Cross-Cultural Students in the Classroom

 

02/15/2022

Week 7 Response: “Cross-Cultural Students in the Classroom”

ESL teachers will almost certainly be in a situation where they have cross-cultural students in their classroom. This could mean that the students come from a different culture than the teacher, or different cultures than each other. Whatever the combination, these differences will also, almost definitely, cause misunderstandings. One example that stood out to me was about asking questions in class. In the US this is seen as a good thing. Students who ask questions are interested in learning, they are engaged in the lesson and seeking to improve. Brother Ivers pointed out that in many Asian cultures, asking questions would be seen as a sign of disrespect to the teacher. They would see asking questions as a sign that the teacher isn’t doing their job well enough. This one difference could cause a lot of problems in an American/Asian cross-cultural classroom. Maybe because I grew up with an American paradigm I am biased, but I really do think that asking questions is a good thing. As an ESL teacher, I would want to impress on my students to not be afraid to ask questions.

Interestingly, I am not planning on teaching English as a second language, however. My plans include teaching, but I want to teach English literature in high school. This lesson still made me think, though, about my future teaching experience. When Brother Ivers talked about some of the ways American students are seen as rude and disrespectful, it brought up some of the fears I have about teaching high school students. They are famous for being rude! Sometimes I think that teenagers have their own cultural paradigms. So maybe when I become a teacher I can look at it that way and just try to understand their cultural differences better.

Comments

  1. Hi Amber, it seems to me that high school-age students can be rude in many countries, it is an age of many changes. For me, it is a great challenge to be a teacher of students of that age, although I really enjoyed teaching young people in the church, where the environment is very different from that at school. I congratulate you on your vocation!

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  2. Hi Amber.
    I found it interesting that you and I approached the same about asking questions in the classroom. I know some Brazilian children who study in the United States and the culture impacts them a lot when they are at school. Learning about culture will help you even if it is to teach in high school.
    Great post!

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