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This book examines the benefits of an Australian in-country study
(ICS) in China programme and explores ways to maximise the
short-term ICS experience in a multilingual space. The book employs
an ecological perspective which has seldom been used to examine the
study abroad context. It emphasises the importance of the space
itself as an arena of interaction, belonging and power, where
conduct and modes of communication are often regulated by political
authorities and societal expectations. Specifically, the book
focuses on the following: * the extent to which the ICS facilitated
interaction in different settings * the way in which interaction
during ICS contributed to language learning * the degree in which
the interaction during ICS contributed to culture learning and *
the role of identity in the learning process in the ICS. The main
argument of the book is that while the ICS promoted multilingual
learning space for in-class and out-of-class interactions, which
further facilitated language and culture learning to a great
extent, Australian students' identities and self-concepts also
played a core mediating role throughout individual learning
trajectories.
This book examines the benefits of an Australian in-country study
(ICS) in China programme and explores ways to maximise the
short-term ICS experience in a multilingual space. The book employs
an ecological perspective which has seldom been used to examine the
study abroad context. It emphasises the importance of the space
itself as an arena of interaction, belonging and power, where
conduct and modes of communication are often regulated by political
authorities and societal expectations. Specifically, the book
focuses on the following: • the extent to which the ICS
facilitated interaction in different settings • the way in
which interaction during ICS contributed to language learning
• the degree in which the interaction during ICS
contributed to culture learning and • the role of identity
in the learning process in the ICS. The main argument of the book
is that while the ICS promoted multilingual learning space for
in-class and out-of-class interactions, which further facilitated
language and culture learning to a great extent, Australian
students’ identities and self-concepts also played a core
mediating role throughout individual learning trajectories.
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