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	<title>Hunan Cross Cultural Education &#187; Vocabulary</title>
	<atom:link href="http://hunancce.com/blog/category/education/vocabulary/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://hunancce.com/blog</link>
	<description>bringing cultures together through education</description>
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		<title>Week 11: USA (Unit 12 &#8211; US Foreign Policy)</title>
		<link>http://hunancce.com/blog/2009/week-11-usa-unit-12-us-foreign-policy/</link>
		<comments>http://hunancce.com/blog/2009/week-11-usa-unit-12-us-foreign-policy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2009 00:00:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Steve</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hong Kong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vocabulary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[英语国家社会与文化入门]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Foreign Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HIST]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[湖南理工学院]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hunancce.com/blog/?p=219</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For my students at the Hunan Institute of Science &#38; Technology ( 湖南理工学院 ) who are taking the course: &#8220;The Society and Culture of Major English-Speaking Countries ( 英语国家社会与文化入门 ) : An Introduction (Book Two / Second Edition)&#8221; This week&#8217;s lesson covered unit 12  from the textbook which is about US Foreign Policy. If you would [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p>For my students at the <a title="Wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunan_Institute_of_Science_and_Technology" target="_blank"><strong>Hunan Institute of Science &amp; Technology</strong></a> (<a title="Official Website" href="http://www.hnist.cn/" target="_blank"> 湖南理工学院</a> ) who are taking the course: &#8220;<em>The Society and Culture of Major English-Speaking Countries ( 英语国家社会与文化入门 ) : An Introduction (Book Two / Second Edition)</em>&#8221;</p>
<p>This week&#8217;s lesson covered unit 12  from the textbook which is about<strong> US Foreign Policy</strong>.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-220" title="week_11" src="http://hunancce.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/week_11.jpg" alt="week_11" width="450" height="338" /></p>
<p>If you would like to have the <a title="Week 11: USA (Unit 12)" href="http://hunancce.com/downloads/Week_11.pdf" target="_blank">Presentation Notes</a> from this week&#8217;s class, click on the link to view or download them.</div>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part Four</title>
		<link>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-four/</link>
		<comments>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-four/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jul 2008 23:00:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Steve</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vocabulary]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hunancce.com/blog/?p=41</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part Four Rites of intensification &#8212; religious practices that increase group solidarity and commitment Rites of passage &#8212; religious practices that mark an individual&#8217;s passage from one life stage into another Role &#8212; the behavior, attitudes, and values associated with a particular status Role conflict &#8212; conflict between the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Four</h3>
<ul>
<li>Rites of intensification &#8212; religious practices that increase group solidarity and commitment</li>
<li>Rites of passage &#8212; religious practices that mark an individual&#8217;s passage from one life stage  into another</li>
<li>Role &#8212; the behavior, attitudes, and values associated with a particular status</li>
<li>Role conflict &#8212; conflict between the demands of a single role or between roles</li>
<li>Role set &#8212; an array of roles that accrue to a particular status</li>
<li>Rules of descent &#8212;  a set of ordered relations limiting recruitment into various kinship groups</li>
<li>Secondary groups &#8212; utilitarian, formal, and impersonal groups</li>
<li>Selector &#8212; a tool used to discriminate among several inputs</li>
<li>Skill &#8212; the acquired ability to apply a given technique effectively and readil</li>
<li>Social class &#8212; those people on a social scale who see themselves as equal and are seen as  equal by others on the scale</li>
<li>Social organization &#8212; the regularization of interpersonal relations</li>
<li>Society &#8212; a social organization made up of a group of people who share a geogrpahical area  and a culture</li>
<li>Sororal polygyny &#8212; a marriage arangement by which a man marries a woman and er sisters</li>
<li>Sororate marriage &#8212; an arrangement by which if a woman dies childless, her sister marries  the widower</li>
<li>State &#8212; a governmentall unit based territoriality, cultural organization, and formal government</li>
<li>Status &#8212; a position or place in a social system with its attendant rights and duties</li>
