Background Information
Why is this project necessary?
Satistics on study abroad indicate that over 100,000 U.S. university
students annually spend one semester or more studying abroad (Institute
for International Education, 1998). These students are immersed
in their new language and culture settings, and thus potentially
have numerous opportunities for developing their second language
and culture knowledge. In looking at the study abroad literature
and programs, it is clear that students intending to study abroad
receive limited if any preparation to be language and culture learners/users
beyond how they would normally learn in a classroom setting. Thus,
they depart for the programs lacking the strategies that would enable
them to more effectively learn and use the foreign language and
the culture in its own context. Clearly, there is a compelling need
to better prepare this large group of learners prior to their departure,
so that the learners themselves and their sending institutions can
fully realize the learning benefits of the sojourn experience (Paige
and Kappler, 1999).
Second language learner strategies encompass both second language
learning and second language use (Cohen, 1998). Taken together,
they constitute the steps of actions consciously selected by learners
either to improve the learning of a second language, the use of
it, or both. Language learning strategies include strategies for
identifying the material that needs to be learned, distinguishing
it from other material, group it for easier learning (e.g., group
vocabulary by category into nouns, verbs, adjectives, and so forth),
repeatedly engaging oneself in contact with the materials, and formally
committing the material to memory when it does not seem to be acquired
naturally (whether through rote memory techniques, the use of mnemonics,
or some other technique). Strategies for using the language fall
into four categories: retrieval strategies, rehearsal strategies,
"cover" (coping) strategies, and communication strategies.
Culture learning involves seven principle dimensions: learning
about the self as a cultural being (cultural self-awareness); learning
about the elements of culture (e.g., values, beliefs, communication
styles, customs); learning about a specific culture; learning about
culture-general phenomena (e.g., cultural adjustment, adaptation);
learning about how to become an effective culture learner; learning
about the stages and correlates of intercultural development, and
being able to assess one's own level of development; and learning
about the relationship between language and culture.
Developing Materials to Support Study Abroad
Building on CARLA's previous research and teacher resources on language
strategies and culture learning,
CARLA received funding in 1999 to create a set of user-friendly materials
designed to maximize study abroad with materials on language and culture-learning
strategies, as part of its U.S. Department of Education's Language Resource
Center grant. Since that time, the project leaders created, field-tested,
and revised a set of three guides as part of the Maximizing
Study Abroad series. The series includes the following publications:
Maximizing Study Abroad: A Students' Guide to Strategies
for Language and Culture Learning and Use
Maximizing Study Abroad: A Program Coordinators' Guide
to Strategies for Language and Culture Learning and Use
Maximizing Study Abroad: A Language Instructors' Guide
to Strategies for Language and Culture Learning and Use
The initial writing phase (1999-2000)
The initial writing phase of this project took place during the
1999-2000 academic year. The writing team was led by Professor Andrew
D. Cohen on the language learning strategies sections and Professor
R. Michael Paige on the culture learning strategies sections. Two
graduate research assistants, Julie C. Chi and James P. Lassegard
worked in collaboration with Professors Cohen and Paige throughout
the initial development of the guides.
The field-testing and revision phase: part 1 (2000-2001)
The field-testing and revision phase of the project was coordinated
by Dr. Barbara Kappler (University of Minnesota International Student
and Scholar Services) during the 2000-2001 academic year. The three
guides were piloted with volunteer groups of language instructors,
students engaged in study abroad programs, and study abroad program
coordinators and advisors at the University of Minnesota and selected
sites throughout the country. Based on the rich feedback received,
the guides were extensively reformatted and revised to be more appealing
and accessible to end-users.
The field-testing/implementation phase: part 2 (2001-2002)
During the third and final phase of field-testing and development
of the guides, prototypes were used to fully explore the range of
options in which the materials could be used effectively. The core
leadership group (Cohen, Kappler, and Paige) worked with faculty
and staff from the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and the
Global Campus at the University of Minnesota to demonstrate how
the guides could be used in a wide range of teaching and study abroad
contexts. As part of this demonstration phase, Margaret Demmessie,
a seasoned instructor of Spanish, taught a special "study abroad"
section of beginning third year Spanish using materials from the
instructor and student guides. Each student in this special course
section received a copy of the Students' Guide; their response to
this publication was very positive.
In addition to using the materials in a language course, special
workshops were held during Fall 2001 and Spring 2002 for students
planning to study abroad. Kappler facilitated another round of focus
groups with language instructors from various language departments
and program coordinators from the Global Campus at the University
of Minnesota. In May 2002 CARLA sponsored an intensive workshop
on how to use the guides; this event attracted over forty language
instructors and study abroad program coordinators to the event.
After three years of intensive development and in-depth feedback, CARLA
published the Maximizing Study Abroad
series, now available to study abroad students, program professionals,
and language instructors through the CARLA
working papers series. CARLA will sponsor workshops and conference
sessions on the guides and will offer a summer institute for study abroad
program professionals and language instructors.
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