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1
CULTURE
  • The water that bears the ship is the same that
    engulfs it.
  • (Chinese Proverb)

2
Intercultural Communication Skills for
EducationCultivating The Space in Between
Kathryn Brillinger Conestoga College CEDP Phase
2 May 2009
3
Areas of Diversity
  • We can apply cultural competency to the
    categories of ethnicity, race,
  • religion, and nationality, and
  • Gender
  • Age (Veteran, Baby Boomer, x, y and )
  • Education (1st generation, generation 1.5)
  • Profession
  • Socio-economic status/employment status
    (Internationally Trained Immigrants, 2nd Career)
  • Sexual orientation
  • Wellness/illness and Mobility
  • Abilities/disabilities,
  • etc.

4
Your StoriesDiversity in College Teaching
  • 2 minutes
  • Turn to a person in your vicinity (that you did
    not come in with) and enthusiastically and with
    as many gestures as possible, tell them about an
    experience you have had with diversity in
    teaching.
  • We will share 2 examples as a full group.

5
Dimensions of Diversity
  • Primary Dimensions
  • Aspects that we cannot change. Things people
    know about us before we even open our mouths -
    they are physically visible (race, gender, age,
    mobility etc). Primary dimensions are
    well-protected in Canada under federal
    legislation.
  • Secondary Dimensions
  • Aspects we have some power to change. We can
    sometimes (be forced to) conceal characteristics
    such as ethnicity, wellness, education level,
    language origins, religious beliefs etc.
    Secondary dimensions face many invisible barriers
    within our education system. Many secondary
    dimensions are also protected.

6
Workshop Objectives and Agenda
  • Recognizing the opportunities that diversity can
    bring to education
  • Culture and its Impact
  • Cultural Competence
  • Principles of Intercultural Communication
  • ICC (Inter-Cultural Communication) Repair
    Strategies

7
Stop, Continue, Start
8
Striving for a BalanceContinuums NOT Stereotypes
9
A Few K-W Stats
  • Compare the stats to the place where you teach.
  • Does this data
  • reflect/not reflect your experience?
  • suggest a need?

10
K-W Population (2006)
  • Ethnic Origin and Number
  • English 96,270
  • German 92,485
  • Canadian 87,950
  • Scottish 68,785
  • Irish 62,860
  • French 34,215
  • Polish 18.075
  • Dutch 16,310
  • Portuguese 15,055
  • East Indian 10,440
  • Italian 10,145
  • Chinese 9, 200
  • Latin America 6,910
  • S-E Asian 6,210
  • Arab 3,175

The Waterloo Region had the 4th highest net
in-migration in Ontario between 2001 and 2006.
In 2006, visible minorities comprised 13 of the
Waterloo Region Census Division population.
Immigrants represent 23 of the Waterloo Region's
population (28 - Ontario).
11
Health Informatics Diversity Data (Intake
September 2008)
  • 19 females and 9 males
  • 40 speak English as a Second Language
  • 14 students have no post high school work/study
    experience
  • 14 have worked full-time for at least a year
  • 11 students are 19 or under, 10 are 20-29, 4 are
    30-39, and 3 are 40 or older
  • 8 have completed a post-secondary qualification
    (2nd career, internationally-trained immigrants)

12
(Very Near) Future Trends
  • Ontario Community Colleges will see increasing
    numbers of culturally diverse students (immigrant
    students, ESL students, internationally trained
    individuals) and other non-traditional students
    (2nd career, 1st generation).

13
O Canada!
Riddle What stays in one corner yet can travel
all over the world?
O Canada, Drew Brook-Cormack, 1000-pc jigsaw
puzzle
14
Internationalization in Canada has not kept pace
with Globalization
  • Globalization is the economic, political, and
    societal forces pulling us towards international
    involvement.
  • Internationalization is the upgrading of
    international perspectives, skills and resources
    via inter-cultural training and enhanced language
    support.(Altbach Knight, 2007)

15
Intercultural Communication Training Needs
  • personnel with intercultural skills
  • intercultural experts
  • research and knowledge in cultural practices
  • workplace and material internationalization
  • (Huisman van der Wende, 2005)

