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Do you remember Chapter 2?!. Two elements of self concept? Difference between the two? What is attribution theory? Difference between sex and gender? Relationship between perception, self, and communication?. Communication, Culture, and Identity. Chapter 3 Lecture/Recap. What is Culture?.
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Do you remember Chapter 2?! • Two elements of self concept? • Difference between the two? • What is attribution theory? • Difference between sex and gender? • Relationship between perception, self, and communication?
Communication, Culture, and Identity Chapter 3 Lecture/Recap
What is Culture? • Shared, personal, and learned life experiences • Values, norms, traditions • Values = standards • Norms = patterns of communication • Traditions = customs • Impacts worldview and interpersonal communication
Cultural Identity • ‘…cultural background helps shape identity’ (p. 54) • Everyone is a cultural being • Made up of ethnicity, gender, age, life stage, beliefs, values, assumptions; intersection of these elements • Learned from family, friends, and communities (e.g. guideposts) • Varies in strength & content • Will impact our views, behaviors, and practices • Including communication • Can you have multiple cultural identities?
Intercultural Communication • Importance? • Occurs when individuals from different countries communicate? • The only case?
Dimensions of Culture • Cultural variability theory • Uncertainty avoidance • Distribution of Power (high vs. low power distance) • Masculine vs. Feminine • Individualism vs. Collectivism • Context orientation theory • High context vs. low context
Culture is…. • Learned • Enculturation • Acculturation • Capable of creating communities • Co-cultures • Cultural clash • Good or Bad? • Multi-leveled • Mini-cultures EXAMPLE: Never Been Kissed (film)
In-Class Activity: Researching a Co-Culture • Research the Millennial Generation • (Hint: Many of you are part of this generation) • Based on what you found, what are some possible aspects of this group’s culture?
Diversity in U.S. • “diversity can be challenging” (p. 57) • Why? • Diversity increasing • Group chat: How do events/situations impact diversity, culture, and interpersonal communication? • The Women’s Rights Movement • Legalization (or banning) of Gay Marriage • September 11, 2001 • Election of President Barack Obama • Others?
Six Reasons for Studying Intercultural Communication • Technological imperative • Demographic imperative • Melting pot vs. salad bowl • Economic imperative • Global village, outsourcing, globalization • Peace imperative • Self-awareness imperative • Ethical imperative
Challenges • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5mAMDZYElE • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HK-Cf9R4q-c • Ethnocentrism • Stereotyping • Activity: Shining light on hurtful, overgeneralizations • Personal examples that bother you? Impact on interpersonal communication? • Identify a stereotype • Why does it bother you? Who does it hurt? Give an example of how it could impact interpersonal communication? • Share with partner/group • Respond to partner’s stereotypes. Do you agree with comments? Why or why not?
Challenges (continued) • Anxiety and Uncertainty (In-groups vs. out-groups) • Misinterpretation of Nonverbal and Verbal Behaviors • Assuming similarities and/or differences • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Rl9Cxc7uZA • Good or Bad? Why?
Improving Intercultural Understanding • Acknowledging and eliminating biases, stereotypes, and prejudices • Takes effort; some unknown • Examples: • “no homo” • “acting black/white” • “Muslim=terrorist” • Others? • GROUP CHAT--CONSIDER… • Why do people use the statement? • What does it mean? • Who could it hurt?
Improving Intercultural Understanding • Be tolerant of the unknown • Educate yourself • Cultural respect • Avoid cultural imperialism; practice cultural empathy • Be prepared • Recognize the individual; not just their cultures
Group Activity • Watch episode that discusses culture https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WlFiL3KncQo&feature=youtube_gdata_player • Look out for examples of stereotypes, assumptions, and cultural clash (among other elements discussed during the lecture) • Be prepared to answer following questions? • Who was wrong in this situation? Who was right? What is the reasoning behind your answer? • How did culture impact the interpersonal encounters? • Was there a healthy resolution to culture clash? • What were some issues dealing with culture? (e.g. was a statement problematic and culturally insensitive? Was there unfair judgment based on a person’s culture? Were there double standards?) • How did your cultural identity impact your reactions to this episode and situation?
Application Exercise #2 (Worth 30 points) • Converse with someone from a different generation about one of the following topics: • Social networking • Reality television • Politics • September 11th Terrorist Attack • Hip-Hop Music • Feminism • How did the conversation go? Do you think culture played a role? Why or why not? • Note other cultural differences that may have played a role • Go back to chapter 2—how did the conversation shape your perceptions? Explain. • Go back to chapter 1—explain if your encounter was interpersonal or impersonal, and why. • Address questions in a 1-2 page write-up.