<li>Stratification &#8212; a hierarchy of statuses</li>
<li>Subculture &#8212; a cluster of behavior patterns related to the general culture and yet  distinguishable from it</li>
<li>Survey &#8212; a research technique involving collecting data by systematic questioning of  individuals</li>
<li>Switch &#8212; a valve with a finite number of positions</li>
<li>Technique &#8212; a set of categores and plans used to acheive a given end</li>
<li>Technological systems &#8212; those parts of culture that enable man to produce objective changes  in his physical and biological environment</li>
<li>Technology &#8212; the sum total of all the social customs by which a people manipulate entities  and substances of all kinds</li>
<li>Terms of address &#8212; terms used to address persons</li>
<li>Terms of reference &#8212; terms used to talk about persons</li>
<li>Tools &#8212; devices for transmitting, transforming, or storing energy</li>
<li>Totem &#8212; a nonhuman &#8220;progenitor&#8221; of a clan</li>
<li>Trap &#8212; a tool that is a selector combined with a container</li>
<li>Tribe &#8212; a group of people who share a language, culture, and territory and see themselves as  an autonomous unit</li>
<li>Unilateral descent &#8212; descent traced through only one parent</li>
<li>Urban anthropology &#8212; the crosscultural study of urbanization</li>
<li>Valve &#8212; a device that passes different kinds or quantities of input at different times</li>
<li>Vehicle &#8212; a tool used to transmit stored objects, energy, or information through space</li>
<li>Vertical status &#8212; the hierarchical ordering of statuses</li>
</ul>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part Three</title>
		<link>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-three/</link>
		<comments>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-three/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2008 23:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Steve</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vocabulary]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hunancce.com/blog/?p=40</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part Three Language &#8212; verbal, systematic, and symbolic communication Laws &#8212; rules and regulations that are enforced by the state Levirate marriage &#8212; an arrangement by which if a man dies childless, his brother marries the widow Mana &#8212; supernatural nonpersonalized forces in animistic religions Marriage &#8212; a pattern [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Three</h3>
<ul>
<li>Language &#8212; verbal, systematic, and symbolic communication</li>
<li>Laws &#8212; rules and regulations that are enforced by the state</li>
<li>Levirate marriage &#8212; an arrangement by which if a man dies childless, his brother marries the widow</li>
<li>Mana &#8212; supernatural nonpersonalized forces in animistic religions</li>
<li>Marriage &#8212; a pattern of norms and customs that define and control the relationship between  a man and a woman, designating them as legitimate sex partners</li>
<li>Matrilineal descent &#8212; descent traced through the mother&#8217;s line</li>
<li>Matrilocal residence &#8212; a living arrangement in which a couple live with the wife&#8217;s family</li>
<li>Mechanism &#8212; arrangements of media designed to transmit or modify the application of  power, force, or motion</li>
<li>Media &#8212; tools used to transmit matter or energy through space while preserving their  essential qualities</li>
<li>Medical anthropology &#8212; the application of cultural criteria to the practice of medicine and  response to medical, clinical, and educational practices</li>
<li>Moiety &#8212; the division of a tribe into two groups, based on birth</li>
<li>Monogamy &#8212; a marriage arrangement in which each individual has only one mate</li>
<li>Mores &#8212; social norms of a moral nature</li>
<li>Mutually exclusive &#8212; groups in which membership in one group precludes membership in  the other group</li>
<li>Neolocal residence &#8212; an arrangement by which a couple lives apart from both partners&#8217;  families and sets up a new household</li>
<li>Noninclusive groups &#8212; groups in which joint membership is neither precluded nor requisite</li>
<li>Nonverbal communication &#8212; the process by which a message is sent and received through  any one or more of the sense channels, without the use of spoken language</li>
<li>Norms &#8212; regular and accepted patterns of behavior</li>
<li>Nuclear family &#8212; a husband and wife and their immature children</li>
<li>Overlapping groups &#8212; groups in which membership in one group does not preclude  membership in the other group or groups</li>
<li>Parallel cousin &#8212; the child of one&#8217;s parent&#8217;s same-sex sibling</li>
<li>Participant observation &#8212; systematic observation while participating in a society</li>
<li>Patrilineal descent &#8212; descent traced through the father&#8217;s line</li>
<li>Patrilocal residence &#8212; a living arrangement in which a couple live with the husband&#8217;s family</li>
<li>Peasant economies &#8212; subsocieties of a larger stratified society that is either preindustrial or  semiindustrial</li>