16
Prejudice and Discrimination Exists
  • Prejudice
  • Negative personal attitude towards a member or
    members of a racial or cultural group
  • Discrimination
  • Observable adverse behavior towards such group
    members
  • Prejudice Discrimination -Organizational/Domin
    ant group power - Deliberate denial of
    recognition, power, and privilege

Who experiences this?
17
Nadia-Alysha-Zahra-Tameera
18
A Practical Model for Cultural Competency
Development
  • Yuri Kagolovsky, internationally-trained MD, MSc
    (Health informatics) and 2-time immigrant
  • Kathryn Brillinger, MEd (TESL), 20 plus years
    experience in settlement language teaching and 10
    plus years in teacher training

19
  • What is culture and how does it impact
    interactions?

20
Culture Shared Meaning
  • Shared meaning informs values, beliefs,
    standards, language, thinking patterns,
    behavioral norms, communications styles, etc.
  • Culture guides the decisions and actions of
    individuals and groups.
  • Cultures are always changing but the change is
    not always obvious except in hindsight.

21
Shared Meaning
  • Cognitive (concepts, ideas) Group work is a
    crucial skill builder/a waste of time.
  • Affective (emotions) I think thats perfectly
    ok/disgusting!
  • Behavioral (procedures, rules, rituals) Make
    yourself noticeable in class via contributions./
    The nail that sticks out gets pounded down.

22
The Problematic Saris and Samosas Approach
Prescription (versus description) can occur
where power exists.
23
  • One cultures competence is anothers
    incompetence!

24
Haptics (the study of touching behaviour)
  • Seven types of touch positive affect
    (support, appreciation, inclusion)playfulnessc
    ontrol (compliance, attention wanted, response
    needed)ritual (greeting/leave-taking)hybrid
    (mix some of above as in a hug good-bye)task-rel
    atedaccidental Jones and Yarbrough (1985)

25
Proxemics (the study of distance in interaction)
  • Public (teacher to class)
  • Social (classmates chatting)
  • Personal (student asking teacher after class)
  • Intimate (friends in class whispering)

Traditional Forms of Greeting
26
Haptics and Proxemics
  • Share an example with a partner of being
    surprised or having someone else surprised by a
    haptic or proxemic difference
  • Think inter-culturally, inter-generationally,
    inter-professionally, inter-gender etc.

27
Oculesics (the study of eye contact)
  • attentive focus/challenging stare
  • shifty-eyed/respectful looking away
  • flirtatious up-look/adultery of the eyes
  • lustful glance/complimentary notice
  • attempt to access vocabulary/lack of
    attentiveness or ability

28
Gesture
  • The triangle
  • The wrist
  • The hand to heart
  • The 3 per utterance

29
Story The Iranian Student and the Rude
Canadians
  • What rules are involved?
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • What cultural values are displayed?
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.

To what degree did both parties share meaning?
30
The Persian concept of taarof involves
language, discourse, culture etc.
  • Central concept warm welcoming, praising,
    politeness and good manners
  • Origins in the Arabic term for mutual
    recognition
  • Essential ability for negotiating relationships
  • Involves offers, compliments, exchange of
    pleasantries, food, gifts, and invitations
  • Expression of selflessness and humility -
    necessary for keeping face - shaxsiiyaet and
    showing sincerity and respect - ehteram
  • Can be interpreted as empty formality or ritual
    courtesy by NA but runs much deeper - has no
    equivalent in NA culture
  • Iranians can be dismayed by a lack of taarof
    in our classroom cultures (Cultural
    info from Eslami, 2005)

31
Confucian Heritage Cultures Face
  • Dominant concept in interpreting and regulating
    social behavior
  • Must be maintained and enhanced
  • Each person in a social group is responsible for
    saving his/her own face and the face of others
  • The teacher, having a higher social standing, is
    expected to adhere to a higher standard of ethics
    and to maintain self-control
  • The teacher should not argue with the students
    and vice versa
  • The teacher should protect the face of the
    students, the other teachers, and the institution
  • I lost a lot of face by being unable to answer
    the question.
  • How could he do that to me? I really have no face
    now.
  • (Chan, 2005)

32
What Comes to Your Mind?
  • 2 minutes
  • Turn to another person and share a story or
    experience where you have not shared meaning with
    another culture.
  • What did it mean to you?
  • Lets share 2 examples.

