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Global Nuances




SESSION 1 (80 min) ANTICIPATION

Part 1: The Same Words, Different Meanings (20 min)

The teacher writes or projects five expressions that can sound different depending on context:

  • “That’s interesting”
  • “I’ll think about it”
  • “With all due respect”
  • “That’s bold”
  • “Let’s circle back.”

Students discuss whether each expression sounds positive, negative, neutral, or indirect. The teacher asks: Why do people sometimes say one thing but mean another? This prepares students to analyze pragmatics, not just vocabulary.

Part 2: Nuance and Colloquialism Bank (15 min)

The teacher introduces a bank of regional colloquialisms, workplace expressions, and diplomatic phrases. Students do not simply translate them. They identify meaning, register, and professional equivalent.

The teacher explains that some expressions are colloquial, some are professional, and some can sound polite but actually introduce disagreement. Students classify ten expressions as casual, neutral, or professional.

Part 3: Pragmatic Meaning Input (25 min)

The teacher explains that nuance is the difference between literal meaning and intended meaning. For example, “That’s interesting” may mean genuine interest, hesitation, or polite disagreement depending on tone. “With all due respect” often introduces disagreement, even if it sounds polite. The teacher models how intonation, pause, facial expression, and context change meaning.

Students practice interpreting implied meaning in short exchanges:

Part 4: Register Conversion Lab (20 min)

Students transform casual or regionally informal expressions into professional dialogue language. The teacher explains that this is not about eliminating personality; it is about adapting language to context. Students work in groups and then perform two upgraded lines orally.

Part 1 – Diplomatic Disagreement Duel (15 min)

Students form two lines facing each other. One student presents a strong opinion, and the partner must disagree diplomatically without sounding rude. After each round, one line moves so students get a new partner. The teacher listens for tone, softening phrases, and turn-taking. This activity is oral, fast, and highly interactive.

Part 2 – Interruption and Recovery Drill (15 min)

Students practice professional interruption and recovery. The teacher explains that in spontaneous professional dialogue, speakers sometimes need to interrupt, but they must do so politely. Students practice entering a conversation, asking for clarification, and returning the floor.

Part 3 – Two-Minute Meeting Snapshot (10 min)

Students work in groups of three and improvise a two-minute professional dialogue. One student is the facilitator, one presents an idea, and one asks clarifying questions. The dialogue must include one colloquial expression, one professional equivalent, and one diplomatic disagreement.

Part 1 – Preparation: Cross-Cultural Professional Dialogue Simulation (15 min)

Students receive a professional scenario involving international communication. They prepare goals, possible misunderstandings, and useful expressions. The teacher reminds them that they cannot write a full script. They may write only key phrases because the task is spontaneous dialogue.

Part 2 – Live Dialogue Simulation (50 min)

Groups perform a spontaneous professional dialogue. The performance must include one misunderstanding, one regional or colloquial expression, one clarification request, one diplomatic disagreement, and one professional reformulation. The teacher evaluates nuance, tone, fluency, repair strategies, and interaction. This is not a memorized presentation; it is an oral simulation where students must respond in real time.

Part 3 – Feedback Triangle (15 min)

After each performance, three listeners give fast feedback: one comments on clarity, one comments on tone, and one comments on the most effective expression. The teacher closes by explaining that advanced communication depends on how meaning is managed, not only on how many words are spoken.


NEE – Agregar el tipo de adaptaciones curriculares

Principio II: Pautas 6.1 – 6.3 – 6.4 
Principio III: Pautas 7.1 – 8.1 – 9.1
ALUMNO 1: Constante monitoreo. Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas. 
ALUMNO 2: Constante monitoreo, Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas.
ALUMNO 3: Constante monitoreo. Corroborar que el contenido entregado en clase haya sido comprendido por la estudiante mediante retroalimentación.