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American Culture Class

 
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lou_la



Joined: 04 Oct 2005
Posts: 140
Location: Bristol

PostPosted: Mon Nov 03, 2008 3:48 am    Post subject: American Culture Class Reply with quote

I have to teach an American Culture Class for two hours every week, to three Chinese teenage boys who are moving to north america next year.

The problem is, I'm British, I have no idea of how to go about this! Can any Americans/Canadians (one of them is going to canada) point out some important areas you think I should focus on? Basically, I just want them to have an idea of what they're going to be faced with at university next year - needless to say, it's going to be pretty different to what they're used to!

Thanks in advance!
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johnslat



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 13859
Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

PostPosted: Mon Nov 03, 2008 4:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dear lou_la

I don't know if this will help, but it can't hurt, and it may give you some ideas.

AMERICAN CULTURE

Course Syllabus

Course Prefix and Number

GEN 1041

Course Title
American Culture for International Students

Course Description

This mandatory course is designed for a newcomer to United States who has to deal not only with becoming a successful student at HSU, but is exposed to foreign culture, customs, laws, conceptions, and misconceptions. The course is not intended to replace Henderson Seminar; nor is it intended to teach international students to imitate Americans. It is designed to develop a deeper understanding of the country where international students will spend the next several years; and help them to cope with cultural differences. To understand America and Americans means in this case to have a reasonably accurate set of ideas on basis of which to interpret the circumstances and behavior they see.

Textbook: Gary Althen: American Ways (A Guide for Foreigners in the United States) Intercultural Press, Inc.



Course objectives:

I.
General Ideas about American Culture

1. General overview of the course � role/position/obligations of international students

Difference in educational systems

2. Understanding Americans

a) How Americans see themselves

b) How Americans see foreigners

c) Generalization � how much is acceptable?

3. General Ideas about American Culture

a) American Values and Assumptions

b) Individualism and privacy

c) Equality

d) Informality

e) Time

f) Achievement, Action, Materialism, Directness, Assertiveness

4. The Communicative Style of Americans

a) Preferred discussion topics, Favorite forms of interaction, Depth

of Involvement Sought, Channels Preferred, Level of Meaning

Emphasized

b) Ways of Reasoning

5. Differences in Customs



II.
Specific Aspect of American Life

1. Family Life

a) Parents, Children, Elders

b) Family Responsibilities

2) Social Relations

a) Male/ Female Relations

Friendship/ Commitment

b) Communication � Verbal/Nonverbal

c) Sports

d) Behavior in Public Places

e) Religion/Church

3) Business

a) Shopping

b) Banking � Credit, Credit Cards, Loans, Checks - Responsibility

c) Driving

4) Health

a) Personal Hygiene

b) Health care system in America

c) Medical Insurance



III.
Coping with cultural differences

1) Activities/Exercises

IV.
Assignments and Evaluation

Students are required to read the American Ways and participate in classroom discussions.

Research project: Each student, in consultation with instructor, will research and write a short paper about cultural pattern in U.S.,
which is different in his native country. Compare and contrast American cultural behavior.

Testing: Midterm and Final Test � multiple choice, short answers. Quizzes through the length of course."

http://www.hsu.edu/content.aspx?id=1061

Regards,
John
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ntropy



Joined: 11 Oct 2003
Posts: 671
Location: ghurba

PostPosted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:57 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

American and Canadian culture are substantially different. Sure, they both speak English, but there they have different forms of government, different histories, different attitudes towards immigration, different religous makeups, foods, sports, literature, differing regional frictions and so on and so on.

You would be doing a disservice to tell them they'll be entering "one" culture. They are no more similar than China would be to Japan.
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ntropy



Joined: 11 Oct 2003
Posts: 671
Location: ghurba

PostPosted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 5:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

American and Canadian culture are substantially different. Sure, they both speak English, but there they have different forms of government, different histories, different attitudes towards immigration, different religous makeups, foods, sports, literature, differing regional frictions and so on and so on.

