- •Пояснительная записка
- •Table of contents
- •International communication
- •International communication
- •Independent b1
- •Independent b2
- •1. Matching headings with paragraphs
- •2. Identifying where to find information
- •Incorrect article choice
- •Incorrect omission or inclusion of articles
- •1. Matching headings with paragraphs
- •2. Identifying where to find information
- •3. Reciting and reviewing the text.
- •(Abridged from the Toolkit for transnational communication in Europe. Copenhagen Studies in Bilingualism. University of Copenhagen, 2011)
- •1. Matching headings with paragraphs
- •2. Identifying where to find information
- •3. Reciting and reviewing the text.
- •4. Identifying patterns of text organization.
- •Identify description, step-by-step explanation, directions, comparison and contrast, analysis, analogy, and definition in the following paragraphs:
- •Verb errors involving tense
- •Text 1-4. Receptive multilingualism (Abridged from the Toolkit for transnational communication in Europe. Copenhagen Studies in Bilingualism. University of Copenhagen, 2011)
- •1. Matching headings with paragraphs.
- •2. Identifying where to find information.
- •3. Identifying the key words of the text.
- •4. Identifying patterns of text organization.
- •Identify description, step-by-step explanation, directions, comparison and contrast, analysis, analogy, and definition in the following paragraphs:
- •5. Reviewing and reciting the text.
- •Identify and correct errors involving verbs and verbals
- •(After j. Normann Jørgensen’s and Kasper Juffermans’ sections in the Toolkit for Transnational Communication in Europe. Copenhagen Studies in Bilingualism. University of Copenhagen, 2011)
- •1. Matching headings with paragraphs.
- •2. Identifying where to find information.
- •3. Identifying the key words of the text.
- •4. Identifying patterns of text organization.
- •Identify description, step-by-step explanation, directions, comparison and contrast, analysis, analogy, and definition in the following paragraphs:
- •5. Reviewing and reciting the text.
- •6. What circumstantial evidence can be inferred from the following paragraph:
- •7. Which of the following best describes the organization of the passage?
- •9. What is the author's attitude toward superdiversity and languaging? Answer choices:
- •Incorrect verb forms
- •(After Robert Phillipson’s Lingua franca or lingua frankensteinia? In World Englishes, 27/2, 250-284, 2008)
- •1. Matching headings with paragraphs.
- •2. Identifying where to find indirect information.
- •3. Identifying the key words of the text.
- •4. Identifying patterns of text organization.
- •Identify description, step-by-step explanation, directions, comparison and contrast, analysis, analogy, and definition in the following paragraphs:
- •5. Reviewing and reciting the text.
- •6. What circumstantial evidence can be inferred from the following paragraph:
- •8. What is the author's attitude toward the English language in science and education expressed in the following paragraph?
- •9. Make valid inferences based on the questions:
- •Identify and correct errors involving verbs and verbals
- •Incorrect inclusion or omission of prepositions
- •Identify and correct errors involving prepositions
- •1. A definition of communication
- •2. Major structural components
- •3. What is culture?
- •4. Explaining Culture
- •1. New approach to intercultural understanding.
- •2. Culture as Ways of Thinking, Beliefs and Values
- •3. Culture as Language: The Close Link Between Language and Culture
- •Identify and correct errors involving the wrong word choice
- •Identify and correct errors involving sentence structure
- •Incomplete adjective clauses
- •Identify and correct errors involving types of clauses
- •Identify and correct errors involving adverb clauses
- •In Europe
- •In Sweden
- •Incomplete noun clauses
- •Identify and correct errors involving noun clauses:
- •Incomplete participial phrases
- •Incomplete appositives
- •Incomplete/missing prepositional phrase
- •Identify and correct errors involving incomplete phrases
- •Introduction
- •Informative Abstracts:
- •Tips and Warnings
- •Identify and correct errors involving word order
- •Items involving parallel structures
- •Introduction
- •Implications
- •Identify and correct errors involving subject-verb agreement
- •Text 1-23. Interpreting successful lingua franca interaction (Based on Christiane Meierkord’s analysis of non-native/non-native small talk conversations in English)
- •The data
- •Identify and correct errors involving misplaced modifiers
- •Text 1-24. Bringing europe's lingua franca into the classroom (After an editorial published on guardian.Co.Uk on Thursday 19 April 2001)
- •Issues:
- •Issues:
- •Issues:
- •Issues:
- •Issues:
- •Issues:
- •1. European migrant workers
- •2. Returnees
- •3. Tourism
- •4. The redistribution of poverty
- •5. Expat workers
- •6. Internal migration
- •7. A reserve army of labour offshore
- •1. Communications technology
- •2. Text messaging
- •3. Surveillance society
- •4. Why English is used less . . .
