Wacky Theories Weird Techniques Peculiar Cultures Fabulous English - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Wacky Theories Weird Techniques Peculiar Cultures Fabulous English

Description:

Music and lyrics shared within a culture may or may not be enjoyed by members of ... Bach Cantatas vs. Rap. Lullabies vs. Country Western. Traditional Folk ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:97
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: anneb1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Wacky Theories Weird Techniques Peculiar Cultures Fabulous English


1
Wacky Theories Weird Techniques Peculiar
Cultures Fabulous English
  • Anne Bliss, Ph.D.
  • University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
  • Fulbright Fellow 2005, Chile

2
Whats a THEORY?
  • Somebody has an idea
  • That person does some research, usually
  • Then the person finds out whether the idea seems
    to be true.
  • Yep, he/she thinks so
  • The person claims the idea is TRUE writes an
    article, and a THEORY is born
  • Some argue for/some argue against

3
Wacky theory 1
  • The Square Earth Society claims
  • the earth is
  • SQUARE!

4
PROOF SHIP SAILS APPEAR ON THE HORIZON, TOP
FIRST, AND THE DISAPPEAR IN REVERSE ORDER.
5
Wacky Theory 2
  • Some guy on a boat looked up into the night sky
    and saw stars moving in circles.
  • He claimed that the earth is
  • ROUND!
  • ?

6
Wacky Theory 3
  • Two fellows who studied linguistics and
    psychology decided that we view the world through
    our language. Voila, the Sapir/Whorf Hypothesis
    (still a theory)
  • LANGUAGE DETERMINES
  • OUR WORLD VIEW.

Edmund Sapir/Benjamin Whorf
7
World Views through Language
  • Laguna Lagoon,
  • Salt Lake, Waste Water,
  • Mineral Water and
  • VACATION
  • Iglesia Church,
  • Religion, Catholic,
  • Historic Site, Holy,
  • Faith, Padres, Heaven and HELL.

8
World Views through Language
  • Ohiogozaimas Good morning!
  • My name is Amami I live on Kikai-ijima island,
    and I speak Japanese. My grandmother speaks Ho
    Gang, an old language of this island. We cant
    talk to each other very well, but we are good
    friends.

9
World Views through Language
  • Woof, woof!
  • Woof, woof, woof!
  • Oooooow! Ooooow.
  • Woof, woof!
  • Grrrrr
  • (Im a dog, and I
  • can communicate
  • without words. Do I
  • have a world view?)

10
World Views through Language
  • Ni Hao! Hello!
  • (ni you hao good)
  • Im Dr. Zhang, and this is my wife, Dr. Gao. We
    recently got married, and we speak Chinese.
  • Zaijian (goodbye)

11
World Views through Language
  • Hola! Hello!
  • Yo soy Ching y ella es mi amiga, Paula.
  • Nosotromos somos maestros de ingles en un colegio
    en Arica, Chile. Hablamos español.
  • Ciao, er Adios, er Hasta la vista, bebe! Baby!
    Uh, bye-bye

12
Whats a Technique?
  • A professor of Educational Psychology once said
    that a good teacher could teach in a barn,
    without chalk, whiteboards, desks, books, etc.
    All a good teacher needs to do is
  • MOTIVATE STUDENTS.

Reference Dr. S. Thompson
13
Motivating Students
  • What do students like to do?
  • Hang out
  • Play games ?
  • Eat
    ?
  • Sleep ?
  • Compete ?
  • Goof off .
    ?
  • LEARN! We learn what we want or need to know.
    Experiences are good teachers.

14
What do teachers like to do?
  • Hang out
  • Play games
  • Eat
  • Sleep
  • Compete
  • Goof off .
  • TEACH! Use weird techniques.

15
Weird Techniques 1In Person Taking
TripsScavenger Hunts
16
In Person No Risk Games and Having Fun English
Corners/English Nights
17
Weird Techniques 2Using Materials Story
Starters and Picture Shows
18
Weird Techniques 3 Using Words
The first little piggy went to market
Nursery Rhymes and Tongue Twisters
Pronunciation Games, Chants, Music and Untied
Tongues
19
Peculiar Cultures
  • CULTURE Shared knowledge among a group of
    humans artifacts used by members of the group
  • PECULIAR Ideas or things that seem strange to
    people who dont understand them

20
Peculiar Cultures 1
  • Members of some Asian cultures enjoy eating
    dogmeat when the weather is hot, or for good
    health. Other cultures despair of eating dogs
    still other cultures approve of eating snakes,
    raw fish, mules, etc.
  • Members of some Latino cultures enjoy eating very
    hot/spicy food when the weather is hot, or for
    good health. Other Latino cultures prefer cool
    food.
  • Words and expressions for foods and sharing food
    are important linguistic and cultural knowledge.
  • FOOD IS NOT JUST ABOUT EATING ITS ABOUT
    EVERYTHINGand food is a good topic to use when
    learning English and sharing cultures.

