Tasks: Migration to the West - English 1 - NDLA

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Tasks: Migration to the West

Discuss:

  1. Why is it so important for immigrants to learn the language of their new country?
  2. What is the difference between a mother tongue and a language that you learn as a lingua franca? How are they used differently?
  3. What is good and what is bad about moving to a different country? List your expectations, and compare and discuss them with a partner.
  4. Imagine that you are moving to a different country. Which personal belongings would you bring along? List the most important items. Compare your list to your partner’s and discuss your choices.
  5. Imagine that you have lived in your new homeland for three years. Discuss if the statements in the box would be true for you or not.

Statements:

People grin when I speak my new language.

I keep in touch with my family and friends back home.

I still support my old favourite team.

I have not changed my way of clothing.

I still listen to the same music.

I spend my money on trips back home.

I still eat the same food.

I read newspapers from my old country.

I have a job and a fiancé.

I love my freedom. Nobody knows me here.

I spend most of my time with people from my old country.

I live in an ethnic neighbourhood.

I make an important contribution to my new country.

I want to return home to my old country.

I have the same Facebook profile.

Write:

Choose one of the tasks and write a longer text.

  1. Imagine that you are an immigrant, and you have lived for three years in a new country. Write a letter to your family back home, telling them about your life. Use your answers in the discussion tasks above as a starting point.
  2. Search for pictures on immigration on the Internet. Present three of them, and explain how they convey themes of hope, affluence, possibilities, fear, human rights, freedom, dreams, change etc.
  3. After three years in your new country, you have become quite a prominent blogger on immigrant issues. Write at least three entries proving your position as the most widely read blogger on these issues. Give your blog a suitable name.

Present:

Pick one of the tasks and make a presentation that lasts 8 - 10 minutes.

  1. Search for pictures on immigration on the internet. Present three of them and explain how they convey such themes as hope, affluence, possibilities, fear, human rights, freedom, dreams, change etc.
  2. Research how someone from Norway can immigrate to the United States, and make a presentation on the topic.
  3. Research how someone from an African country can immigrate to the United States, and make a presentation on the topic.

Research 1:

Use various internet sites to find statistics on the population development in Western countries in recent years. Decide on three countries to do research on. Look for trends, changes and significant shifts in the populations in your research. Make sure you state your sources, especially whenever you find contradictory figures and facts. Present your findings in a written report or as an oral presentation. Some useful search queries: European Union, population, demographics, fertility, birth rates, statistics.

You may find these sources useful:

Research 2:

Today, there are almost 80 million people in the world who are forcibly displaced, and the UN's refugee agency reports that the number of displaced people is at its highest ever, surpassing even post-World War 2 numbers. In 2015, Europe felt the impact of this surge, when more than a million people crossed into Europe in just one year. Use various sources to find out more about this crisis. Ask yourself questions such as: Where did the refugees come from? What was their motivation for leaving their homes? How did they arrive in Europe? How were they received by the various states? Which other regions in the world were affected by the flow of immigrants? Present your findings in a written report or an oral presentation.

You may find these sources useful:

Revise:

Answer the multiple choice questions below.

Related content

Subject material
Migration to the West

According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), as much as 12% of the population in OECD countries were foreign born.

Written by: Knut Inge Skifjeld and Karin Søvik.
Last revised date 11/02/2020