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particular IT system. He has no previous experience of the area
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Cross Cultural Communication Theory and Practice PDFDrive (1)
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- Perception exercises
particular IT system. He has no previous experience of the area. ‘What do we think we know about them already?’ For each of the following three nationalities, write a maximum of six words or phrases which describe how you perceive people of these countries: Estonians ……………………………………………………………………………………… ……………………………………………………………………………………….. Latvians ……………………………………………………………………………………… ……………………………………………………………………………………….. Lithuanians ……………………………………………………………………………………… ……………………………………………………………………………………….. Comment It is very likely that the businessman’s answers will reveal some generali- zations and stereotypical views. In addition, he will probably not have considered the three nationalities as being very distinct, as he has been conditioned to refer to them as the ‘Baltic States’, that is, as one group. In discussion, students should realize that stereotyping is very often inac- curate, but, nevertheless, it can retain a very forcible and suggestive power. If the points made, whether true or false, are repeated enough times, there is a strong tendency for them to be believed. Perception exercises There are a number of simple exercises to help explain perception to students. These include a famous perceptual illusion in which the brain switches between seeing a young girl and an old woman. For many years, Teaching Cross- Cultural Communication 291 the creator of this figure was considered to be the British cartoonist W. Hill, who published it in 1915 in Puck, a humour magazine in America, inspired by the British magazine Punch. Hill almost certainly adapted it from an origi- nal concept widely popular on trading and puzzle cards. This is represented below in Figure 15.3. Figure 15.3 The ‘young lady/old lady’ (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ YoungGirl- OldWomanIllusion.html, date accessed 17 December 2012) This exercise shows that our perception is our reality, at least until we know better. In our daily life, perception involves checking data for validity. In dealing with perception, it is important to impress upon students that: perception is selective and is very often culture- driven; perception works on differences more than similarities; perceived differences lead to various reactions depending on the level of culture affected; our perception of another culture is relative, very often in comparison to our own set of values. Summary The methodology of teaching cross- cultural communication can involve cultural awareness training, country- specific briefings, case studies, criti- cal incident scenarios, simulation and role playing, and cultural values exercises. In addition, there may be a need for language training. The choice of methods depends greatly on the time and resources available. • • • • • • 292 Cross-Cultural Communication Whenever possible, teaching should be experiential, encouraging students to make choices, and sufficient time for discussion should be allowed as required. Simulation, role playing and case studies can be used to advantage. Whenever possible, nationals of the foreign culture should be involved. If appropriate and if time permits, members of the family as well as the working partner should be involved in at least part of the pre- departure cultural training. All teaching should use up- to- date scenarios, based on relevant experi- ence in the target culture, involving nationals of the destination culture if possible. The benefits of intercultural competence and cultural awareness training should be emphasized to all students – in particular, that such training enhances their people skills and future employment opportunities. Download 1.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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