21
FOODIES
  • Chow chao mein, ciao, chow man
  • Delicious finger-lickin good, chuparse los
    dedos, oishi-des, yum!
  • Cup cup-u, taza, copa, coffee or tea?
  • Table table-u, mesa, flat-top mountain

22
Peculiar Cultures 2
  • Music and lyrics shared within a culture may or
    may not be enjoyed by members of a different
    culture.often the lyrics are related
  • Lyrics - Vocabulary
  • Rhythms Repetition
  • Tunes - Intonation
  • Mozart vs. the Beatles
  • Bach Cantatas vs. Rap
  • Lullabies vs. Country Western
  • Traditional Folk Songs vs. Heavy Metal

23
Peculiar Cultures 3
  • Personal affect varies from one culture to
    another. These stereotypical affects influence
    language use and risk taking in language
    learning.
  • Native Americans of the Warm Springs Tribe
    typically do not look at elders when they speak.
  • Some Muslim males do not look at female
    professors when they speak. Some Muslim females
    are hidden behind veils when they speak.
  • Some Asians are reluctant to voice their
    opinions, especially in public.
  • Some North Americans and some Europeans speak
    loudly and insistently.
  • Some Latin Americans tend to keep quiet unless
    they know exactly what they want to say.

24
Fabulous English
  • THEORY International English is a new breed of
    English, it belongs to no nation or specific
    culture, and this new English is fast becoming
    the most used language in the world.
  • Whose theory? Mine, and it might be wacky. But,
    lets consider, research, and argue for and
    against the theory.
  • PROOF
  • International English follows some rules of
    English (British, American, Australian, Canadian,
    other) and not others.
  • It is a sponge and soaks up whatever lexicon,
    grammar or syntax seem to be useful and
    efficient, or it makes up new words and
    constructions.
  • Its linearity complements technology and
    algorithms.
  • It sponges up different world views and spits
    them out in new places.
  • Using English brings about powerful cultural
    influences and changes.
  • Is it round or square or linear? Its all of
    thoseso long as its communicable.

25
Proof of Theory 1
  • International English follows some rules of
    English (British, American, Australian, Canadian,
    other) and not others.
  • Words meaning, order, use/intention,
    omission/addition, pronunciation, Latinate or
    Germanic terms, invented terminology
  • Grammar not especially important.
  • Syntax follows linear patterns, usually
  • Punctuation can change intention, use carefully
  • CONSIDER BRITISH/AMERICAN PUNCTUATION

26
Proof of Theory 2
  • International English is a sponge and soaks up
    whatever lexicon, grammar or syntax seem to be
    useful and efficient, or it makes up new words
    and constructions.
  • Words cultural, conquered, borrowed, changed
  • Grammar linguistic differences, fossils,
    flexibility
  • Syntax word order for clarity
  • What to worry about? Communication!

27
Proof of Theory 3
  • Its linearity complements technology and
    algorithms.
  • English is a word order language with little
    flexibility compared to other languages. English
    can be more specific than most other languages
    to be and articles (a, an, the).
  • Many Asian languages are somewhat circular.
  • Many African languages depend on sounds.
  • Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese) depends on
    tones.
  • Most Eskimo and Native American languages tend to
    be somewhat indirect/circular.
  • Latin based languages tend to use inflections and
    flexible structures.
  • Mathematics/algorithms are linear structures
    computers work by means of mathematic and
    linguistic algorithms.

28
Proof of Theory 4
  • It sponges up different world views and spits
    them out in new places.
  • Consider GLOBALIZATION.
  • Consider the Sapir/Whorf Hypothesis.
  • Consider your use of Spanish compared to your use
    of English which words do you prefer to use for
    which actions, things, ideas, emotions?
  • Consider ACCULTURATION.

29
Proof of Theory 5
  • Using English brings about powerful cultural
    influences and changes.
  • Media print, cinema/film, electronic including
    computers, Internet, cell phones
  • Cultural Artifacts food, clothing, tools, etc.
  • Cultural Behaviors religion, relationships,
    family structures, etc.
  • Vocabulary gain/loss
  • Cultural gain/loss

30
THEORY International English is a new breed of
English, and the new English is fast becoming the
most used language in the world.
  • Wacky Theories
  • Weird Techniques
  • Peculiar Cultures
  • Fabulous English Learn it, Use it, TAKE RISKS,
    free your students to TAKE RISKS, MAKE MISTAKES,
    PLAY WITH WORDS AND STRUCTURES.WE LEARN
    LANGUAGES BY LISTENING, SPEAKING, READING, AND
    WRITINGBY DOING!

31
Keep Talkin !!
  • Thank you for your attention. (big smile)
  • Muchas gracias por su attencion. (smile)
  • Shi-shi, hen hao. (with a nod)
  • Arigato goziamas. (with a bow)
  • Ciao, y hasta luego! Talk a lot, a lot, a lot!
    Englich? Ingles? Eengleesh? Engleesh-u?
    ENGLISH! FABULOUS ENGLISH!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com