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How to include culture learning in English language classes
Communicating Across Cultures
A Guide for Teachers
Linell Davis
January 2005
What do we mean by culture?

Chinese speakers often mean characteristics of Chinese
people as compared to characteristics of people from
other nations
 Knowledge about culture is often expressed as
generalizations
• The English are conservative
• Americans are individualistic
• The French are romantic

National culture
 Personal traits of people from that nation
More meanings of culture

Way of life of any group
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Regional culture- north/south, rural/urban
Religious culture- Christian, Buddhist, Moslem
Ethnic culture- Han, Hui, Tibetan, Xinjiang
Gender culture- male/female
Economic class culture- farmer/intellectual/business
Generational culture- youth/middle age/elderly
Organizational culture – schools, education
“Way of Life” definition of culture
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Assumes that people with similar life experiences
share VALUES.
They see the world in similar ways.
Members of important groups share MEANINGS.
They can understand one another more easily than they
can understand people from other groups.
Group membership is often more important than
national culture.
What do I know about the NBA?
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Nothing at all
I am female and I am old
The NBA is American and I am an American
It is an experience shared by male members of
the international youth culture
I am not a member of that culture
So, don’t assume that national culture is the
only or best level of analysis
What do I know about teaching?
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A lot; it is my love, my craft, my life
I share many experiences with other teachers
It doesn’t matter whether they are Americans or
Chinese
We can communicate about teaching, learning, schools,
students, etc.
We share an academic or educational culture
Differences in national culture are not necessarily
significant barriers to communication
Do I know how to use chopsticks?
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Of course, I do. Why do people keep asking me that
question?
Because Chinese use chopsticks and Americans use
knives and forks, and I am an American
They assume that I am different from them in every
way because I am a waiguo ren
Look for similarities, not just differences
When you meet someone for the first time, you look
for what you have in common with that person.
How do Americans celebrate
Christmas?

In many different ways, some not at all
• Ethnic cultures – Italian/Swedish/German/Hispanic
• Religious cultures – Christian/Jewish/secular
• Regional cultures –south/north, east coast/west coast

People often ask me questions about Americans
 They assume all Americans are alike
 They want me to give them a generalization
 Generalizations about national cultures cause many
misunderstandings in communication
Do all Americans sleep late?
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A Chinese friend invited me to go to a park to do
morning exercises
BUT – all along the way she complained about the
traffic.
I asked – Why do you do it if it is so unpleasant?
Her answer – You are an American, so I didn’t think
you would want to go as early as I usually go.
I am an early-riser.
National culture is not a good predictor of most
personal habits.
Are Americans more individualistic than
Chinese?

The conventional opinion is yes, they are.
 There is some truth to it, but it is an oversimplification.
 This idea alone is not a useful guide to predicting the
preferences or behavior of Americans.
 Chinese educational culture is much more
individualistic than American educational culture.
• American teachers collaborate more.
• Students do more group work.
If you use ‘American individualism’ to
predict what Americans prefer, you will
make many mistakes
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In international competition Americans excel at
team sports while Chinese excel at individual
sports.
Americans are constantly forming groups and
joining groups to meet a variety of personal and
professional goals.
Typically, Americans participate in groups very
differently from the way Chinese people do.
Pay attention to processes rather than
traits
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How do people carry on a friendship?
How do they teach; how do they learn?
How do they show respect?
How do they express disagreement?
How do they apologize?
How do they handle relationships with people of
higher or lower status than themselves?
How do they participate in work groups?
ICC - Intercultural communication
competence
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Knowledge of social groups in your own country and other
countries
Attitude of openness about other cultures and people
Ability to gain new knowledge and to act on that knowledge
Knowledge of processes and ability to use that knowledge
How to communicate – not just how to speak the target
language
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•
•
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Meeting, greeting, starting a conversation
Expressing agreement and disagreement
Asking for information
Working with others
Then, how do we teach culture?
Three approaches are used:

Big “C” Culture
• Important people, works, events
• Mark Twain, Bill Gates, “I have a dream” speech,
War of Independence, Civil War

Little “c” culture
• Daily life, holidays, customs
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Cultural awareness
• Culture-general rather than culture-specific
Try these two approaches
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Cultural awareness
The classroom as a cultural scene
• Stretching, expanding, destabilizing the culturally
prescribed ways of teaching and learning
• “When a butterfly flaps its wings in the north, it
produces a typhoon in the south.”
• It means – doing small things can have big effects
Cultural awareness
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Sensitivity to
• People
• Situations
• Similarities and differences

