Richard wrote:Risager (2018) 'Representations of the World in Language Textbooks' looks at language coursebooks used in Denmark focusing on the content they cover (not the language).
Thank you for a very interesting book that might come in handy as we are revising our LNG curriculum to better meet the university's new strategy and goals. The book is in the RC at LNG 866 if anyone else wants to take a look.
Scanning through the book made me wonder how the textbooks we use at KMUTT would be analyzed using this framework. I was thinking about the coursebook for LNG 107,
National Geographic Pathways 3, and my gut feeling was that a lot of nations and cultures were mentioned, so I thought it was fairly multicultural and inclusive. But a quick look through it today with Risager's 5 Perspectives in mind, I now realize that the mentions of nations and cultures are very superficial. The main focus in almost every reading is on science and technology, not culture or communication.
In the past few weeks in the Department, there have been several big group discussions about the relationship between liberal arts education (soft skills) and science and technology workforce education. Perhaps if we believe that liberal arts education is still important, even in the engineering workplace, then a framework like Risager's can help us to design our language curriculum. If I have understood her argument correctly, it's not necessarily a matter of choosing which cultures to represent in the classroom, but more about showing how different cultures interact in local and global contexts. This would also include discussing and learning about all of the benefits and problems those interactions create.