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Syllabus
& Writing Assignments
Pre-departure
Seminar Syllabus
Assignments for Pre-departure Seminar
Writing Assignments completed while abroad:
1, 2, 3,
4
Re-entry Seminar Syllabus (TBA)
Assignments for Re-entry Seminar (TBA)
The following is
the syllabus for the pre-departure half of the pilot course
as it was taught in the Spring of 2002 as well as the four writing assignments
students completed and sent back to their instructor from abroad.
IDS
220: Pre-Departure Syllabus - Spring 2002 |
Jan
Solberg
Dewing 203-F Office: 269-337-7120
e-mail = solberg@kzoo.edu
Readings:
Carroll, Raymonde. Cultural Misunderstandings. University of
Chicago Press, reprint edition 1990.
Nothomb, Amélie. Fear and Trembling. St. Martin’s
Press, 2002.
Storti, Craig. The Art of Crossing Cultures. Intercultural
Press, 2001 (Second Edition).
Todorov, Tzvetan. The Conquest of America. University of Oklahoma
Press, 1999.
Week I:
Read The Art of Crossing Cultures (Storti)
Week I Course Goals,
Personal Goals, Discussion of Storti, In-class exercises (“What
is culture?”)
For next week:
Read Raymonde Carroll (Intro + Conclusion + whichever of four essays
I assign to you [be able to give a clear oral summary of the essay you
read]); do short culture exercises on Concept of Self; write short response
paper: based on reading and discussion of Storti book, what do you now
feel are your own greatest strengths / assets as you prepare
to study abroad? What are you most afraid of / What will be your greatest
challenges?
Week II:
Cultural Misunderstandings, Raymonde Carroll (Introduction,
“Parents and Children,” “Home,” “Conversation,”
“Friendship,” Conclusion); In-class exercises: Concept of
Self
For next week: short
culture exercise on Personal vs Social Responsibility Read Fear and
Trembling; write response paper on ONE of these subjects:
- Assuming that
this is your ONLY source of information, write a description of Japanese
business culture.
- In what ways
are Amélie’s experiences and reactions probably typical
of those that any young European woman might have in this situation,
and in what way might they be unique to her?
- If you had been
in Amélie’s situation, is there anything that you would
have done differently?
- Assuming that
this is your only source of information about Japanese women, write
a description of the Japanese woman and her place in society
Week III:
Fear and Trembling, Amélie Nothomb; In-class exercises:
Personal vs Social Responsibility
For next week: Read
your book for in-class presentation; write brief book report following
model, and prepare presentation; short culture exercise on Concept of
Time
Weeks IV
– VI: In-class presentations on books; In-class culture
exercises; presentations on cross-cultural experiences by Kalamazoo
College faculty and students; readings/presentations about cultural
concepts, observation strategies, experiential methodologies, etc.,
writing short biography
Readings
(each book to be read and presented by two students):
Arana, Marie.
American Chica: Two Worlds, One Childhood. Delta, 2002.
Connelly, Karen. The Dream of a Thousand Lives: A Sojourn in Thailand.
Seal Press, 2001.
Fadiman, Anne. The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down.
Farrar Strauss & Giroux, 1998.
Hessler, Peter. River Town. Harper Perennial, 2001.
Iyer, Pico. The Lady and the Monk: Four Seasons in Kyoto.
Vintage Books, 1992.
Johnson, Diane. Le Divorce. Plume, 1998.
Kingsolver, Barbara. The Poisonwood Bible. Harper Perennial,
1999.
Wearing, Alison. Honeymoon in Purdah: An Iranian Journey.
Picador, 2001.
Week VII:
Session conducted by Center for International Programs staff (director
and interns): Study Abroad Orientation, Introduction to the Integrative
Cultural Research Project
Weeks VIII
– IX: The Conquest of America, Tzvetan Todorov
(excerpts); Additional theoretical readings addressing concepts discussed
in the course (identification and articulation of cultural values, cross-cultural
communication, and cross-cultural adaptation)
Week X:
Concluding Remarks, Student presentations of papers, Evaluations
Paper due
by Monday of Final Exam Week
Graded course
components:
Presentation (15%)
Short response papers, autobiography, etc. (ca. 4 total) (30%)
One short paper (5-10 pp. + Annotated Bibliography) (30%)
Class participation, between-class contributions to an on-line discussion
group (25%)
Since this class
only meets ten times, your grade will be lowered for each absence
beyond the first one. Absences will be excused only for truly extraordinary
circumstances.
