Welcome to the ICLE SIG's Activity Initiative.
Here we share activity ideas for teaching all things related to intercultural communication.
Looking to be inspired by a new idea? Click on the activities below to learn more about them.
If you have any questions about the Activity Initiative, please contact Javier Salazar or Andy Johnson.
Activity #1: Stereotypes vs. Nationalities by Javier Salazar [Stereotypes]
Overview: Stereotypes are part of human nature ... and this in spite of the fact that they are among the many root causes of social problems such as racism, discrimination, xenophobia and even wars. There is a vast body of research in social psychology that suggests that “cognitive biases” determine how we perceive others that are labeled as the “Other” due to their preferences, interests, affiliations, gender/sexual orientation, ethnicity or nationality. In this sense, although cognitive biases constitute an important mechanism for humans to make sense of their environment (and the people that inhabit it) they inevitably lead to the formation of stereotypes. Even more, these stereotypes tend to be largely unconscious; in the sense that humans are usually unaware of how their own biases shape their perceptions of the “Other”. When it comes to learning a foreign language (and ultimately communicating with the “Other” through it) stereotype awareness becomes an essential element of true intercultural communication. In this activity, student will be “tricked” into making explicit the stereotypes they may (or may not) have of people from other nationalities, as a means to eliciting stereotype awareness.
Keywords: stereotypes, surface culture, deep culture, intercultural awareness, communication-based activity
Activity #2: Pelican Family by Bruno Jactat [Differences]
Overview: In this activity, participants attend a welcoming ceremony in a simulated foreign culture. The Pelican family (a man and two women) greet the participants in silence. The guests are expected to do as the hosts do and not speak. After the ceremony, participants will share their impressions and try to understand the underlying workings and motives of this particular culture. The final part, which reveals the origins and thus true nature of this culture, actually serves to unveil the workings of the minds of the participants when faced with an unknown cultural environment.
Keywords: ethnocentrism, intercultural awareness, surface culture, deep culture, experiential activity
Activity #3: Barnga by Bruno Jactat. [Differences]
Overview: In this classic simulation activity, participants play a simple card game in silence. They do not know that they are all playing with slightly different rules. Since they are only allowed to communicate through gestures and pictures, at some point they have to solve the discrepancies they observe in the other players’ way of playing the game.
Keywords: Oz moment, communication styles, surface culture, norms, printable, card game
Activity #4: Cultural Onions by Fern Sakamoto. [Differences]
Overview: This activity introduces students to the onion model of culture and facilitates community-building in a safe environment. Students learn a little about their classmates, about themselves and about the concepts of identity and culture.
Keywords: concepts of culture, identity, community-building, intercultural awareness, hand-crafted materials
Activity #5: Learning about similarities and differences through a picture book by Gaby Benthien. [Surface Culture]
Overview: Authentic children's picture books can be used to introduce students to an L2 and foster intercultural awareness. This series of activities is aimed at lower to mid primary students who have learnt parts of the body and colors already.
Keywords: Intercultural awareness, surface culture, young learners, lower to mid elementary school children
Activity #6: Making the Familiar Strange by Stephen M. Ryan. [Differences]
Overview: In this activity, students read and enter questions about a text purportedly written by an anthropological observer of a foreign culture. In fact, the practices described in the text are very familiar to the students: they are part of Japanese lifeways and all students in the class are intimately familiar with life in Japan. The intention is to make the familiar strange.
Keywords: intercultural awareness, culture self-awareness, identity, study abroad, ethnographic observation
Activity #7: Assumptions that Divide Us by Stephen M. Ryan. [Stereotypes]
Overview: Students watch a YouTube video and reflect on why the waitress in the video was unable to communicate with her customers. Surprisingly the problem is not lack of a shared language but some very inflexible assumptions she makes. The activity is intended to give students a chance to reflect on the non-linguistic barriers to communication and the difficulties caused by unchallenged assumptions about the people we interact with.
Keywords: cognitive bias, stereotypes, intercultural awareness
Activity #8: Critical Thinking: A Path to Understanding to Global Issues by Prateek Sharma. [Differences]
Overview: A significant part of intercultural education is to educate learners on some of the pressing global issues that the world faces today. Social differences and economic disparity are two such challenges that numerous countries still face. This activity will help learners critically analyze how, mostly, one problem leads to another, or how these challenges are interconnected.
Keywords: critical thinking, social issues, intercultural awareness, vocabulary, discussion-based activity
Activity #9: Is everyone’s image of a dog the same? by Andrew Johnson. [Differences]
Overview: Individuals derive the meaning of simple (and not so simple) English words based on their culture and personal experiences. For example, the word ‘dog’ in one culture may not have the same association to someone in another. The aim of this lesson is to help students understand this connection between language and culture/experience.
Keywords: linguaculture, intercultural awareness, stereotypes, embodied simulation theory
Activity #10: Bedrooms Around the World by Vikki Williams. [Surface Culture]
Overview: In this activity, students practice describing things, in this case, bedrooms in various countries. Students are encouraged to think about how they live and the lives of people in other countries.
Keywords: surface culture, cultural awareness
Activity #11: What was different? by Stephen M. Ryan. [Differences]
Overview: Students list experiences of difference and the teacher helps them to classify them. The categories that emerge from the classification of differences in human experience are used later in building models of culture.
Keywords: cultural differences, models of culture, intercultural awareness
Activity #12: Similar Needs, Different Means by Stephen M. Ryan. [Surface Culture]
Overview: In this activity, students look at pictures of houses and their contents from around the world, in order to identify similarities in human needs (such as shelter, comfort, food, drink) and differences in the ways by which these needs are fulfilled.
Keywords: cultural differences, surface culture, intercultural awareness