Final Multimedia Project

FINAL MULTIMEDIA PROJECT

Students will prepare a final multimedia project via iMovie that compiles interview clips, photographs, and video footage of program activities and events during the summer program, featuring a voice-over narration (see D2L for links to related iMovie tutorials).  The narration should synthesize the cultural content learned and analyze how a particular experience led them to  the acquisition of a communication strategy deemed useful for a future study abroad experience. The latter should briefly narrate a specific experience that resulted in the acquisition of strategies to inquire, assess, and understand different cultural perspectives. These strategies may serve a variety of ends, including-but not limited to: communicating one’s own perspective as a unique and valid, rather than conflicting, point of view, identifying and articulating a shared value or narrating how an experience in another culture led to the acquisition of a value.

21st Century Skills applied

National Standards for Foreign Languages: Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, Communities

Modes of Communication: Presentational

Information, Media, and Technology Skills: Communication, Creativity and Innovation, Media Literacy, Technology Literacy

Life and Career Skills: Flexibility and Adaptability, Initiative and Self-Direction, Social and Cross-Cultural Skills

Here is an example of an experience/ strategy that allowed me to respect my Spanish friends’ appreciation of bullfighting as a different and equally valid perspective:

While living in Spain, I was invited to Pamplona during the yearly San Fermínes festival. Horrified by the amount of blood shed during the first bullfight I saw, I felt a judgement arise within me about the barbaric nature of the ritual. Rather than accepting this one-sided point of view as fact, I asked my friends questions about the culture of bullfighting, which has a long history as tradition and identity in Spanish culture.  As I learned about how the fighting bulls (toros de lidia) are raised in very humane conditions and the precision and skill necessary to be a bullfighter, I was reminded of a similar experience being raised in the South by Yankee parents unfamiliar with the rules and restrictions placed on deer-hunting practices. Learning about these rules from experienced hunters helped me understand the practice in a context of tradition and ecology and respect it as a sport and art in spite of my parent’s rejection of its value. This comparison helped me understand why bullfighting is celebrated in Spain and valued by my friends in spite of my initial skepticism.

Here is an example of an experience that allowed me to see cultural similarities and led me to identifying a value I shared with my host family from a trip I took to Colombia:

Growing up, my family made time on Sunday evening to prepare and eat a special meal together. After, we would watch a movie, sing songs, or play a card game.  This is a tradition that is commonplace in many family households in Colombia.  When I spent a summer there recently as a guest in a friend’s family home, I was delighted to learn that they hosted a weekly family gathering on Sunday afternoons. Every week, a large and varied group of extended family and friends would arrive from all over the city to eat, talk, play dominoes, sing, dance, and/or watch a soccer game together.  In addition to enjoying the company of their guests, (I have an extroverted nature and delight in the opportunity to meet and talk to new people,) the weekly event brought back fond memories of warm family moments from my childhood.  I was thus able to identify and articulate a value that I shared with the host family: the refreshing and enjoyable nature of setting aside time every Sunday afternoon/ evening to relax, eat a special meal, and converse with others before returning to work the following week.

And here is a final example of an experience in another culture that led to the acquisition of a shared value:

Growing up, I did not enjoy team sports, especially soccer. While living in Spain, I was invited to play soccer with friends in a neighboring park on various occasions, and had habituated myself to refusing the offer. One afternoon however, some of my particularly persuasive Spanish girlfriends encouraged me to join a a friendly match.  In spite of being an inferior player, I thoroughly enjoyed the fresh air, endorphins, and felt my fear of jokes about my poor skills fade away as I discovered that all participants, from the most skilled athlete to the novice player, were subject to friendly gibes and occasional ribbing from teammates and opposing team members. Through the experience, I learned that with practice, I could train my body to control the ball and that by paying attention to how others played, I could rely on my intuition to anticipate their moves and effectively engage in my team’s strategies and help them score goals. This refreshing new experience led to the acquisition of a value and a framework for relating to others in play.  The rules of soccer were the same; the experience, on the other hand, was markedly different.  As a child, the violently competitive attitudes of my peers on the soccer field made it impossible for me to progress as a player, resulting in my complete and total rejection of its value as a recreational activity.  However, as an adult in Spain, the playful and friendly attitude of my teammates encouraged me to learn to improve my athletic and intuitive capacities by playing soccer and enjoy the game.

 

Ethnographic Interviews

Music 4

ETHNOGRAPHIC INTERVIEWS

Students will complete an ethnographic interview with a native Spanish speaker, record the interview audio on the Soundcloud iPad app and post the link to the corresponding D2L discussion board on or before the specified due dates (mid-semester, end of the semester).  The interview should elaborate an aspect of culture that has piqued the student’s interest and interview subjects should be able to discuss the topic with the student at length during the 10 minute interview.  Interviewing techniques will be rehearsed in class through role-play exercises and guided questions prior to your interview appointment. The in-class interview workshop will provide you with the communicative skills necessary to improvise questions that build on interviewee responses and appropriately exhaust the discussion topic.