The syllabus for the revised pre-departure seminar and the syllabus
for the re-entry seminar will be posted as they become available.
Assignments
for Pre-departure Seminar |
Presentations
on books:
Working with one
other person, you will read and present to the class a book whose subject
is the encounter with another culture. Since your main focus is the
cross-cultural encounter, you will be assigned a book about a country
other than the one in which you will be studying. The presentation will
have two parts:
I. In collaboration
with your partner, write a brief description of the book. Is it fiction
or non-fiction? Who is/are the main character/s? In which country
is the book set? For what purpose is/are the foreigner/s in the foreign
country? In brief, summarize the book’s story, explaining why
someone interacting with the featured foreign culture might want to
read the book, and evaluating the insights that can be gleaned from
reading it. Finally, rate the book, using a system of one to four
stars (four being the highest), in three different categories:
a. How much
factual information one learns about the country
b. The quality of the cross-cultural insights one gets from reading
it
c. The pleasure-factor — how enjoyable it was to read it.
Maximum length:
2 pp. typed, double-spaced. Work on this — your review will probably
be part of a travel book display in the Kalamazoo College bookstore
this spring.
II. Working separately,
each of you will make a presentation on one aspect of the book that
you found particularly interesting (make sure you don’t choose
exactly the same thing). Below are some general suggestions:
- Articulation
of cultural values observed in the reading
- Analysis of
why culture clashes described in the book occur
- Analysis of
how American values might create difficulties for students, tourists,
business people, NGO or diplomatic personnel living or working within
the culture
- Insights about
cross-cultural communication and adaptation that you glean from
reading the book
- A an assessment
of how people were changed by their encounter with the foreign culture
- Identification
of the preoccupations and biases of the writer, as well as your
own preoccupations and biases
(N.B. In addition
to these general suggestions, I will have some additional specific
suggestions for you on most of the books.)
You may want to
select an appropriate excerpt from the reading to photocopy for other
students to read, and/or to prepare a few discussion questions.
Many of these readings
are novels or first-person accounts of travel or encounters with people
from other cultures. Stories are always captivating. Since they are
often less explicitly analytical than ethnographies produced by social
scientists, and are often told from an idiosyncratic point of view,
they may give you more room to develop your own ideas about how to analyze
and understand a foreign culture. They will also give you practice in
evaluating sources.
You are encouraged
to develop a style in which you express yourself as precisely as possible,
but in which you differentiate between fact, opinion, and speculation,
and in which you acknowledge how your own thinking may be culturally
biased. Think, too, about how you might test any theories you have formulated.
Try to search for nuances, to acknowledge your own ignorance, and to
identify logical pitfalls instead of making bold, overly simplistic
assertions.
Paper:
You will prepare
a Briefing Paper on some aspect of the culture of the country in which
you will be studying (5-10 pp., double-spaced). Ideally, this will be
directly connected to the Integrative Cultural Research Project you
will do abroad, so choose an aspect of the country in which you’re
particularly interested. However, even if your ICRP ultimately takes
you in a different direction, the paper will yield valuable background
information and help you develop good research techniques.
Possible topics
(to be narrowed significantly):
- P political,
governmental structures
- The educational
system
- One or more significant
historical events (e.g. the Cultural Revolution in China, the student
riots in France in May of 1968, etc.)
- Family or kinship
structures
- The status /
perception of one or another group in the society (men, women, children,
homosexuals, elders, the mentally ill, the disabled, a particular
ethnic or racial group, a certain immigrant group, etc.)
- The arts
- The environment
- The economy
- Business culture
- Other topics,
to be negotiated
Provide factual
information about this topic in a well-organized format, identifying
your sources carefully (see below).
If appropriate,
you will also discuss how your own experiences might influence your
reaction to the phenomenon you are studying, how they might affect your
adaptation to the culture, and how they might color your conversations
about this subject with people from your host country. You might also
make some recommendations about discussing this subject with members
of the host culture.
Work at finding
a rhetorical “voice” that positions you as a non-expert
on this subject, but also as someone with good critical thinking skills
who is attempting to understand something outside of your present field
of experience.
You must consult
at least four sources while writing this paper:
- At least two
works written by “experts” in the field (those whose academic
training or professional experience qualify them in the eyes of the
world to speak about this subject) — required.
- At least one
source written by someone who is not American (this could be an article
in the foreign press [Canadian, British, a foreign language source,
etc.]) — required. (If one of your academic sources is already
non-American, you have already fulfilled this condition, but a current
journalistic “take” on a subject can add further interest
to your study.)
