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The International Classroom

Challenging the Notion

by Vittorina Cecchetto (Volume editor) Magda Stroinska (Volume editor)
©2006 Edited Collection 244 Pages

Summary

Classrooms offer a safe and fertile laboratory-like environment where students and teachers can engage in communication across languages and cultures. This volume challenges the dominant notion of international classroom and the authors approach the reality of international students and professors from several new perspectives. They show that the international student may not necessarily come from overseas and that students from different linguistic and cultural backgrounds are a rich untapped resource in our increasingly interconnected world. The authors also illustrate why abolishing the distinction between national and international classroom is vital to the future of intercultural communication and relationships and offer insights and strategies that can be valuable tools for teachers and instructors at any level.

Details

Pages
244
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631538029
Language
English
Keywords
Interkulturelles Lernen Bildungseinrichtung Cross-Cultural pragmatic ESL teaching Acculturation Motivation International Student Adaptation Aufsatzsammlung
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2006. 243 pp., 5 tab., 4 graphs

Biographical notes

Vittorina Cecchetto (Volume editor) Magda Stroinska (Volume editor)

The Editors: Vittorina Cecchetto teaches Italian and Linguistics at McMaster University in Canada. Her research interests include the genesis of immigrant contact languages in a multicultural society, the linguistic and identity problems of first and second generation immigrants, didactic stereotyping in second language instruction and language attrition in the aging immigrants. Magda Stroińska teaches Linguistics and German at McMaster University in Canada. Her major areas of research include cross-cultural and interpersonal communication, cognitive linguistics, language of propaganda and problems of communication in the aging multicultural population.

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Title: The International Classroom