Expanding the concept of culture beyond the idea of
national culture
 Working on problems of generalization and prejudice
 Building on what students already know about how to
communicate
English is a global language
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People in many countries learn English.
Don’t limit culture learning to the study of countries
where English is a native language.
English can be used to learn about many different
cultures and about culture in general.
It is likely that in the future your students will be
communicating with speakers of English as a second or
foreign language.
They are participants in the emerging global culture.
So are you!
Culture learning begins with awareness
of the home culture
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How did you/your family come to Shenzhen?
How does your family entertain guests?
What was life like for your grandparents when they
were your age?
Tell about an experience in which someone judged you
based on a single characteristic.
Tell about an experience in which you communicated
with someone different from you.
Your class is full of cultural diversity
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A microcosm of our global village
Through these activities you teach how to deal with differences
Respect differences, appreciate them and learn from them
Look for similarities as a basis for building relationships
Notice that these learning activities are inductive and studentcentered.
Using them you are doing culture, not just learning about a
specific culture
You are modeling social practices from the global culture.
Bring new experiences into the
classroom
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Look at the organizational culture of the school
and the classroom.
Take steps to stretch that culture a little to move
it closer to the ways of the target culture.
This is the best way to teach culture.
It is the way for you and your students to gain
intercultural competence.
Similarities in classroom cultures
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Students study similar subjects
They usually live at home and attend school
five days a week
They have homework; they take exams
They are sensitive to the approval/disapproval
of their teachers and classmates
From the classroom culture they are learning
how to participate in the larger culture
Differences in classroom cultures
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American
Chinese
Student-centered
Teacher - centered
Knowledge is sometimes
discovered by students
Inductive
Knowledge is given by the
teacher
Deductive
Students prefer definite
answers; uncomfortable with
ambiguity, uncertainty
More than one answer is
acceptable; uncertainty
stimulates discovery
Learning through problemsolving
– thinking, acting
Learning through reading
- visualizing
Relationships based on hierarchy
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The teacher is at the top of the
hierarchy, the leader of the
class
Relationships between teacher
and students somewhat distant
because students owe respect
and obedience
Relationships are reciprocal or
complementary
service
The pattern is one of mutual Respect,
and obedience
dependence
Direction, care and
protection
Communication flow
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The classroom leader, the
teacher, belongs to other
hierarchies.
Teacher owes respect, service
and obedience to those above
Communication flows from the
top down
Teachers communicate with
one student at a time or with
the group as a whole
Students can communicate
freely with each other unless
they are competing for the
approval of the leader.
Teacher - Student Interaction
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Teachers are likely to
give very precise
instructions
 The student’s job is to
produce the correct
answer
 This process is
endlessly repeated and
elaborated
 It produces the
examination system
I better tell them exactly what to do
I don’t want any mistakes
What am I supposed to do?
I hope I don’t make a mistake
Bring the new close to the familiar
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Develop your intercultural competence by
stretching the system a little.
Introduce activities in which students learn
inductively – cultural awareness activities.
Encourage student inquiry.
Encourage them to ask questions that do not
have definite or fixed answers.
Western style groups
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Short term – time limited group learning projects
Belong to many groups – classes and a variety of
extra-curricular groups such as sports teams and
music groups
Less emotionally involved in each group
Prefer equal relationships – teacher is not as
socially distant, not as elevated in status
The teacher is more like the coach of a team
Group identity and personal identity
are separate

In the West groups have
less influence over the
individual’s behavior
 The person forms and
breaks ties easily
 The person looks for
groups that are useful in
achieving personal goals
Professional groups
Community groups
person
Work groups
Recreation groups
Group leadership is dispersed
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Various members take
leadership roles
 Leaders win their roles by
convincing members of their
effectiveness
 Members expect to contribute
in different ways to the group
 Their rewards will be different
too.
Task leader
Formal
leader
Emotional
leader
Process
leader
Resource
leader
Members cooperate and compete
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Members may compete with one another for
recognition, leadership, allies, etc.
They also cooperate within the group and outside the
group
Linking the group with other groups is an essential
function
The group boundary is relatively open
These complex patterns of competition and
cooperation are made orderly by rules of process called
“fair play rules”
Examples of fair play rules
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Everyone should have an equal opportunity to participate – no
one should dominate or be left out
Decision-making is shared – not the exclusive responsibility of
the leader whether that is the teacher or any other member
Members should give honest feedback – students freely say
what they like and don’t like; they make suggestions
Everyone should focus on the task at hand
Some tasks are individual; others are completed by the group
Know the difference and don’t cheat
These process rules are often more important than
reaching a specific outcome
Personal motivation is critical
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Because group membership
is voluntary, members must
be motivated to devote
energy to the group
If a person must be in a
group, it is still necessary to
build motivation to create
energy for the group’s work
Chinese classroom groups
depend more on extrinsic
motivation – passing exams
I like working
with the people
in this group
I can learn
some new
skills from
this group
I really believe
in the purpose
of this group
If I do a great
job I’ll move up in
the organization
My goals
are the same
as the group’s
goals
Comparing group behaviors
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Western
little difference between
ingroup and outgroup
behaviors
less associative with
ingroups; less hostile to
outgroups
informal and direct
insensitive to
hierarchical relations
among members
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Chinese
great difference between
ingroup and outgroup
behaviors
more associative with
ingroups; more hostile to
outgroups
may be motivated by
loyalty to ingroups
expect all members to be
rewarded equally
Questions for teachers who want to
stretch the classroom culture
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What motivates me and others?
• Do I respond to extrinsic or intrinsic motivation?
What roles do I play in the groups I participate in?
• A directive leader in some and passive follower in others?
What behaviors/attitudes from the target culture can I practice?
• Sharing tasks and information with colleagues without
waiting for the leader’s instructions
• Introducing inductive learning experiences
• Coaching rather than directing learning experiences
Teams are Western style groups
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Teams are highly motivated, voluntary, short term,
goal-oriented groups
The team metaphor includes the idea that the group
will win; it will achieve its goal
Members cooperate and even compromise if necessary
to get the job done
High energy and some ingroup competition serve the
larger goals of the group
When you enact the team metaphor in your class, you
prepare students for participation in the global culture.
The Chinese national football team
hired a coach from the West
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The strategy was to build a Western style team
Previously every member was behaving like a
Chinese dragon
• Showing how great they were as individuals
• Sacrificing the best interests of the team as a whole
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“One Chinese is a dragon; three are a worm.”
Do you still say that Americans are more
individualistic than Chinese?
For more information

Read my book
• Doing Culture: Cross-cultural communication in
action. Beijing Foreign Languages Teaching and
Research Press
• Available at Shenzhen Book City, telephone 075582073020; talk to Miss Wu
• Chapters 1-3 on cultural awareness
• Chapter 13 on working in groups