- At least one
personal interview with a person from your host country (if you do
not know anyone from your host country, ask me, a language prof, a
student returning from abroad, or the CIP for help in identifying
someone. Try the Internet — an e.mail “interview”
is an acceptable means of conversing with your source.) — required.
- One personal
interview with someone who is not a citizen of the host country, but
who has worked, lived, or traveled there — required.
If possible,
data from a more “literary” source (e.g., a novel, a
feature film, some other cultural document [songs, the visual arts,
etc.]) — optional, but desirable.
Additional sources
(including Internet sources) that you deem appropriate (please be
aware that the evaluation of Internet sources for your Annotated
Bibliography [see below] presents a particular challenge —
one that must be confronted by anyone who considers him/herself
a serious scholar).
To your Briefing
Paper, you will attach a sort of Annotated Bibliography, according to
the following specifications:
Modified
Annotated Bibliography:
List your sources,
using appropriate academic bibliographic citations, and then tell us
more about the sources so that we will know better how to evaluate the
information they yielded. Comment on such things as: the historical
period in which the source was published; the source’s nationality,
gender, age, political affiliation, degree and kind of experience with
the culture; the source’s ideological stance, educational background,
etc.
In each case, comment
as well on your own role in processing and transmitting the information:
how might your own nationality, gender, age, intellectual development,
educational background, personal experiences, ideological leanings,
personal affinities (in the case of personal interviews), etc., have
influenced the way in which you have used the information (or not used
it) from each source. Take this part of the assignment very seriously.
You might need to write as much as one full page per source (this does
not count in the recommended 5-10 pp. of text).
Express yourself
as precisely as possible, but differentiate between fact, opinion, and
speculation, and acknowledge the ways in which your thinking may be
culturally biased. Think, too, about how you might go about testing
any theories you have formulated. Try to search for nuances, to acknowledge
your own ignorance, and to identify logical pitfalls instead of making
bold, overly simplistic assertions.
Writing
Assignments completed while abroad |
Students
submitted four short informal essays while abroad. The assigned topics
for these assignments appear below:
- Assignment
#1: Selection of Destination
Describe
how you chose your study abroad destination, the process of getting
ready to leave home, and your first impressions upon arrival. The
following questions may help you think of what to write about:
Why/How did you
choose your study abroad destination? What do you hope to gain from
this experience? How did you form your impressions and gain information
about your destination culture before leaving home? Were you able
to evaluate the credibility of your various sources? Was it hard to
decide to leave home? Did you have to convince family members to let
you go? Describe the process of preparing yourself, both “logistically”
and psychologically.
When you first
arrived at your destination, what did you experience? Can you describe
the interplay among preconceived ideas, new thoughts, feelings and
reactions (both positive and negative), memories of home, new sensory
impressions, physical sensations, etc.? Do you have any sense of what
your greatest challenges are going to be in adapting to your host
culture? What have been your best moments/experiences so far?
Scholar Dean Barnlund
argues that one of the primary sources of difficulty in adjusting
to another culture is a tendency to overlook culture differences and
to persuade oneself that everyone everywhere is, at base, alike; that
differences among groups—whether cultures, subcultures, or informal
groups—are merely superficial. Have you had any surprises already
(e.g., discovering differences where your initial impression was of
sameness—or vice versa)? In what ways have people from your
host culture and from your “K” group helped you in your
adjustment process?
You don’t
need to write about all of these things, but do try to push yourself
to remember, to put your experience into words, and to be specific.
Try to get to a level of detail rather than simply generalizing (e.g.
note the difference in impact between “Everything was so exciting!”
and “I loved the unevenness of the old paving stones in the
narrow, cobbled streets, and the smell of French bread wafting out
of open bakery doors I passed every morning on my way to class.”)
You might also
consider the following description of a well-known formulation of
culture shock:
“[The Preliminary
Phase] includes the initial awareness of the future host culture,
the decision to leave the home culture, preparations for the sojourn,
farewell activities and ceremonies, and the effects of the trip from
the home to host culture. This phase is generally marked by a rising
sense of anticipation tempered by, or alternating with, regret at
leaving. The second phase begins with the foreigner’s arrival
in the new setting […]. Arrival is usually accompanied by a
rising tide of emotions, among which the foreigner is likely to careen
erratically. Initial impressions, which at first convey a sense of
the monumentality of the experience, later tend to well inward at
an increasingly unmanageable rate and to devolve at times into barely
distinguishable blurs. Throughout this stage, the foreigner can be
characterized as a largely passive, but intensely alert, spectator.”