- •5. Independent journalists and bloggers
- •Text 2-4. Polylingualism, multilingualism, plurilingualism
- •1. Borders - Borderlands – Boundaries (after Virginie Mamadouh)
- •3. Tool(s) – Toolkit (after Virginie Mamadouh)
- •1. Could you tell us your background and why you decided to become an educator? (from Ana Wu, City College of San Francisco, esl Instructor)
- •2. From poststructural and postcolonial perspectives, linguistic imperialism could be critiqued by its deterministic and binary divisions; those who colonize and those who are colonized.
- •6. Dr. Phillipson: In the March, 2009 interview Marinus Stephan on this blog, Dr. Stephan
- •8. You have written and discussed very controversial issues. How do you deal with criticism? How do you react to people who disagree with your ideas?
- •1. Interactive communication
- •2. Time and Space
- •3. Fate and Personal Responsibility
- •4. Face and Face-Saving
- •5. Nonverbal Communication
- •6. Summary
- •1. Social interaction.
- •2. Looking Back
- •3. Food for Thought
- •1. Introduction
- •2. Three Decades Have Passed
- •3. Cultural Predestination!
- •4. Individual Values
- •5. Culture Is a Set of Dynamic Processes of Generation and Transformation
- •1. Strong and weak uncertainty-avoidance cultures
- •2. Individualism versus Collectivism, the Case of Japan
- •3. Identity
- •1. Two specific uses of the concept of cultural identity
- •2. The interplay of culture and personality
- •3. The interaction of culture and biology
- •4. Psychosocial patterns of culture
- •5. Motivational needs
- •6. The flexibility of the multicultural personality
- •1. Introduction
- •2. Background: English as the language of publication and instruction
- •3. Methods
- •4. Results
- •4.1 Form of words (Morphology)
- •4.2 Grammar (Syntax)
- •4.3 Attitudes towards English as a Lingua Franca
- •5. Conclusion
- •Text 2-14. A new concept of english?
- •Cambridge English Examinations: Speaking Test
- •1. Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills (bics)
- •Implications for mainstream teachers
- •2. Common underlying proficiency (cup)
- •Implications for mainstream teachers
- •Implications for mainstream teachers
- •4. Additive/subtractive bilingualism
- •Implications for mainstream teachers
- •Introduction
- •Impetus for the study
- •1. Cultural
- •2. Organizational
- •Parts of an Abstract
- •Introduction
- •Interaction between teacher and students
- •Read the introduction section of the article.
- •Read the methods section of the article.
- •Read the discussion section of the article.
- •(Based on Christiane Meierkord’s analysis of non-native-/non-native small talk conversations in English. Continued from Text 1-23)
- •Interpreting lingua franca conversational data
5. Motivational needs
Implicit in any analysis of cultural identity is a configuration of motivational needs. As the late Abraham Maslow (1962) suggested, human drives form a hierarchy in which the most prepotent motivations will monopolize consciousness and will tend, of themselves, to organize the various capacities and capabilities of the organism. In the sequence of development, the needs of infancy and childhood revolve primarily around physiological and biological necessities, i.e., nourishment by food, water, and warmth. Correspondingly, psychosocial needs are most profound in adolescence and young adulthood when the people engage in establishing themselves through mar, "un-becoming", something different from before while yet mindful of the grounding in his or her primary cultural reality. Stated differently, the multicultural individual is propelled from identity to identity through a process of both cultural learning and cultural un-learning. The multicultural person, like Robert J. Lifton's concept of "protean man" (1961), is always recreating his or her identity. He or she moves through one experience of self to another, incorporating here, discarding there, responding dynamically and situationally. This style of self-process, suggests Lifton, "is characterized by an interminable series of experiments and explorations, some shallow, some profound, each of which can readily be abandoned in favor of still new, psychological quests." The multicultural person is always in flux, the configuration of loyalties and identifications changing, the overall image of self perpetually being reformulated through experience and contact with the world. Stated differently, life is an ongoing process of psychic death and rebirth.
Third, the multicultural person maintains indefinite boundaries of the self. The parameters of identity are neither fixed nor predictable, being responsive, instead, to both temporary form and openness to change. Multicultural people are capable of major shifts in their frame of reference and embody the ability to disavow a permanent character and change in socio-psychological style. The multicultural person, in the words of Peter Berger (1973) is a "homeless mind," a condition which, though allowing great flexibility, also allows for nothing permanent and unchanging to develop. This homelessness is at the heart of his motivational needs. He is, suggests Lifton, "starved for ideas and feelings that give coherence to his world", that give structure and form to the search for the universal and absolute, that give definition to the perpetual quest. The multicultural person, like great philosophers in any age, can never accept totally the demands of any one culture nor are they free from the conditioning of their culture. Their psychocultural style must always be relational and in movement, able to look at their own original culture from an outsider's perspective. This tension gives rise to a dynamic, passionate, and critical posture in the face of totalistic ideologies, systems, and movements.
