And, as with other bicultural families, the therapeutic work includes both accepting differences among members and recognizing similarities. |
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In a bicultural setting the challenge exists to incorporate cultural content into cognitive-behavioural practice. |
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We have developed positive attitudes and built bicultural institutions that are the envy of the world. |
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The only long-term future for a bicultural nation is to develop models of co-management. |
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There is general agreement that being bilingual and bicultural are positive attributes in an increasingly culturally diverse country. |
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With many more immigrants entering the country we are moving from a bicultural to a multicultural society. |
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I am Irish and I am African-American and I am the first bicultural contestant. |
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In the final analysis, upon developing a bicultural personality, they operate with and beyond cultural meanings with a sense of being worthwhile. |
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Jo attended the group herself and reported on the involvement of the members in the core groups and the bicultural focus of the organisation. |
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But we have some way to travel before we can become a bicultural, bi-structural nation. |
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Bilingual and bicultural education should continue throughout the school career. |
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In most cases, the clear preference is for bilingual, bicultural therapists, but when a Spanish-speaking therapist is not available, it may be necessary to use an interpreter. |
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She had grown up both bilingual and bicultural, speaking Maidu with her mother and English with her father, a Dutch settler who had come Wisconsin by covered wagon as a child. |
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Speaking Spanish rather than English, for a bilingual and bicultural Puerto Rican in New York, might conjure feelings of family and home. |
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And of those bicultural bilinguals, we should be little surprised that they feel different in their two languages. |
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The project will include components on intercultural and bicultural education, cultural promotion and youth development. |
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What you do every day helps strengthen understanding among our citizens by creating a critical mass of bilingual and bicultural young Canadians. |
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Located on the Ontario-Quebec boundary, the city is enriched by its bilingual and bicultural characteristics. |
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And so that's why I think people from our community who are perhaps the most successful are in fact bicultural. |
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Indeed, just as 'balanced' individual bilingualism is rare, so too are balanced bilingual and bicultural programmes. |
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It is the only state in the U. S. A that we can really consider as bilingual and bicultural. |
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It was recommended to make bicultural and multicultural heritage and resources available to schools via the Internet. |
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For it is people, not laws, that make our peculiar bicultural partnership work. |
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Similarly, a bicultural identity, which signifies that a person can identify with more than one culture, was discussed. |
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Even so, Aboriginal people retain their conviction that education can be a positive force in the pursuit of bicultural competence and confidence for their children and themselves. |
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The first action taken by the new leadership established bicultural beginnings of Canada that have since grown to our wonderful multicultural country of today. |
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At the same time, as noted in the February 2008 Report on the Government of Canada's Consultations on Linguistic Duality and Official Languages, stress fractures are appearing in terms of the image of Canada as bicultural. |
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This emphasis on some communities does not work to the detriment of the right to a bilingual and bicultural education in each of the institutions supported by the State. |
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Her teaching, research and publications are deliberately bicultural, promoting discourse between the worlds of Aboriginal knowledge and experience and the language and protocols of academics and policy makers. |
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The authors noted that bicultural Asian American students are exposed to both mainstream American culture, which stresses independence, and East Asian culture, which stresses the value and importance of interdependence. |
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Support teachers pay particular attention to Roma children, treating them at an early stage of education as speakers of a foreign language and bicultural persons. |
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The more that you get bilingualism into the universities, the more the concept of being bicultural before bilingual will establish itself and bleed backwards into the schools. |
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He called his bicultural group the Liberal-Conservative Party, a seemingly ambiguous name which actually made sense because it was composed of moderates of both the left and right. |
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In the 1970s, a growing demand that whole educational programmes in larger indigenous communities should be truly bilingual and bicultural emerged. |
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We are going for a younger bicultural viewer,'' said Nely Galan, Telemundo's entertainment president. |
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My point is that if you put aside the departments of French literature, there are a number of other areas in which being bicultural and bilingual is intellectually relevant. |
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Moreover, the cultural identity of bicultural individuals is contextually driven and usually only one culture will be salient in a particular situation. |
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The Tamaki Hikoi, a Maori guided walk of Auckland, gives visitors a sense of the importance of the culture in what is a proudly bicultural country. |
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Latinos' bicultural lifestyles, colorful insights and interesting stories. |
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The Tamaki Hikoi, a Maori-guided walk of Auckland, gives visitors a sense of the importance of the culture in what is a proudly bicultural country. |
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Staff on the Bicultural Committee can begin to implement this strategy for future intakes of internal students. |
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The more-acculturated Hispanic Boomer is made up of those that are Bicultural and Acculturated. |
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