33
Cultivating the Space in Between Sharing Meaning
34
Cultural Boundary Lines
  • Cultural boundaries are fluid and our cultures
    can grow and decrease
  • Anthropologists have even found societies where
    people MUST marry someone who comes from a
    different culture. These societies adapt to
    extreme living conditions well. (Wade, 2007)

35
Preserving Diversity
  • Other cultures are mirrors in which we can
    better see ourselves what the anthropologist
    Margaret Mead (1934) called
  • the looking-glass self
  • Check out Canadian Wade Davis 22 minute lecture
    about the decreasing ethnosphere
  • on www.ted.com
  • http//www.ted.com/index.php/talks/wade_davis_on_e
    ndangered_cultures.html

36
Looking BackLooking InwardsLooking Forward
37
(No Transcript)
38
Continuum of Perspectives
  • Global Personal

39
Approaches to Gaining Cultural Competence
  • The culture-specific approach gives information
    about individual cultures - usually a
    business/marketing model.
  • The culture-general approach starts with an
    understanding and awareness of cultural issues
    before specific information is given. - an
    educational approach which reduces the chance of
    stereotyping and encourages a principled
    approach.
  • This workshop is a blend of both approaches.
    Further study would involve looking deeply at
    various groups (e.g. Confucian Heritage Cultures,
    East Indian, Middle-Eastern, 1st generation
    students etc.) and applying the principles.

40
  • Culture clearly impacts our every thought and
    move.
  • What is cultural competence?

41
Individual Cultural Competency
  • knowledge of ones own cultural practices/
    paradigms and those of other cultures
  • ability to explain your own cultures practices
  • ability to interact effectively with individuals
    from differing cultures
  • ability to effectively participate in diverse
    communities
  • ability to help solve intercultural conflict

42
Organizational Cultural Competency
  • set of congruent behaviors, practices, attitudes
    and policies
  • enable effective work to be done in
    inter-cultural situations
  • based on principles of Universal Design (UD) -
    changes made for a particular case/group group
    benefit everyone
  • expertise and training available
  • internationalization of the curriculum underway

43
Stages of Cultural Competence
Unconscious Competence
Unconscious Incompetence
Mindfulness
Practice
Feedback
Conscious Incompetence
Conscious Competence
Education
44
Unconscious Incompetence
  • Foisting a handshake on a devout Muslim of the
    opposite sex
  • Telling jokes with graphic sexual content or
    identity ridicule (harassment)
  • Making negative comparative statements about
    another persons culture or country and the way
    things are done here

Feedback helps.
45
Conscious Incompetence
  • Avoiding interaction with members of another
    culture for fear of doing something inappropriate
  • Insisting that they should adopt our ways,
    because they have moved here.

Education helps.
46
Gaining Competence
  • Ghada and the coffee.
  • What rules are involved?
  • What does following the rules mean to each
    culture?
  • What cultural values are displayed?
  • What would each party have needed to know to
    avoid the intercultural breakdown?
  • Was I as the teacher negligent? Was the planned
    curriculum inadequate? Did the host workplace
    bear responsibility?

47
Conscious Competence
  • Educating yourself on appropriate cross-cultural
    etiquette and experimenting in applying it
  • Self-conscious, unsure of own capabilities

Practice helps.
48
Unconscious Competence
  • Comfortable with cross-cultural interaction
  • Seek out opportunities to learn about and
    interact with new cultures
  • Mindful of how your actions are affecting others,
    able to ask questions and adjust quickly
  • Institute mindful and reflective adaptations of
    situation to accommodate diversity

49
  • What are some principles
  • that I can apply to
  • intercultural communication?

50
Principle 1
  • We are cultural beings.

51
Principle 2
  • We are unaware of how our cultures inform our
    perceptions, cognition, emotions and actions.
  • E.g. The math teacher and the Serbian father

52
Principle 3
  • Culture provides unstated sets of rules by which
    we operate and reward and punish.
  • E.g. My big presentation in Mexico City.

