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- What do Halloween, population growth, and other global issues have in common?
- The sun had still risen…
- Preparing students for the digital AND GLOBAL world
- Educational Success: Expectations are Key
- Where are you from? Third culture kids
- Race to Nowhere: Can we change the cultural definition of success?
- From the Icelandic Volcano to a World School
- Please, say “thank you.”
- How to give to disaster relief in Japan
- The U.S. must come out of its monocultural cocoon
- It’s Groundhog Day: recognizing cultural differences
- Fortune cookies: the relevance of education
- Hey, why did “they” do THAT to education?
- Want to join the 21st-century coffeehouse for optimizing education?
- What time is it where you are?
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Tag Archives: foreign language
What do Halloween, population growth, and other global issues have in common?
Halloween, and a snow day already—yes, two months before winter officially starts. About 2,000,000 east-coast customers have no electricity; countless trees broke because they hadn’t lost their leaves yet. It’s Monday, and trick-or-treating has been moved to Saturday in many … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Africa, Asia, developing countries, education, foreign language, global economy, global issues, jobs, living abroad, population growth, poverty
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Preparing students for the digital AND GLOBAL world
Leadership Day is organized by Scott McLeod: Dangerously Irrelevant (blog on Big Think). Summary of this post: Digital, linguistic, and cross-cultural skills are required for jobs in the global economy; what jobs are actually like in global business, and suggestions for schools. … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged communication, culture, education, foreign language, fungibility, global economy, job prep, jobs, learning, life skills, living abroad, purpose, teaching, technology, user-centered design
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Educational Success: Expectations are Key
My experience studying abroad When I studied at the Sorbonne in Paris in 1981-82, I realized that the French system of education (and likely that of other countries) expected a lot more of students compared to the American system. Here’s what … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged culture, education, foreign language, language, language acquisition, learning, teaching
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Where are you from? Third culture kids
It used to be easier to tell where someone was from. People immigrated and stayed in the new place, or traveled for brief periods and then went home. But more and more often, people live for extended periods in other places, … Continue reading
From the Icelandic Volcano to a World School
A year ago, we received daily reports about the effects of the horrible earthquake… not the ones in Christchurch or Sendai, but in Port-au-Prince. And then there was the eruption of the volcano in Iceland, which disrupted aviation for a … Continue reading
The U.S. must come out of its monocultural cocoon
There’s an old joke, commonly known among linguists: What do you call someone who speaks 2 languages?—Bilingual. 3 languages?—Trilingual. Only 1 language?—American. School taught me a lot about western civilization and local history, but not much about the rest of … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Africa, Asia, big media, blog, culture, education, foreign language, geopolitics, global economy, language, power of individuals, security, technology
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It’s Groundhog Day: recognizing cultural differences
Today is Groundhog Day. Have you seen the movie “Groundhog Day,” starring Bill Murray and Andie MacDowell? The French title is “Un jour sans fin” — ” A Never-ending Day.” Here in New England, we seem to be living through The … Continue reading
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Tagged cultural differences, culture, education, foreign language, fungibility, global economy, job prep, jobs, language, non-fungible work
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Welcome to Education Is Global!
This blog is for teachers, parents, students (at least 13 years old), usability specialists, and everyone who’s interested in improving the learning process. We’re living in an interesting time: education must integrate technology and become global. (I’ll explain why I … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Africa, Asia, blog, communication, education, Education Is Global, education reform, educationisglobal, English, ESL, foreign language, global, global economy, language, language acquisition, learning, literacy, reading, second language, student-centered design, students, teachers, teaching, technology, technology integration, usability, user-centered design, users
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