Hello!
Images: Personal photographs of student posters. All rights reserved to students.
How are you? Here are some great student posters on global-glocal themes. These are ideas you can research about for your presentations. We will do these in class before our Christmas and New Year's holidays!
Speaking I (J)
プレゼンテーションは日本に有名、名高い外国人とかハーフジャパニーズ、日系の人達、移民のことをプレゼンテーションします。下にこのテーマ、学生のディスプレイの例えば:
上のポスターの部分:
それで下に他の例えば:
Speaking I (D)
For your presentations, you can research with partners on one of three themes:
I decided to add two more themes - about refugees and educational systems - to our presentation topic ideas to give you more ideas to choose from. Here are some examples of past student posters on these themes:
Speaking II (A) - immigrant communities in different countries and some problems they have
- refugees (難民) coming to Japan and difficulties they have
- educational systems in different countries
I decided to add two more themes - about refugees and educational systems - to our presentation topic ideas to give you more ideas to choose from. Here are some examples of past student posters on these themes:
For your presentations you can research with your partners on different indigenous or ethnic groups, communities, and languages around the world. The blogpost you saw about the Ainu was one example of this kind of community.
Here are some other indigenous peoples, communities, and languages you could choose from for your research. Because you are European and American Culture majors (Obei), I have made a list of unique peoples, communities, and languages from Europe and North America:
The Travelers (Ireland)
Bretons (northern France)
Welsh language (Wales, the UK)
The Basques and their language (northwestern Spain/southwestern France)
The Sorbs and their language (eastern Germany/southwestern Poland)
German minorities of Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan
Hungarian minority of Romania
The Sami people (northern Norway and Finland)
Metis people of Quebec (Canada)
The Haida (British Columbia, Canada)
Hasidic Jews of New York (U.S)
The Lumbees (east central cost of the U.S.)
Cherokee language (Oklahoma, the U.S.)
Cajun (Acadian) people of Louisiana (the U.S.)
Or - if you can think of another unique minority community or language in Europe or North America, you can choose that too.
I hope these displays and ideas can help you with your presentations!
Here are some other indigenous peoples, communities, and languages you could choose from for your research. Because you are European and American Culture majors (Obei), I have made a list of unique peoples, communities, and languages from Europe and North America:
The Travelers (Ireland)
Bretons (northern France)
Welsh language (Wales, the UK)
The Basques and their language (northwestern Spain/southwestern France)
The Sorbs and their language (eastern Germany/southwestern Poland)
German minorities of Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan
Hungarian minority of Romania
The Sami people (northern Norway and Finland)
Metis people of Quebec (Canada)
The Haida (British Columbia, Canada)
Hasidic Jews of New York (U.S)
The Lumbees (east central cost of the U.S.)
Cherokee language (Oklahoma, the U.S.)
Cajun (Acadian) people of Louisiana (the U.S.)
Or - if you can think of another unique minority community or language in Europe or North America, you can choose that too.
I hope these displays and ideas can help you with your presentations!
Good luck! See you next time!
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