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1
Two levels of verbal communication, universal and culture-specific
Wierzbicka, Anna. - : De Gruyter Mouton, 2022
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2
Building Intercultural Competence through Travel - A Case Study of Agnes Scott College’s Journeys
In: South East Coastal Conference on Languages & Literatures (SECCLL) (2020)
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3
Pathway Reflections: Intercultural Understanding in NSW Preparatory Programs to Higher Education
Allen, Suzanne. - : University of Sydney, 2020
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4
Foreign language teaching as foreign culture teaching? The problem of intercultural understanding
In: Teanga: The Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics, Vol 20 (2020) (2020)
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5
Towards Intercultural Understanding and Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: Building an Internationally Minded School
In: The Organizational Improvement Plan at Western University (2019)
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6
Sustainability and ethnic peace discourse: in search for synergies from bringing together discourses on intercultural communication and on global sustainability
In: ESSACHESS - Journal for Communication Studies ; 10 ; 1 ; 215-235 ; Rhetoric and Peace at Crossroads: Public and Civic Discourse, Culture and Communication Perspectives (2018)
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7
The development and validation of intercultural understanding (ICU) instruments for teachers and students in primary and secondary schools
Denson, N; Ovenden, G; Wright, L. - : Routledge, 2017
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8
Developper des competences civiques: un jeu de piste dans les champs disciplinaires ; Developing civic competences: a treasure hunt throughout the curriculum
In: International Journal for 21st Century Education 4(Special), 45-50 (2017) (2017)
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9
Promoting cultural understandings through song across the Tasman: pre-service primary teacher education
Joseph, Dawn; Trinick, Robyn. - : Routledge, 2016
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10
Text and context: challenges to comparability in survey questions
In: Methodological aspects in cross-national research ; 11 ; ZUMA-Nachrichten Spezial ; 95-107 (2016)
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11
ПРЕДПОСЫЛКИ ИЗУЧЕНИЯ ЛИНГВОКУЛЬТУРОЛОГИИ С ТОЧКИ ЗРЕНИЯ ФИЛОСОФИИ
ЯШИНА М.Г.. - : Общество с ограниченной ответственностью «Издательский дом «ХОРС», 2015
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12
COGNITIVE DISSONANCE FROM THE INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION PERSPECTIVE
LEONTOVICH OLGA. - : Федеральное государственное бюджетное образовательное учреждение высшего профессионального образования «Российский университет дружбы народов», 2015
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13
What makes a good life? A cross-linguistic and cross-cultural perspective
In: Journal of Positive Psychology: dedicated to furthering research and promoting good practice (2015)
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14
Allo-repetition in Academic Settings. Cooperation, Understanding Co-construction and Knowledge Negotiation in the Medical Section of the ELFA Corpus
Cappuzzo, B.. - : Edipuglia, 2015. : country:IT, 2015
Abstract: In recent years, spoken academic ELF (English as a Lingua Franca) has been an object of in- creasing interest in linguistic and communication studies thanks to the position of academia as “one of the domains which have most eagerly adopted English as their common language in in- ternational communication” (Mauranen 2006a: 146) 1. In a context where different linguistic and cultural backgrounds come together, clarity and explicitness play a prominent role. In this respect, ELF research has paid much attention to the importance of communicative strategies, the most prominent of which is repetition. ELF studies on repetition have been carried out in several do- mains, including academia. Within this, however, medical discourse, and more specifically, spoken medical discourse, to date has been neglected. This is quite surprising given the ever-growing medical research output in the English language, which has resulted in an increasing number of literacy programs within EMP (English for Medical Purposes), thus in turn intensifying the use of English as an instrument of international higher medical education. Moreover, academia makes use of several forms of speech, traditionally lectures, seminars, conferences, panel discus- sions, etc., but spoken discourse still remains less investigated as compared to written contexts. This paper is intended to be a continuation and development of a previous study on self-repetition (Cappuzzo forthcoming), and focuses on the role of allo-repetition in the 63,029-word subcorpus of nine polylogic speech events belonging to the 100,135-word section of spoken academic medical interactions included in the one million-word ELFA (English as a Lingua Franca in Academic Settings) corpus. More specifically, following Kaur’s (2009) analysis of interactional devices in co- constructing understanding in English as a lingua franca, this paper concentrates on the com- municative functions served by allo-repetition in the meaning-making process and understanding co-construction in a medical academic ELF context involving speakers of several different linguistic and cultural backgrounds. The paper first reports relevant literature on repetition and allo-repetition strategy. It subsequently shows the findings of the research and examines the functions displayed by allo-repetition in the data, with extracts illustrating the different functions. Occurrences of such cohesive devices falling into the category of repetition as superordinates, hyponyms, and synonymic expressions will also be taken into consideration as useful strategies enhancing clarity and giving discourse coherence. Finally, the paper discusses some didactic implications from the results obtained and offers suggestions on how allo-repetition can be deployed in EMP syllabuses. The main purpose of the work is to highlight how allo-repetition as an interactive process between speakers contributes to increasing understanding, constructing an atmosphere of cooperation, establishing and/or re-establishing shared understanding in knowledge negotiation at an international spoken academic level in the medical field. 
Keyword: academic communication; Allo-repetition; intercultural settings; knowledge negotiation; medical discourse; Settore L-LIN/12 - Lingua E Traduzione - Lingua Inglese; understanding co-construction
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/183232
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15
Developing an international curriculum: why and how?
Magne, PJ. - : Marriott Albert and Victoria Hotel Manchester, 2015
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16
Internationalisation and curriculum development: why and how?
Magne, PJ. - : University of Bedfordshire, 2014
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17
A Case Study of Internationalization at Western Kentucky University
In: Mahurin Honors College Capstone Experience/Thesis Projects (2014)
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18
Sexuated Topology and the Suspension of Meaning: A Non-Hermeneutical Phenomenological Approach to Textual Analysis
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19
Identifying and developing effective approaches to foster intercultural understanding in schools
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20
Intercultural understanding and professional learning through critical engagement
Diaz, Adriana. - : Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations, 2013
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