<li>Phratry &#8212; a group of two or more clans held together either by kinship or mutual interest</li>
<li>Polyandry &#8212; a marriage arrangement in which a female has more than one husband</li>
<li>Polygamy &#8212; a marriage arrangement in which a person has multiple mates</li>
<li>Polygyny &#8212; a marriage arrangement in which a male has more than one wife</li>
<li>Primary group &#8212; a small, intimate, and informal group</li>
<li>Primogeniture &#8212; a system of inheritance in which the family&#8217;s wealth and position is passed  on to the first-born son</li>
<li>Proximic communication &#8212; transmission of messages that utilizes space</li>
<li>Quasi-experimental design &#8212; a methodology similar to that of using an experimental design  but in which the researcher cannot control all the factors</li>
<li>Rationalization &#8212; a psychological defense process by which an individual recasts a difficult  situation into one that is acceptable</li>
<li>Religion &#8212; the shared beliefs and belief practices of a people.  These may or may not be  supernatural in character</li>
</ul>
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		<item>
		<title>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part Two</title>
		<link>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-two/</link>
		<comments>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-two/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jul 2008 23:00:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Steve</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vocabulary]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hunancce.com/blog/?p=39</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part Two Endogamy &#8212; a sociological rule requiring a person to select a mate from within a culturally defined group of which both are members Eskimo kinship system &#8212; a bilateral, linear kinship system Ethnocentrism &#8212; the practice of interpreting and evaluating behavior and objects by reference to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Two</h3>
<ul>
<li>Endogamy &#8212; a sociological rule requiring a person to select a mate from within a culturally  defined group of which both are members</li>
<li>Eskimo kinship system &#8212; a bilateral, linear kinship system</li>
<li>Ethnocentrism &#8212; the practice of interpreting and evaluating behavior and objects by  reference to the standards of one&#8217;s own culture rather than those of the culture to  which they belong</li>
<li>Ethnography &#8212; the descriptive study of human societies</li>
<li>Ethnohistory &#8212; the cultural history of a people</li>
<li>Ethnology &#8212; comparative ethnography</li>
<li>Ethnoscience &#8212; a linguistic approach to the study of nonverbal culture</li>
<li>Ethnotheology &#8212; a discipline concerned with the deculturalization and contextualization of  theology</li>
<li>Exogamy &#8212; a sociological rule requiring that potential mates come from different culturally  defined groups</li>
<li>Experimental design &#8212; a methodology used to control various factors in an experimental study</li>
<li>Extended family &#8212; a living arrangement in which two or more related nuclear families share  a household</li>
<li>Family of orientation &#8212; the family one is born into</li>
<li>Family of procreation &#8212; the family one forms by marriage</li>
<li>Fictive ties &#8212; socio-legal kinship relationships</li>
<li>Folkways &#8212; low-level norms such as customs and manners</li>
<li>Foraging &#8212; food acquisition by gathering naturally growing foodstuffs</li>
<li>Formal government &#8212; an independent system or social institution set up for the purpose of  governing</li>
<li>Fraternal polyandry &#8212; a marriage arrangement in which a woman marries a man and his  brothers</li>
<li>Functional equivalent &#8212; something in one culture that performs the same function as  something else in another culture</li>
<li>Government &#8212; a society&#8217;s mechanisms and structures for the maintenance of order and  communal decision making</li>
<li>Group &#8212; a unit of two or more people involved in communication and interrelationship and  having &#8220;unit awareness&#8221;</li>
<li>Hawaiian kinship system &#8212; a bilateral, generational kinship system</li>
<li>Horizontal status &#8212; a status on the same level or having the same rank as another</li>
<li>Horticulture &#8212; intensive types of agriculture involving killing certain plant growth and  planing other plant growth with higher food value</li>
<li>Hunting &#8212; the catching and killing of wildlife for food</li>
<li>Hypothesis &#8212; a statement to be tested by a scientific methodology</li>
<li>Idiolect &#8212; an individual usage of a language</li>
<li>Incest taboo &#8212; the prohibition against mating with or marrying kinsman</li>
<li>Inclusive groups &#8212; groups in which membership in one group means inclusion in another  group</li>
<li>Independent variable &#8212; a factor that is varied in an experimental study</li>
<li>Informal government &#8212; a governmental system based on an already-existing system such as  the kinship system</li>
