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JAPANESE >  Upper Levels > Theme: Social Issues > Topics

 
Japanese

Civic Responsibility and Engagement

Diversity, Prejudice and Discrimination

Historical and Present Conflict

Crime and Justice


Japanese Upper Levels > Social Issues

Civic Responsibility and Engagement

Communication

Person-to-Person Communication

  • Elicit an exchange and discussion on participation in community activities.
  • Maintain a discussion related to topics such as education, travel, and involvement in today's society.
  • Discuss topics related to adulthood.
  • Debate what makes one a responsible citizen.
  • Discuss personal rights and responsibilities of young adults.
  • Discuss a citizen's responsibility to vote and be informed politically.

Listening and Reading for Understanding

  • Understand written and oral materials on the role of the young adult in his or her community.
  • Understand spoken or written information given by community organizations, schools and the media.
  • Comprehend written and oral materials on young adults' involvement in politics.
  • Comprehend literature pertaining to one's civic responsibility to be informed and aware of issues such as politics, the environment, and social issues.

Oral and Written Presentation

  • Communicate oral and written information pertaining to community involvement.
  • Produce well-organized spoken and written presentations on civic responsibilities upon reaching adulthood.
  • Produce and present original presentations highlighting one's community responsibility and civic rights.

Cultures

Cultural Perspectives, Practices and Products

  • Compare and contrast young adults' civic responsibilities in the U.S. and in Japan.
  • Compare and contrast community structures and civic involvement in the U.S. and in Japan.

Connections, Comparisons, and Communities

Making Connections Through Language

  • Recognize a connection to various school subjects such as civics, government, and social sciences.
  • Compare and contrast civic responsibilities of a young adult in the U.S. and Japan.

Cultural and Linguistic Comparisons

  • Compare and contrast the U.S. government to the Japanese government.
  • Compare policies and practices regarding voting and civic and personal responsibilities in Japan and in the U.S.
  • Compare and contrast business transactions in the U.S. and in Japan.
  • Compare and contrast linguistic conventions in English and Japanese when discussing an individual's personal and civic responsibilities.

Communication Across Communities

  • Investigate voting practices and civic responsibilities in Japan.

Related Vocabulary and Linguistic Elements

  • Vocabulary related to community involvement and civic responsibility
  • Expressions of preference, agreement and disagreement
  • Use of the conditional and different levels of speech (honorific, humble, polite)

Japanese Upper Levels > Social Issues

Diversity, Prejudice, and Discrimination

Communication

Person-to-Person Communication

  • Maintain a discussion related to diversity.
  • Discuss and/or debate prejudice and discrimination.
  • Express and explain reactions to prejudice and discrimination.
  • Express opinions and react to issues concerning human rights.

Listening and Reading for Understanding

  • Comprehend and analyze written and oral materials on diversity and discrimination.
  • Read and comprehend materials on prejudice in all societies.

Oral and Written Presentation

  • Produce oral and written reports on prejudice and discrimination throughout history.
  • Produce an activity showing prejudice and discrimination and discuss possible solutions.
  • Produce an oral or written presentation reflecting current trends and/or attitudes in society related to diversity.

Cultures

Cultural Perspectives, Practices and Products

  • Explore traditional attitudes when reacting to diversity and discrimination in the U.S. as well as in Japan.
  • Explore bias in reporting human rights issues.

Connections, Comparisons, and Communities

Making Connections Through Language

  • Recognize a connection to various school subjects to include humanities, social sciences, history and government.

Cultural and Linguistic Comparisons

  • Compare and contrast attitudes of people in the U.S. and in Japan towards discrimination in the criminal justice system.

Communication Across Communities

  • Locate and use authentic resources in Japanese to broaden understanding of prejudice and discrimination.

Related Vocabulary and Linguistic Elements

  • Vocabulary related to political and social systems
  • Vocabulary related to geography and contemporary issues
  • Expressions of conviction, opinions, and agreement or disagreement

Japanese Upper Levels > Social Issues

Historical and Present Conflict

Communication

Person-to-Person Communication

  • Discuss past and present conflicts including causes, resolutions, and impact on the world (e.g. World War 1, WWII, war in Iraq, etc.).

Listening and Reading for Understanding

  • Understand current and historical texts relating to world conflict.
  • Understand spoken presentations about world conflict, including news broadcasts, speeches and interviews.

Oral and Written Presentation

  • Express differing points of view and opinions about world conflict.

Cultures

Cultural Perspectives, Practices and Products

  • Identify the sources of conflict in Japan, such as language, religion, tradition, colonialism, etc.

Connections, Comparisons, and Communities

Making Connections Through Language

  • Relate knowledge of world conflict from social studies classes to knowledge gained in Japanese class.

Cultural and Linguistic Comparisons

  • Compare prevailing opinions in the United States regarding world conflicts with those in Japan.

Communication Across Communities

  • Locate information about world conflict in Japanese.

Related Vocabulary and Linguistic Elements

  • Vocabulary related to diplomacy, geography, and nationality
  • Vocabulary related to opinions

Japanese Upper Levels > Social Issues

Crime and Justice

Communication

Person-to-Person Communication

  • Maintain a discussion related to a crime or mystery story.
  • Express and explain reactions to crime and the judicial system.
  • Debate criminal cases.
  • Express opinions about the effectiveness of various laws.

Listening and Reading for Understanding

  • Identify relevant information or legal issues when listening to newscasts.
  • Identify pertinent evidence when reading mystery stories.

Oral and Written Presentation

  • Produce oral and/or written book report in Japanese on a mystery.
  • Produce and present an original mystery.

Cultures

Cultural Perspectives, Practices and Products

  • Explore attitudes when reacting to today's criminal justice system in the U.S. as well as in Japanese-speaking countries.

Connections, Comparisons, and Communities

Making Connections Through Language

  • Recognize a connection to various school subjects to include social sciences, literature, biology and government.

Cultural and Linguistic Comparisons

  • Compare and contrast attitudes of people in the U.S. and in Japan towards the criminal justice system.

Communication Across Communities

  • Locate and use authentic resources in Japanese to broaden understanding of the criminal justice system in Japan.

Related Vocabulary and Linguistic Elements

  • Vocabulary related to political systems
  • Vocabulary related to legal systems
  • Expressions of conviction, opinions, and agreement or disagreement
  • Use of the passive voice

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Last Updated
September 1, 2008


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Yvonne Griggs
Yvonne.Griggs
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