21st Century Skills applied

National Standards for Foreign Languages: Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, Communities

Modes of Communication: Interpersonal, Presentational

Information, Media, and Technology Skills: Communication, Critical Thinking and Problem Solving, Technology Literacy

Life and Career Skills: Social and Cross-Cultural Skills

Blog Assignments

Enrique

BLOG ASSIGNMENTS

Students are asked to design a personal blog on www.wordpress.com and post 3 weekly entries of 150 words reflecting on their experiences as participants in cultural activities during class meetings and information about Spain and Latin America from reading assignments and documentary film screenings. When referring to readings or films that were not assigned in class, students were asked to cite their sources.  Students were encouraged to upload and share photos from group activities on their blog.  A weekly writing rubric was available on D2L for specific information about evaluative criteria that progresses from basic to advanced mastery of grammar, syntax and vocabulary as presented in the SPAN 1001-2 section.  Weekly rubrics provided students with standards that would gradually increase in difficulty and rigor, challenging them to incorporate more complex grammatical structures and new vocabulary in their weekly writing tasks.

21st Century Skills applied

National Standards for Foreign Languages: Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, Communities

Modes of Communication: Interpretive, Presentational

Information, Media, and Technology Skills: Communication, Critical Thinking and Problem Solving, Information Literacy, Technology Literacy

Return to Spanish Immersion

 

Pragda Film Festival

research picture

PRAGDA FILM FESTIVAL

OVERVIEW

This summer the Spanish Summer Language Institute received a partial grant to hold a Spanish Film Festival featuring 5 contemporary films from Spain and Latin America. This series was made possible with the support of Pragda, the Secretary of State Culture of Spain, and its Program for Cultural Cooperation with United States Universities in collaboration with the North Georgia College 2012 Spanish Summer Language Institute and the Department of Modern Languages.

I prepared the students to discuss general themes from the films with a worksheet that introduced the film context, related vocabulary, and questions to draw their attention to general and particular aspects of the film narrative and cinematography. After screening the films on Thursday evening, the students led discussion sessions, exchanging ideas with other audience members, which included members of the North Georgia faculty and the larger local community. Following the discussion, students were to write a 200-word review of the film to be published on their MLAN 1950 blog. The assignment instructions encouraged students to draw on their own lives and experience as they reflected on the film’s themes, using concrete examples to guide their commentary and discussion of similarities and differences between their own lives and the struggles faced by the films’ protagonists. Students were aware that they were not to make generalizations about a nation or culture based on the film. The series included films from Guatemala, Nicaragua, Spain, and Argentina. They explored themes of cultural fusion in music, the struggle for empowerment and autonomy in a context of poverty, artistic collaboration and issues raised by mental health problems.

*Discussion sessions were conducted in both English and Spanish, allowing students to think through their impressions and response to the film in dialogue with audience members from a variety of disciplinary orientations. According to recent research, allowing students to compare and contrast cultural differences in the L1 allows them to express a more complex understanding and appreciation of these differences. An advanced understanding and appreciation of cultural differences has been shown to increase L2 Learner ability to engage and interact with native speakers during a future study-abroad experience (ACTFL Annals Spring 2012).

FESTIVAL PROMOTIONAL POSTER

Please join us for a series of New Films from Spain and Latin America on Thursday evenings from 7-9p. Chico y Rita (June 28) and La Yuma (July 5) will be shown at Shott Auditorium. Antes del Estreno (July 12), La isla interior (July 12), and Las marimbas del infierno (July 26) will be shown in the Special Collections Room 382 at the Library and Technology Center.

All films are subtitled and the series is free and open to the public.

Thursday June 28

Shott Auditorium

Watch the trailer: Chico y Rita

Thursday July 5

Shott Auditorium

Watch the trailer: La Yuma

La Yuma Worksheet

Thursday July 12

Library and Technology Center, Special Collections Room 382

Watch the trailer: Antes del estreno

Antes del estreno Worksheet

Thursday July 19

Library and Technology Center, Special Collections Room 382

Watch the trailer: La isla interior

Thursday July 26

Library and Technology Center, Special Collections Room 382

Watch the trailer: Las marimbas del infierno

Marimbas del infierno Worksheet

This series is made possible with the support of Pragda, the Secretary of State Culture of Spain, and its Program for Cultural Cooperation with United States Universities in collaboration with the North Georgia College 2012 Spanish Summer Language Institute and the Department of Modern Languages.

List of Participating Colleges and Universities

21st Century Skills applied

National Standards for Foreign Languages: Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, Communities

Modes of Communication: Interpretive, Presentational

Information, Media, and Technology Skills: Critical Thinking and Problem Solving, Media Literacy, Technology Literacy