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Autor principal: Perugini, Dorie Conlon
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1091023
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  • Judging a Book by Its Cover: Developing Intercultural Competence through Book Covers Perugini, Dorie Conlon Intercultural Communication Spanish Second Language Learning Second Language Instruction Units of Study Interdisciplinary Approach Language Teachers Art Products Teaching Methods Cultural Awareness Elementary School Teachers Food Holidays Cultural Background Grade 3 Childrens Literature Librarians Elementary School Students In this brief article, elementary Spanish teacher, Dorie Perugini describes a classroom project that not only enabled students to explore their own culture and cultures around the world, but motivated them to create a beautiful piece of art. Like most elementary language teachers, Perugini needed to teach her class about food. While planning her lesson, she contemplated how she could evoke the strong memories of favorite recipes and foods traditionally eaten at holidays in and if it was possible to get across the importance of food in cultural identity to her third grade students during a standard fruit unit. Using one of her favorite third grade stories, "La sorpresa de Nandi" by Eileen Brown she engaged her class in her a novice level Spanish discussion about the book's cover, giving her students great motivation to listen to the story. To help her students gain skills of Intercultural Competence after reading the story, Perugini based her future lesson plans on an essential question: How would the story change if it was set in a different country? Following this discussion, Perugini partnered with a classroom teacher to create an interdisciplinary lesson in English. With the aid of the classroom teacher and the school's library media specialist, the students came up with a number of questions to further explore and research how the story would change if it were set in a different country. When they had finished gathering their information, the students used materials from the art room to create poster-sized covers for their new stories.