<li>Iroquois kinship system &#8212; a unilateral, linear kinship system</li>
<li>Kinesic communication &#8212; the transmission of messages by body movements</li>
<li>Kinship &#8212; a network of family relationships</li>
<li>Kin term &#8212; a specific term in a specific language used to refer to a kin type</li>
<li>Kin type &#8212; an abstract concept of a relationship that can be described in every culture</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part One</title>
		<link>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-one/</link>
		<comments>http://hunancce.com/blog/2008/glossary-of-cross-cultural-communication-terminology-part-one/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jun 2008 23:00:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Steve</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vocabulary]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hunancce.com/blog/?p=38</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology &#124; Part One Acculturation &#8212; the process by which individuals acquire the knowledge and skills that enable them to more or less function in a second culture Achieved statue &#8212; a status obtained through choice and achievement Adjudication &#8212; the process involving delegating decisions to others Affinal ties &#8212; kinship [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part One</h3>
<ul>
<li>Acculturation &#8212; the process by which individuals acquire the knowledge and skills that  enable them to more or less function in a second culture</li>
<li>Achieved statue &#8212; a status obtained through choice and achievement</li>
<li>Adjudication &#8212; the process involving delegating decisions to others</li>
<li>Affinal ties &#8212; kinship relationships by marriage</li>
<li>Animism &#8212; the religion of primitive people based on a belief in a spirit world</li>
<li>Anthropology &#8212; the study of man as a biological, psychological, and sociological culture  bearing being</li>
<li>Archaeology &#8212; the study of the artifacts of prehistoric societies</li>
<li>Artifact &#8212; any portion of the material environment deliberately used or modified for use by  man</li>
<li>Ascribed status &#8212; a status that society assigns to an individual, usually based on  characteristics of birth such as race and sex</li>
<li>Assimilation &#8212; the total adaptation to a new culture</li>
<li>Avunculocal residence &#8212; a living arrangement by which a married couple live with the  brother of the wife&#8217;s mother</li>
<li>Behavioral sciences &#8212; those sciences that study human behavior, including anthropology,  psychology, and sociology</li>
<li>Bilateral descent &#8212; descent traced through both parents</li>
<li>Clan &#8212; a consanguinely related group, patrilineal or matrilineal, believing in a common  descent</li>
<li>Clinical design &#8212; the application of anthropology to a social problem</li>
<li>Cognitive anthropology &#8212; the study of the organizing principles underlying behavior</li>
<li>Community &#8212; a corporate body sharing sociopolitical identity and a geographic area</li>
<li>Compartmentalization &#8212; a psychological process by which a person boxes off conflicting  things from each other</li>
<li>Consanguine ties &#8212; kinship relationships based on biological relationships</li>
<li>Container &#8212; a tool used to sore matter or energy for a length of time while preserving it  from loss or contamination</li>
<li>Converter &#8212; a tool that changes one kind or form of matter or energy into another</li>
<li>Cross cousin &#8212; the child of one&#8217;s parent&#8217;s sibling of the opposite sex</li>
<li>Cultural anthropology &#8212; the branch of anthropology concerned with the study of existing  human cultures</li>
<li>Cultural determinism &#8212; the approach to human behavior that sees culture as the determining  factor of behavior</li>
<li>Cultural relativism &#8212; the approach to an interpretation and evaluation of behavior and  objects by reference to the normative and value standards of the culture to which the  behavior or objects belong.</li>
<li>Culture &#8212; the learned and shared attitudes, values, and ways of behaving of a people; also  the artifacts of the people</li>
<li>Culture complex &#8212; a cluster of related culture traits seen as a single unit</li>
<li>Culture shock &#8212; the reaction experienced by an individual who comes to live in a new and  different culture</li>
<li>Culture trait &#8212; the smallest unit of culture; individual acts characteristically done by  members of a culture</li>
<li>Dependent variable &#8212; the observed factor in an experimental study</li>
<li>Deviance &#8212; behavior that violates normative rules</li>
<li>Dialect &#8212; a variation of a language</li>
<li>Economics &#8212; the production, distribution, purchase, and consumption of goods and services</li>
<li>Educational anthropology &#8212; the comparative study of socialization and enculturation  processes</li>
<li>Enculturation &#8212; the process by which individuals acquire the knowledge, skills, attitudes,  and values that enable them to become more or less functioning members of their  society.</li>
</ul>
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