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[Project Number: 2016-1-HR01-KA201-022159]
Title of Activity
Prejudice and stereotypes
Description of educational activity
Duration: 2 x 45 minutes
Student age: 17 – 18 (Junior year)
Student class organization: group work
Lecture goal:
To encourage the development of cultural understanding and breaking stereotypes and prejudices
Developing empathy
Supporting materials
Highlights:
Activity:
reading, interpreting, and discussing the text
I. Activity before reading
Allows for motivation, sharing of personal impressions, and group cohesion
Students are divided into groups of four. Every group get one task
a) Prejudices
Examine photographs of famous people that are somehow attached to specific prejudice and individually answer question related to their unknown side of life
Example:
What does the owner of Amazon ride, the richest man on the world?
What is the IQ of once the most beautiful blond Sharon Stone?
What is the profession of Zvonimir Boban, captain of the bronze soccer team in 1998?
(Honda accord, built in 1999., member of Mense, IQ 154, history teacher)
Discuss the answers together and compare them with the correct information provided. Explain why certain prejudice emerged when mentioning these famous people.
b) Ethnic stereotypes
Together explain the following ethnic stereotypes: act like an English man, correct as a Swiss watch, every gipsy praises his horse, there are as much as the Chinese, valuable as Japanese.
Individually suggest examples from everyday life about ethnic negative stereotypes and together try to break them.
c) How do I feel
Look at the pictures and individually describe a similar personal experience and the emotions that came with it.
Presentation of group results and short discussion.
II. Activities during and after reading in groups.
Groups receive parts of the text and class leaflets (every group reads their given part)
1st chapter – Croatia: Where Russia is not, str. 10 - 11
The underlying task:
What does the sentence mean: We are situated between two huge oceans and we are just prone to placing everything on the other side somewhere over there.
What are the author’s opinions about spaces and people ‘somewhere over there’? What are the Croatian views about Americans? Explore the meaning of the terms Cold War, Bipolar Political World, Iron Curtain and explain them in the context of fragmentation.
Analysis: stereotypes and Prejudices; attitude towards the unknown
12th Chapter - Neighbors, pg. 82 – 86
The underlying task :
Compare the American phrase: ‘good fences make good neighbors’, with the Croatian version ‘thin walls, hallways full of echo and open windows make good neighbors.’ Explain the sentence ‘It sounds crays, and annoying, but comforting to know that people know who you are, what’s happening in your life and if any help is needed.’ What are the differences between life in a community and life on a separate small island?
Analysis: cultural differences; community and individuality; alienation
c) 23rd chapter – Sharing a bill, pg. 144 – 145
The underlying task:
What stops the author not to enjoy lunch? Why does he come with such beliefs? Examine the sentence ‘The board in me just flipped, everything just went blank, the music stopped and I am in shock.’
Analysis: beliefs; cultural differences; prejudices and stereotypes
III. Common activities after reading
Presenting group work results.
Dramatic methods
The Hot Stool: the group is examining a participants life, behavior, and motivation (Possible questions: How do you feel in the new environment? What people's actions make you feel uncomfortable in your environment? What behavior do you not understand?)
The Rashomon effect – a hot stool variant – every character tells the story based on his/her experience (possible questions: fitting in a new environment; social events; interpersonal relationships etc. - talks from the writers perspective, wife’s, neighbors and acquaintances ...)
Evaluation and Assessment Method:
Professors Role - Prepare Materials and Act as a Moderator
Evaluation of group work - questionnaire: evaluation and self-evaluation
Students are assessed on the basis of their abilities:
The Impact of Activity on Reading RSP:
The activaties encourage the development of empathy and tolerance of the student, understanding differences and accepting different cultural concepts and thus breaking stereotypes and prejudice.
Connection to curriculum
Grade: 3rd (junior year)
Curriculum:
Linguistic Expression - Formation of Expression
Ethics
English language
Geography
Sociology
Knowledge:
Skills:
- collection, selection and evaluation of information
- reading, interpreting and evaluating literary texts
Competence:
- communication competences
- ability to work in a team, and acceptance of someone different
Knowledge:
- better understanding of yourself and the world around you
- Critical thinking about the world, society, religion
- Enjoyable reading experience
Skills:
- collection, selection and evaluation of information
- reading, interpreting and evaluating literary texts
Competence:
- communication competences
- intercultural competences
- ability to work in a team, and acceptance of someone different
Bibliographic reference to be used during the activity
Cody McClain Brown, Draft, Slipper and mother in Law
Publisher: Algoritam
Translation to Croatian: Vladimir Cvetković Sever
06/2014.
186 pg., soft cover
ISBN 9789533167749
Results
Expected outcomes:
Students will be able to:
- express opinions clearly and reasonably as well as actively listen to others
- recognize and understand cultural differences
Recommendations
The work is appropriate for students because it speaks about topics close to them and enables them to have a better cultural understanding and insight into different perceptions of social norms, customs and values. The theme and simple writing style makes it easy to understand and encourage them to read the continuation of the book (Croatia hits back) or similar works.
X gimnazija ''Ivan Supek''
Ul. Vjekoslava Klaića 7
10000
Zagreb
E-mail: partners@handbook4rspreaders.org