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Cross Cultural Communication Theory and Practice PDFDrive (1)
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- Introduction
Further reading
Conn, S., and Rieke, M. (1994). The 16PF Fifth Edition Technical Manual (Champaign, IL: Institute for Personality and Ability Testing, Inc.). Fukuyama, F. (1992) The End of History and the Last Man (New York: Free Press). Gesteland, R. (2001) Cross- Cultural Business Behaviour (Copenhagen Business School Press). Gregory, R. (2011) Psychological Testing: History, Principles, and Applications, 6th edn (Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon). Mendenhall, M., Dunbar, E. and Oddou, G. (1987) ‘Expatriate Selection Training and Career- Pathing: A Review and Critique’ Human Resource Management 26(3): 331–45. Wild, J., Wild, K. and Han, J. (2006) International Business: The Challenge of Globalisation (Harlow: Pearson). 274 15 Teaching Cross- Cultural Communication Introduction In this chapter, we draw upon our wide experience of teaching cultural aware- ness and cross- cultural communication to UK and international students at both undergraduate and postgraduate level, and of running training courses for business and diplomatic staff, briefing them for working and living overseas. We aim to provide examples of good practice and to analyse the effectiveness of different teaching methods, providing some of the tools we have found to be of value in teaching this important subject. ‘One of the goals of cross- cultural training must therefore be to alert people to the fact that they are constantly involved in a process of assigning meaning to the actions and objects they observe’ (Trompenaars and Hampden- Turner, 1997: 196). Summary Course design Teaching methodology Language training Presentations across cultural boundaries Country briefings Case studies Critical incident scenarios Cultural capsules Cultural assimilators Simulation and role playing Cultural proverbs True/false exercises Cultural values checklists Business in a foreign culture checklist Stereotype and perception exercises Teaching Cross- Cultural Communication 275 Areas covered include the teaching of cross- cultural awareness, communication skills, specific country/regional briefings, business pro- cedures, negotiating skills, building and sustaining multinational teams, and language training. All these aim to develop intercultural competence, which can be described as the ability to interact effectively across cultures. ‘Learners cannot simply shake off their own cultural baggage, for their culture is a part of themselves, has formed them and created them as social beings’ (Byram and Morgan, 1994). Training aims to provide benefits in the following areas: breaking down cross- cultural barriers; building trust between cultures; developing self- awareness and learning about one’s own strengths, weak- nesses and prejudices; acquiring cognitive information, that is, facts about the target culture; developing an understanding of how one’s own culture is seen by foreigners; opening up new cultural horizons; developing improved interpersonal skills and sensitivity towards those of another culture; developing awareness of conventional behaviour in situations in the target culture; stimulation of intellectual curiosity in and empathy towards the target culture; developing an understanding that we all exhibit culturally conditioned behaviour. This chapter aims to bring together the theory and practice in the earlier chapters which we have found effective in our own work in this area, and to offer suggestions for those responsible for the design and delivery of courses relating to cross- cultural communication problems. Download 1.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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