LINGUIST List 19.2091
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Tue Jul 01 2008
Confs: General Ling, Lang Acquisition, Philosophy of Lang, Socioling/USA
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Directory
1. Kate
Mackay,
Developing and Assessing Intercultural Competence
Message 1: Developing and Assessing Intercultural Competence
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Date: 01-Jul-2008
From: Kate Mackay <kmackay email.arizona.edu>
Subject: Developing and Assessing Intercultural Competence
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Developing and Assessing Intercultural Competence Date: 10-Oct-2008 - 11-Oct-2008 Location: Tucson, Arizona, USA Contact: Kate Mackay Contact Email: cercll email.arizona.edu Meeting URL: http://cercll.arizona.edu/events_intercultural.php Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Philosophy of Language; Sociolinguistics Meeting Description: A Professional Development conference for K-16 educators in language, social studies and humanities-related fields. The conference is cosponsored by the University of Arizona's Center for Educational Resources in Culture, Language and Literacty (CERCLL), Center for Latin American Studies, and Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Intercultural competence is [the ability] ''to see relationships between different cultures - both internal and external to a society - and to mediate, that is interpret each in terms of the other, either for themselves or for other people.'' It also encompasses the ability to critically or analytically understand that one's '''own and other cultures''' perspective is culturally determined rather than natural. - Michael Byram, Professor, University of Durham, England A simple definition [of intercultural competence], might be: the abilities to perform effectively and appropriately with members of another language-culture background on their terms. - Alvino E. Fantini, Ph.D., School for International Training, Vermont Intercultural competence might also be defined as knowledge of others; knowledge of self; skills to interpret and relate; skills to discover and/or to interact; valuing others' values, beliefs, and behaviors; and relativizing one's self. - Darla Deardorff, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Association of International Education Administrators, Duke University, North Carolina Although the term is increasingly used today, there is by no means consensus about what it is. So what is Intercultural Competence? How can we help students develop it? How do we assess it? These are the many questions that we will try to answer during this conference. Participants will examine how to develop and assess Intercultural Competence within four disciplines (Foreign Languages, Social Studies, Language Arts, and Fine Arts) with a focus on two regional areas: Latin America and the Middle East. The schedule culminates in discipline-based workshops in which participants can begin to create curriculum units and lesson plans using the materials presented in the keynote and plenary talks. Conference presenters are drawn from well-known experts in the fields of Intercultural Competence and Communication across the U.S., as well as from faculty at the University of Arizona.
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