Sachiko wrote:For example, what can we do with our LNG students if we want to "equip students with the means to analyse a broad range of cultural practices and meanings"?
The reading from the textbook was about how different cultures attach different meanings to things like colors and other design choices. For example, in the US, the color green is related to business and money because all of our money is green. We use red to show monetary and other kinds of losses. Chinese, on the other hand, see red as being lucky and positive. Since this was an English class, the lesson was focusing on learning "academic vocabulary" such as universal, context, emphasizes, etc., and we were talking about how to read and write about graphs and statistics. But we were doing it in the context of cultural differences. The lesson was (hopefully) "equip[ing] students with the means to analyse a broad range of cultural practices and meanings" through the use of academic English.
The textbook that we use for LNG 107 (Pathways) seems to make an effort to cover the kinds of issues raised in Sachiko's bullet point list. A lot of the readings we have done are about "global developments", "critical worldviews", and "intercultural relations", at least on a surface level. This is in stark difference to the book that we use in LNG 600 which doesn't seem to consider any of these issues.
I'd be interested to hear other's experiences in the other LNG courses. I don't think that Global Competence is a part of the learning outcomes of any of our LNG courses, but maybe it should be.