Abstract

The role of cultural dimensions in the teaching of Chinese as a foreign language in the UK is not as fully understood as it needs to be, especially in relation to developing students' abilities with intercultural communication. This paper adopts an ecological perspective on learning another language and seeks to contribute to the field of teaching and learning a foreign language through an investigation of the perceptions and experiences of university-based learners of Chinese. Learners' perceptions and experiences might productively be conceptualized with an ecology metaphor which provides analysts with a complex view of the learning and use of language based on a consideration of time and space. This present study focuses on one aspect of a broader research project in which the author investigated a group of students studying Chinese at universities in London and other British cities whose construction of culture and intercultural competence while learning Chinese as a foreign language was based on their learning experiences and intercultural encounters. In what follows we consider the concept of 'language distance' in order to understand both the linguistic and social space that students of Chinese need to overcome. Drawing from the research data, the paper also considers the notion of intercultural communication and learning as arising from a seamless interaction between different layers of fluid social processes. The paper argues that Chinese as a foreign language in higher education can provide resources for developing intercultural dimensions of learning. The paper concludes by stressing that changes in approach to teaching and learning Chinese are increasingly necessary because of the rapid changes that are taking place within the social and political ecology of China and the Chinese language.

Highlights

  • The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that:

  • This present study focuses on one aspect of a broader research project in which the author investigated a group of students studying Chinese at universities in London and other British cities whose construction of culture and intercultural competence while learning Chinese as a foreign language was based on their learning experiences and intercultural encounters

  • Building on the knowledge developed from this tradition of research, the present paper focuses on the teaching and learning of Mandarin Chinese as a foreign language in the UK in the higher education sector and examines how the targets ‘culture’ and ‘intercultural competence’ are constructed and understood by learners

Read more

Summary

22 Tinghe Jin

Within the higher education sector, intercultural awareness, understanding, and competence have been identified as key learning outcomes for language graduates (QAA, 2007). Worton’s (2009) research takes account of feedback from employers to emphasize the significance of developing graduates’ intercultural competence in order to enhance their employability, a position adopted by Arabski and Wojtaszek (2011). Intercultural communication is concerned with interactive processes that occur between individuals who have experienced different ways of life, which fundamentally influences how they interact with each other (Corder and Meyerhoff, 2007) and how they reconfigure their own senses of identity. This means penetrating the social space of the other, which is shaped by a discourse field. This paper, looks within the UK university context at how far the Chinese language mediates learners’ ways of knowing the target culture while developing abilities to communicate with people from the target country. A higher education setting was chosen because of the rapid expansion of Mandarin learning currently taking place in colleges and universities

Methodology
Conclusions
Notes on contributor
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call