will be shown as a way of exemplifying lessons that are culturally focused and exploitable from a pluricultural point of view.Fil: Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas; Argentina.Fil: Scilipoti, Paola Mabel. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas; Argentina.Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas2012info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjectinfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794info:ar-repo/semantics/documentoDeConferenciaapplication/pdfhttp://rdi.uncoma.edu.ar/handle/uncomaid/13788Actas en CD del 2° Congreso Nacional El conocimiento como espacio de encuentroreponame:Repositorio Digital Institucional (UNCo)instname:Universidad Nacional del Comahueenghttp://bibliotecadelenguas.uncoma.edu.ar/items/show/190info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ar/2025-10-23T11:17:02Zoai:rdi.uncoma.edu.ar:uncomaid/13788instacron:UNCoInstitucionalhttp://rdi.uncoma.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://rdi.uncoma.edu.ar/oaimirtha.mateo@biblioteca.uncoma.edu.ar; adriana.acuna@biblioteca.uncoma.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:71082025-10-23 11:17:03.123Repositorio Digital Institucional (UNCo) - Universidad Nacional del Comahuefalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
title The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
spellingShingle The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo
Lenguas Extranjeras
Enseñanza
Lingüística
title_short The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
title_full The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
title_fullStr The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
title_full_unstemmed The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
title_sort The importance of being pluricultural: blooming with the other
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo
Scilipoti, Paola Mabel
author Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo
author_facet Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo
Scilipoti, Paola Mabel
author_role author
author2 Scilipoti, Paola Mabel
author2_role author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Lenguas Extranjeras
Enseñanza
Lingüística
topic Lenguas Extranjeras
Enseñanza
Lingüística
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv We have been inspired to write this work thanks to our experiences for one academic year as Foreign Language Teaching Assistants (FLTA) in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, and Arkansas, USA; respectively granted by British Council- and Fulbright-Ministerio de Educación. Our duties as FLTAs consisted in helping in speaking and writing sessions, testing, teaching, designing materials, and being in charge of cultural activities related to food and dance in secondary schools and universities. Today’s globalized world has permeated education, and interculturality has recently been integrated in the English as a Foreign/Second Language classroom, broadening the language experience by including cultural aspects in a lesson. This is why we believe that understanding others is essential for communication and cooperation. As Sercu (2005) states, “foreign language education is, by definition, intercultural. Bringing a foreign language to the classroom means connecting learners to a world that is culturally different from their own” and promoting “the acquisition of intercultural competence in the learners” (Sercu 2005: 1). When teaching a foreign language, diverse forms of living and understanding the world get into the classroom by means of audiovisual materials, texts, talks, coursebooks and realia. Thanks to these sources, all members in the FL classroom can discover a foreign culture and contrast it with their own. The underlying aim is to work with and form pluricultural individuals, i.e. learners with the ability to recognize others and be aware of their own traditions and values. As it is not always essential to travel abroad to be pluriculturally competent, some practical ideas will be shown as a way of exemplifying lessons that are culturally focused and exploitable from a pluricultural point of view.
Fil: Espinosa, Gonzalo Eduardo. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas; Argentina.
Fil: Scilipoti, Paola Mabel. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas; Argentina.
description We have been inspired to write this work thanks to our experiences for one academic year as Foreign Language Teaching Assistants (FLTA) in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, and Arkansas, USA; respectively granted by British Council- and Fulbright-Ministerio de Educación. Our duties as FLTAs consisted in helping in speaking and writing sessions, testing, teaching, designing materials, and being in charge of cultural activities related to food and dance in secondary schools and universities. Today’s globalized world has permeated education, and interculturality has recently been integrated in the English as a Foreign/Second Language classroom, broadening the language experience by including cultural aspects in a lesson. This is why we believe that understanding others is essential for communication and cooperation. As Sercu (2005) states, “foreign language education is, by definition, intercultural. Bringing a foreign language to the classroom means connecting learners to a world that is culturally different from their own” and promoting “the acquisition of intercultural competence in the learners” (Sercu 2005: 1). When teaching a foreign language, diverse forms of living and understanding the world get into the classroom by means of audiovisual materials, texts, talks, coursebooks and realia. Thanks to these sources, all members in the FL classroom can discover a foreign culture and contrast it with their own. The underlying aim is to work with and form pluricultural individuals, i.e. learners with the ability to recognize others and be aware of their own traditions and values. As it is not always essential to travel abroad to be pluriculturally competent, some practical ideas will be shown as a way of exemplifying lessons that are culturally focused and exploitable from a pluricultural point of view.
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dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2012
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publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Facultad de Lenguas
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