53
From Monochronic to Polychronic (Chronemics)
  • Monochronic Concepts
  • one thing at a time is best - concentrate on the
    task at hand
  • time commitments/deadlines/schedules are serious
  • adhere religiously to plans

54
Polychronic Concepts
  • Do many things at once
  • Distractions are acceptable/interruptions are
    acceptable
  • Commit to people and relationships not time
  • Change plans often and easily

55
Principle 4
  • We are unaware of our own level of
    inter-cultural sensitivity and skills.

56
Changes must occur in three areas.
57
Principle 5
  • Building inter-cultural communication skills is
    an ongoing, recursive process requiring
    cognitive, affective and procedural changes.

58
Principle 6
  • Inter-cultural communication is the
    responsibility of each party.
  • E.g. Plagiarism debate (inter-generational,
    inter-gender, and inter-cultural)

59
Principle 7
  • Inter-cultural communication necessitates a
    re-distribution of power.
  • E.g. Some examples from Canadian history

60
Cultural Competency Success
  • Everyone can experience
  • Everyone can contribute
  • Everyone can learn

Educators need to demonstrate best practices.We
need cultural competency training in order to
develop those practices.
61
Seven questions to ask ourselves when
intercultural communication goes wrong
  • Is it language or discourse rules?
  • Is it culture?
  • Is it the situation or context?
  • Is it racism, nationalism, or discrimination?
  • Is it a systemic barrier?
  • Is it someones personality?
  • Is it me?

Without a diagnosis moving forward is nearly
impossible. Lets look at an example of each.
62
ICC Repair Strategies
  • Asking someone why they do something culturally
    can cause a defensive reaction
  • E.g., asking a student why he plagiarized or why
    she is always late
  • Why questions can be seen as promoting
    potentially unfavorable comparisons and
    otherness
  • Therefore, we recommend an invitational approach
    that can create a dialogue and allow for shared
    meaning

63
Case Study Plagiarism
  • Think of a time when a student plagiarized.
  • Tell your story to a partner.
  • Was this an intercultural situation?
  • Lets role play one plagiarism case using the
    questions.

64
Repair Strategies (cont.)
  • What does ltthisgt mean to you personally/as a
    student?
  • What does ltthisgt mean to you as a member of your
    group/class/program?
  • What does ltthisgt mean to your group/class/program?
  • What does ltthisgt mean to the community where you
    live now/lived before?
  • What does ltthisgt mean to the society of the
    nation/country?
  • Do you know the history of this phenomenon? Has
    it changed over time?
  • If ltthisgt does not happen, what would it mean to
    you (your group, your community, society)?

65
LEARN Model (adapted from Berlin and
Fowkes,1995 medical CC model)
  • Listen to the students perception of the problem
  • Explain your perception of the problem
  • Acknowledge and discuss differences/similarities
  • Recommend a solution
  • Negotiate the final solution
  • - and then reflect on the new learning you got
    from this lucky encounter

66
Expect Challenges - Nurture Empathy
  • Communication in a heterogeneous context is
    tiring and can not take place in the same way as
    in a homogeneous context.
  • We need to be explicit about expectations and
    responsibilities.

67
Summary
  • We have looked at examples of intercultural
    communication and practiced some strategies and
    principles that can be applied.
  • We need to continually develop our cultural
    competency to support our diversity.
  • We need to determine and exemplify best practices
    within the college.

68
Reflection STOP, START, CONTINUE
  • Reflect on what values, feelings, or
    behaviour(s) need to Stop, Start and Continue in
    order to show cultural competency in your college
    teaching
  • Share one of your suggestions

69
The Space in Between
  • Once the realization is accepted that even
    between the closest human beings infinite
    distances continue, a wonderful living side by
    side can grow, if they succeed in loving the
    distance between them which makes it possible for
    each to see the other whole against the sky.

Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)
70
Thank you!
  • Questions?
  • Comments?
  • Suggestions?
  • Complaints?
  • Concerns?
  • kbrillinger_at_conestogac.on.ca
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