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ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question.. .

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Page 1: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

ATTITUDES:

Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question..

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Page 2: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Development of Attitudes:Attitudes develop early in childhood.*The effect of attitudes on language learning.*positive attitudes lead to:1. an integrative orientation to

learn2. a significant correlate of success.

Page 3: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

The relationship between attitudes and language successPositive attitudes toward self, the native language group, and the target language group enhance proficiency

Page 4: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

How can a Tr. change negative attitudes ?*By replacing negative attitudes with accurate understanding of the other culture as one that is different from one’s own, yet to be respected and valued.

Page 5: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

SECOND CULTURE ACQUISITION:What is meant by the process of culture learning?First we have to illustrate some of the perspectives on culture learning. Two misconceptions of culture learning:1- the notion that culture learning is "a magic carpet ride to another culture“, achieved as an automatic byproduct of language instruction, is a misconception.

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Page 6: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

2- the notion that a foreign language curriculum could present culture as "a list of fact to be cognitively consumed“ devoid of any significant interaction with culture.Culture learning is a process of creating shared meaning between cultural representative. It is experiential, a process that continues over years of language learning and penetrates deeply into one’s patterns of thinking, feeling and acting,

Page 7: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

SLL=involves the acquisition of a second identity called acculturation  . Culture shock refers to phenomena ranging from mild irritability to deep psychological panic and crisis. It is associated with feelings of estrangement, anger, hostility, indecision, frustration, unhappiness, sadness, loneliness, homesickness, and even physical illness.

Page 8: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Stages of Culture Acquisition

Page 9: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

STAGE OF CULTURE ACQUISITION BY: AMANI AL-BISHRI

1 -stage 1 is period of excitement and euphoria over the newness of the surroundings.

2 -stage 2 -culture shock- emerges as individuals feel the intrusion of more and more cultural differences into their own images of self and security .

Page 10: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

3- stage 3 is one of gradual and at first tentative and vacillating recovery. This stage is called “culture stress”: some problems of acculturation are solved while others continue for some time.

4 -stage 4 represents near or full recovery either assimilation or adaptation, acceptance of the new culture and self- confidence in the “new” person that has developed in this

culture .

Page 11: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Anomie- feelings of a social uncertainty or dissatisfaction- is a significant aspectof the relationship between language learning and attitude toward the foreign culture. Anomie might be described as the first symptom of the third stage of acculturation. Anomie is experienced when linguistically a person begins to "master " the foreign language

Page 12: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Present by::

NAWAL AL-HABIA

HFSAH BJOEE

RAHSA AL-SOWAT

AROWA AL-OTIBIA

Page 13: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question
Page 14: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

2 -Integration .Is the integration pattern of the L2 group assimilation, acculturation, or preservation? What is the L2groups

degree of enclosure? 3 -Cohesiveness .

Is the L2 group cohesive? What is the size of the L2 group?

4 -Congruence. Are the culture of the two groups congruent ?

What are the attitudes of the two groups toward each other?

5 -Permanence .What is the L2 groups intended length of residence in

the target language area ?

Page 15: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

The above factors to describe hypothetically "good" and " bad" language learning situations.

Bad language learning situation context:

Page 16: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

1-The TL group views the L2 group as dominant and the L2 group views itself in the same way. Both groups desire preservation and high enclosure for the L2 group, the L2 group is both cohesive and large , the two cultures are not congruent ,the two groups hold negative attitudes toward each other, and the L2 group intends to remain in the TL area only for a short time.

2 -The second bad situation has all the characteristics of the first except that in this case, the L2 group considers itself subordinate and is considered sub- ordinate by the TL group.

Page 17: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

A good language learning situation is one in which the L2 group is non-dominant in relation to the TL group, both groups desire assimilation for the L2 group, low enclosure is the goal of both groups, the two cultures are congruent, the L2 group is small and non-cohesive, both groups have positive attitudes toward each other, and the L2 group intends to remain in the target language area for a long time.

Page 18: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Schumann's hypothesis.

The greater the social distance between two cultures, the greater the difficulty the learner will have in learning the second language , and conversely, the smaller the social distance between two culture, the better will be the language learning situation.

Page 19: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

The difficulty of Schumann’s social distance hypo. * the measurement of actual social distance

Solution:Acton devised a measure of perceived social distance, when learner encounter a new culture, their acculturation process is a factor of how they perceive their own culture in relation to the culture of the target language and vice versa.

Page 20: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

The professed Difference in Attitude Questionnaire (PDAQ).

The PDAQ asked learners to quantifyWhat they perceived to be the differences in attitude toward various concepts on three dimensions:

Page 21: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

(a-)distance between themselves and their countrymen

(b-)distance between themselves and members of the target culture

(c - )distance between their countrymen and members of the target culture .

By using a semantic differential technique three distance scores were computed for each dimension

Page 22: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Conclusion:The implication is that successful language learners see themselves as maintaining some distance between themselves and both culture.Thus, the PDAQ did describe a relationship between social distance and second language

acquisition. Another theory Supported Lambert’s contention that mastery of the foreign language takes place hand-in-hand with feelings of anomie or homelessness.

Page 23: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

Thus, a new hypothesis emerges: mastery or skillful fluency in a second language occurs somewhere at the beginning of the third –recovery –stage of acculturation.

Stage: 3>> may provide not only the optimal distance but the optimal cognitive and affective tension to produce the necessary pressure to acquire the language.

Q: What is suggested in this optimal distance model?

• Critical-period hypothesis is culturally based

• independent of the age of the learner

Page 24: ATTITUDES: Stereotyping usually implies some type of attitude toward the culture or language in question

:عمل الطالباتاآلء الهاشميخديجة الزهرانيإيمان يتيم رحاب أشقر