Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns In U.S. Universities

The past decade has witnessed a steady increase in the numbers of Asian students in North American institutions of higher learning. While their academic success has been widely recognized, concerns about their silence in classrooms have also been expressed by educators. Following an overview of Asian students in North American higher education, this book presents a focused ethnographic study of twenty Asian graduate students enrolled in a major US university, exploring and describing Asian student's oral classroom participation modes across multiple factors.

Four major classroom communication patterns—total integration, conditional interaction, marginal participation, and silent observation—are identified among the participants and discussed across sociocultural, affective, cognitive, linguistic, and pedagogical/environmental factors. Also discussed are the Asian concepts of face saving, politeness, and social identity in multiple discourse communities in light of Asian students' perceptions of and modes in classroom participation. The book concludes with a call for the development of cultural transformation competence, which encompasses social identity negotiation skills, and culture-sensitivity knowledge and mindful reflexivity in addition to communicative competence.

"1100270327"
Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns In U.S. Universities

The past decade has witnessed a steady increase in the numbers of Asian students in North American institutions of higher learning. While their academic success has been widely recognized, concerns about their silence in classrooms have also been expressed by educators. Following an overview of Asian students in North American higher education, this book presents a focused ethnographic study of twenty Asian graduate students enrolled in a major US university, exploring and describing Asian student's oral classroom participation modes across multiple factors.

Four major classroom communication patterns—total integration, conditional interaction, marginal participation, and silent observation—are identified among the participants and discussed across sociocultural, affective, cognitive, linguistic, and pedagogical/environmental factors. Also discussed are the Asian concepts of face saving, politeness, and social identity in multiple discourse communities in light of Asian students' perceptions of and modes in classroom participation. The book concludes with a call for the development of cultural transformation competence, which encompasses social identity negotiation skills, and culture-sensitivity knowledge and mindful reflexivity in addition to communicative competence.

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Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns In U.S. Universities

Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns In U.S. Universities

by Jun Liu
Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns In U.S. Universities

Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns In U.S. Universities

by Jun Liu

eBook

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Overview

The past decade has witnessed a steady increase in the numbers of Asian students in North American institutions of higher learning. While their academic success has been widely recognized, concerns about their silence in classrooms have also been expressed by educators. Following an overview of Asian students in North American higher education, this book presents a focused ethnographic study of twenty Asian graduate students enrolled in a major US university, exploring and describing Asian student's oral classroom participation modes across multiple factors.

Four major classroom communication patterns—total integration, conditional interaction, marginal participation, and silent observation—are identified among the participants and discussed across sociocultural, affective, cognitive, linguistic, and pedagogical/environmental factors. Also discussed are the Asian concepts of face saving, politeness, and social identity in multiple discourse communities in light of Asian students' perceptions of and modes in classroom participation. The book concludes with a call for the development of cultural transformation competence, which encompasses social identity negotiation skills, and culture-sensitivity knowledge and mindful reflexivity in addition to communicative competence.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313016028
Publisher: Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated
Publication date: 10/30/2001
Series: Contemporary Studies in Second Language Learning Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 980 KB

About the Author

JUN LIU is Assistant Professor in the English Department of the University of Arizona, Tucson.

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction: My Journey of Adaptive Cultural Transformation

Asian Students in U.S. Higher Education

Studying Asian Students' Participation in American Classrooms

Understanding Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns

Factors Affecting Asian Students' Classroom Communication Patterns

Interpreting Silence from An Asian Perspective

Asian Students' Adaptive Cultural Transformation

Epilogue

Author and Subject Index

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