Sunday, 6 October 2013

Evaluating Intercultural Communication

In this blog I will describe my personal experience on intercultural communication in Singapore during my undergraduate study.

When I first came to Singapore I was excited since that was my first time abroad. Everything was new and wonderful, and I had fun exploring around without feeling a bit tired. I enjoyed my life for the first couple weeks with friends, but soon I felt confused and nostalgias and couldn’t fit myself in.

The toughest barrier in front of me was the language. Unlike in Singapore, English was a foreign language in china. I only learned elementary level in my high school, with most materials in British or American English. I could barely understand what a local Singaporean spoke. Most of the time, they just gave up and communicated with me in Chinese instead. Soon enough, I decided to use Chinese whenever possible.

However, I felt panic when I found myself having difficulty following classes along. The good news was that, for computer science, there were all sorts of open courses online and virtually every university conducted pretty much the same syllabus. I skipped most lectures and instead, I watched lecture recordings from top universities like Stanford and Berkeley. At first, I tried my best to keep up with the pace of the videos. I started to ask questions and read answers online in English. I tried to read programming books in English. Thankfully I could get pretty good results for my exams.

A year ago, there was a group project for the database course I was taking. I got assigned into a group of 3 Singaporeans. I felt a bit worried at the beginning but surprisingly I actually could understand what they talked and I was also able to express my basic ideas in simple English. We got along quite easily and managed to finish the project with good quality.


From my experience I understand that, for overseas students from non-English speaking countries, language barrier is always the toughest cultural barrier that we have to overcome. There are no easy ways to get around with it. You have to try your best and eventually you can feel yourself improving.

2 comments:

  1. Hey Lin Huan! I believe you took a lot of effort to master English language and you are doing really fine now. Keep up your good effort! I believe at the end of your university education in Singapore, you will be able to communicate in English effectively.

    Even though English is the main language Singaporeans communicate in, most Chinese Singaporeans are able to communicate in Chinese as well. I wouldn't think that they have given up on speaking English with you instead. Probably they thought Chinese language was the language that they can communicate with you most effectively. What I think you could have done was to ask them in a polite manner the reason for not communicating with you in English after a short while. Singaporeans in general are fine with people being frank with them. Alternatively, if given a chance, you can work with non-Chinese Singaporeans so that they would not have a chance to speak to you in Chinese.

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  2. Yes Lin Huan - you seem to have coped quite well. Keep speaking English and imrpoving - you'll find yourself getting more confident in cosmopiltan situations.

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