Cultural Differences, Culture Shock - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

Cultural Differences, Culture Shock

Description:

What every exchange student should know about culture ... Formality Informality. Past Future. Directness Indirectness. Change Permanence. Change Permanence ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:11046
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: ivan99
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Cultural Differences, Culture Shock


1
Cultural Differences,Culture Shock
  • Orientation Meeting
  • Strecno
  • 20. 9. 2008

2
  • ... OR
  • What every exchange student should know about
    culture before his stay abroad

3
The best preparation is to understand the concept
of culture and the idea of cultural differences
4
What is culture?
  • learned behavior, not hereditary or genetic
  • Culture is the acquired knowledge (not
    instinctual) that groups use in order to
  • interpret the world around them
  • generate social behavior
  • judge the behavior of others

5
What is culture?
  • everything that is not a part of nature
  • Tree part of nature
  • Chair invention and manifestation of culture
  • Buildings, architecture

6
Communication
  • Communication, particularly language, is the
    foundation of culture. Language labels, creates,
    maintains, and transforms culture.

7
Language
  • Language is not only the way culture is
    transmitted
  • It is one of the lenses through which culture is
    created

8
What is culture?
  • An integrated system of learned behavior patterns
    that are characteristic of any given society or
    group
  • It refers to the total way of life, including how
    people think, feel and behave

9
Metaphorically, culture is the LENS, through
which we see the world
10
Think of these cultural lens as the ability to
see the world colorful or colorless
11
Think of color-blindness (inability to see
different colors) asculture-blindness
12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Ethnocentrism
  • The universal tendency for any culture to see
    its own values and practices as natural and
    correct
  • The Mediterranean Sea
  • China means middle earth
  • In Ecuador, the monument at the equator is
    roughly translated as The middle of the world

17
Ethnorelativism
  • The acquired ability to see many values, beliefs
    and behaviors as cultural rather than universal

18
Developing Intercultural Sensitivity
The Experience of Difference
Acceptance Adaptation Integration
Denial Defense Minimization
Ethnocentric stages
Ethnorelative stages
19
Developing cultural sensitivity and competence
requires moving from Ethnocentrism to
Ethnorelativism
20
Defensiveness
  • Recognizing a cultural practice as different, but
  • Labeling it wrong or inferior
  • Or, by labeling ones own practice superior

21
  • Our own culture or sub-culture comes to us
    naturally and unconsciously
  • Ex Our handedness
  • We generally dont think about what hand we will
    use to write our names
  • Changing our cultural point of view is about as
    hard as changing our handedness
  • Both are possible, but neither is easy

22
Cultural differences
  • Easily noticed differences
  • Language
  • Food
  • Clothing
  • Deeper differences
  • Values
  • Thinking patterns

23
The Cultural iceberg
Conscious behaviors
1/8th above the surface
Unconscious beliefs and values
7/8ths below the surface
24
Individualism Group Orientation
Formality Informality
Past
Future
Directness Indirectness
Change Permanence
25
Change Permanence
26
Individualism Group orientation
  • Example development of music players (walkman,
    discman, iPod)

27
Individualism
Western cultures
Change Permanence
Eastern cultures
Group orientation
28
Culture shock
  • The profound sense of disorientation and
    discomfort that comes with extended travel or
    living in a foreign culture markedly different
    from ones own

29
Stages of Culture Shock
  • Initial excitement
  • Irritability and negativeness
  • .
  • .

30
Some travelers want to go to foreign places
but are dismayed when the places turn out
actually to be foreign.Canadian author
Margaret Atwood
31
Stages of Culture Shock
  • Initial excitement
  • Irritability and negativeness
  • Gradual adaptation
  • Biculturalism

32
Culture Shock Cycle
Months
Pre- departure
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 Return...
Normal level of feelings
Adapted from a model by Robert Kohls
33
Reverse Culture Shock
  • Initial Euphoria (may be very brief or not
    happen at all)
  • Irritability and Negativism (may be very lengthy)
  • Gradual Adaptation
  • True Bi-Culturalism

34
Culture Shock and Reverse Culture Shock are not
just unpleasant side effects of international
living. They are the necessary ingredients that
bring about quality exchanges.
35
Inbound Syndrome
  • Universal tendency of foreigners to group
    together, regardless their country of origin
  • They become a sub-culture and being foreigners is
    what they have in common

36
When you travel, remember that a foreign
country is not designed to make you comfortable.
It is designed to make its own people
comfortable.Clifton Fadiman
37
First you need to know your own cultural values
38
Slovak cultureCzech culture
39
Advantages?
  • personality
  • biculturalism
  • further education
  • employment
  • your life

40
Finding help
  • To know the road ahead, ask those coming back.
    Chinese Proverb
  • Problems connected with culture shock can be
    helped by those, who have such experience
    (rebounds) or who know about the problem (YEO in
    your club)
  • Your parents cant give you good advice unless
    they have lived in a different culture for a
    longer period of time

41
Prepared by Ivan Polák, Rotex Slovensko,
2007 From the original Dennis White, Ph.D., WI,
USA Presented at 2007 USA Canada YE Network
Conference, www.yeoresources.org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com