You would be doing a disservice to tell them they'll be entering "one" culture. They are no more similar than China would be to Japan.
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spiral78



Joined: 05 Apr 2004
Posts: 11534
Location: On a Short Leash

PostPosted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 6:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

While it's aimed at businesspeople, www.executiveplanet.com offers a useful comparison of 'acceptable public behavior' and other useful info about both countries.

It could be interesting to start by printing out their info on China (it's in English, obviously) to see whether your students think it's accurate. Then you can compare it to US and Canadian info.
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GambateBingBangBOOM



Joined: 04 Nov 2003
Posts: 2021
Location: Japan

PostPosted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 6:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ntropy wrote:
American and Canadian culture are substantially different. Sure, they both speak English, but there they have different forms of government, different histories, different attitudes towards immigration, different religous makeups, foods, sports, literature, differing regional frictions and so on and so on.

You would be doing a disservice to tell them they'll be entering "one" culture. They are no more similar than China would be to Japan.


Sorry, but that's just ridiculous (unless for some reason you meant by this that China and Japan seem to be virtually identical to people who are outside of both, but that would be ridiculous within the context of China and Japan, too).

It is often commented that there seem to be no two countries where the everyday culture is more similar. It can be a long, LONG time before someone will know which country a person they meet overseas is from unless asked or told (usually, this means that there is an assumption that the person is American, based on the accent, but later the person will say they are from Canada- although I've heard it's the opposite in Korea). GENERALLY speaking, Canada tends to be a bit more socially liberal than the US, and it's true that the government is much more closely related to the British system than the American one. But then, Canada just re-elected another right wing minority government (the farthest right we've ever had federally) and the States seem to be about to elect a left wing government.

There are different foods in that there are foods in Canada that aren't really in the States, but 1. They usually aren't all that common (I don't recall having moose meat with Maple Syrup gravy over at my friend, Lumber Jack's house all that often) and 2. It isn't like there aren't regional foods that are found in one area of the States that aren't found in another. Anglo-Canadian and American are very close. Franco-Canadian and American are much further apart, but that's not really all that surprising at all, and there is probably a very, VERY slim chance that students travelling overseas to Canada to learn English language are going to be placed in the geographically largest French speaking place in the world (the province of Quebec is about three times the size of France is and is the only monolingual French province in Canada) and other than that most of Canada is English (New Brunswick is bilingual, Northern Ontario has a lot of French, of course the capital city is bilingual), except for small pockets that are either francophone or predominantly allophone (neither French nor English, but 'All Other Phone')

Different attitudes to sports:

Top four sports in Canada: hockey, baseball, basketball, football (generally NFL, but there are still people in Hamilton, Ontario and probably out west who care about the CFL)
Top four sports in the US: NFL Football, baseball, basketball, hockey.

Yep! Seems like a TOTALLY different thing to me, as different as two countries that speak unrelated languages!

Basically, as far as university goes, you should definately make sure they know that in Canada, university is the hardest level of school. You cannot really float through school in Canada. Canadians generally don't coddle (spoil) kids either- a lot of (probably most) Canadian kids have part time jobs during school and are responsible for their work. You cannot get by in school by sayiing 'oh, I didn't bring my textbook!'. This is the same in the US, but totally, TOTALLY different than what these students will be used to.
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jpvanderwerf2001



Joined: 02 Oct 2003
Posts: 1117
Location: New York

PostPosted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 10:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Do you have a US Embassy or Consulate around you? They usually have a wealth of cultural information that's free to take. There's usually a cultural specialist (for lack of appropriate term) whose job it is to spread the good word about the USA. Contact this person if possible.
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JZer



Joined: 16 Jan 2005
Posts: 3898
Location: Pittsburgh

PostPosted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 3:34 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

You might try downloading the college handbook from where they will be studying next year. It is a little try but it will give you and them some ideas about their university and you can teach them some of the important words they will need to know.


If they don't have a school yet then you can just download a handbook from some famous school or where they have already applied.
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