TEACHING RUSSIAN AS A FOREIGN LANGUAGE TO THE HOMO CLIPUS GENERATION: QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
This article analyses the specificity of teaching Russian to Polish students of Russian at the university level, in particular those students who are characterised by clip thinking (hence the name homo clipus). The main aim of this article is to suggest the approach, methods and means to be used in teaching a foreign language to students from the homo clipus generation. There being no studies on teaching Russian as a foreign language to homo clipus students, this study serves as a counterbalance to more traditional approaches to teaching Russian as a foreign language by offering a description of specific ways of learning adopted by young people who represent the homo clipus generation.
Keywords: Russian as a foreign language, clip thinking, methods, information and communication technologies
References:
1. Makarovska О. Klipovost’ myshleniya i formirovaniye mezhkul’turnoy kommunikatsii [Clip thinking and intercultural competence formation]. Studia Rossica Posnaniensia, Poznan, Adam Mickiewicz University, 2010, vol. XXXV, pp. 133–143 (in Russian).
2. Makarovska О. Klipovost’ myshleniya i realizatsiya printsipa situativnosti v protsesse obucheniya pol’skikh uchashchikhsya mezhkul’turnomu obscheniyu na russkom yazyke [Clip thinking and the implementation of the situationality principle in the process of teaching intercultural communication in Russian to polish students]. Studia Rossica Posnaniensia, Poznan, Adam Mickiewicz University, 2010, vol. XXXIX, pp. 173–184 (in Russian).
3. Makarovska О. Osobennosti obucheniya pol’skikh uchashchihsya RKI s uchetom klipovosti myshleniya (povedencheskiy aspekt) [The specifi city of teaching Polish students Russian as a foreign language with the emphasis on clip thinking (behavioral aspect)]. Russkiy yazyk v inostrannoy auditorii – teoriya, praktika, tseli i rezul’taty prepodavaniya. Pod red. E. Nevzorovej-Kmech [In: E. Nevzorova-Kmech (ed.). Russian as a foreign language – theory, practice, objectives and learning outcomes]. Lodz, University of Lodz, 2015, pp. 54–63 (in Russian).
Issue: 1, 2016
Series of issue: Issue 1
Rubric: FOREIGN LANGUAGES IN HIGHER EDUCATION
Pages: 123 — 127
Downloads: 646