This does not
necessarily describe you and your experiences — don’t
think you have to correspond to this model — but it might be
stimulating to compare your own experience to it.
- Assignment
#2: Learning to live in a new place
How
are you learning to cope with living in a new place and interact with
people from a different culture? Tell me a story / some stories.
What are some
of the challenges you’ve faced so far? Describe some successes
and “failures” (i.e., situations in which you felt awkward,
made a cultural faux pas, misunderstood something, overreacted to
something that happened, behaved with what you later came to realize
was insensitivity, judged something from a U.S. American perspective,
etc.). Have there been times when you’ve tried hard to do the
right thing, and it’s backfired? Have you experienced any dramatic
culture clash situations? (Describe what happened, how you felt, what
you did, etc.) To what degree has avoidance become a strategy for
coping with some aspects of your host culture (e.g., have you caught
yourself spending a lot of time writing e-mail, reading in your room,
etc.)? What other coping strategies have you found? Would you characterize
them as positive or negative? Can you tell any stories about incidents
that show you’re adapting, learning how to act and interact
in the new culture? Even small successes, positive encounters, incidents
in which you “get it,” can really raise your spirits when
everything seems strange and difficult.
Feel free to interpret
this assignment rather freely, but do try to get very specific, and
try to tell one story that involves some difficulties you’ve
encountered, and one about an incident that made you feel very positive
about your stay in the host culture.
- Assignment
#3: An in-depth report on your ICRP
The ICRP is considered to be one of the good and unique features
of “K” study abroad. I know what we administrators say
about it, but I really want some intelligent student perspectives
on the same subject. Here are some questions to prompt your reflections:
- How was
the ICRP presented to you, while still at “K” and
upon arrival in the host country? What specific examples of student
projects did you hear about that were done in the past in your
host country?
- What are
some ideas for ICRP's that you considered? Was there something
you wanted to do that didn’t seem possible? Why was that?
How did you narrow your choices, and why did you select the ICRP
that you did? How did you set it up and get ready to begin? (At
the end of the project, ask yourself how much the actual subject
of the ICRP was important, and what other factors were important.)
- Describe
starting out on the project (logistical issues, meeting people,
settling in, learning what to do and how to do it).
- How did
the project evolve? How did your relationships with people you
worked with evolve? How did your understanding of the organization
you worked for/with (if you did that sort of ICRP) evolve? How
about your understanding of the host culture (and the way it does
things) in general? Your understanding of your own culture? Your
understanding of yourself?
- Keep taking
notes and adding to what you’ve written. As the ICRP is
ending, revisit the entire idea — do you feel the ICRP is
a valuable part of the study abroad experience? Why? / Why not?
(I can think of many possible answers, some surprising, some not.)
Do you think your ICRP experience will affect your activities,
your studies or your attitudes once you return home?
- What advice
would you give to your Resident Director, to the director of the
organization you worked for/with (if you did), to the Center for
International Programs staff, and to future students about the
ICRP?
I know that every
SA site is different. In some places you choose your ICRP, in others
you fit yourself into existing structures; some are more service-oriented,
and others are more research-oriented; the timetable is different
in every place. Feel free to adapt this assignment intelligently to
reflect your own situation. Do take this assignment particularly seriously,
though, as the ICRP is in many ways the real focus of this pilot program
class and of the "K" College study abroad experience.
- Assignment
#4: Reflections
Reflections on the end of your sojourn. How has this experience
evolved for you (or how have you evolved)? Describe some really low
and high points from the end of the stay. Make some reflections on
what makes for a "successful" stay abroad — indeed,
what is a "successful" stay, in your opinion? (You might
think about / refer to other people in your program as well as yourself
in order to answer that question.) Are there times when you find yourself
thinking like people from your host culture, or having a sort of "double
vision" experience in which you see things from two perspectives?
What will you miss / not miss about the host culture once you’re
back home? What are you looking forward to / dreading about being
back in US American culture? Is six months long enough to have a real
sense of living in / adapting to the culture? What are the most important
things you think you’ve learned on this voyage? What are your
greatest regrets at this point? What advice would you give to your
younger classmates who haven’t yet gone abroad? Take some time
with the writing of this. You’ll have to "dig" to
avoid platitudes and cliches. A rule of thumb: if you can imagine
a sobbing Miss America reading your words as she walks down the runway,
try to find another way to say it!
Excerpts
from student writing assignments may be found elsewhere on this
website.
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