English midterm

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52 Terms

1

culture

shared belief, values, custom and symbols of a large group of people

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2

Examples of culture

customs are practices like weddings, birthday parties and death

broad concepts (not limited to nations, race, religion or ethnic groups)

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3

co-culture

presence of many different cultures (i.e Mexican culture and American culture) existing side by side

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4

co-culture characteristics

usually attached outside of mainstream culture

culture practices inside a mainstream culture (sit under an umbrella of main culture)

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5

communication

without communication there’s no identity, since we share our identities with each other.

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6

Identity

it is impossible for one person only to have an identity no other person has, because identities are cultural (shared)

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7

communication is symbolic, language is a code

in order to understand language, you have to decode the symbolic code

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8

symbol

anything that stands or represents something else

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9

verbal communication

words spoken or written

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10

nonverbal communication

not spoken, involve use of symbols, gestures, facial expressions, visual representation of belonging, etc

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11

communication is a process

has no definitive beginning or end

a constant flow of actions with consequences

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12

communication is transactional

channels of communication carrying messages in two directions at the same time

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13

model of communication

A black arrows pointing to a white background<br /><br />Description automatically generated

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14

communication is contextual

relational and cultural context

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15

relational communication

provides information about level of intimacy and / or balance of power and socially constructed rules

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16

Cultural communication

provides another layer of information determining meaning and consequences of communication

family culture, regional culture, religious culture, racial / ethnic culture, professional culture, national culture, etc.

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17

global community

people and nations of the world are connected by modern technology and are interdependent economically, socially, and politically

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18

peaceful coexistence

interacting with individuals of another culture peacefully without discrimination

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19

negative peace

the absence of violence & conflict between two groups of people

example: ceasefire

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20

positive peace

success in no conflict remaining, eradicating structural and cultural violence

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21

pure peace

there has never been a conflict in the first place

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22

peacemaking

stopping and eradicating the conflict

ie: negotiating the ceasefire

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23

peacekeeping

constant intervention to make sure people don’t go back to conflict thus preventing recurrence

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24

peacebuilding

efforts to continue to grow peace between groups, so we can achieve positive peace

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25

structural violence

comes from some kind of structure, sociopolitical and economical and produce or permit various forms of human suffering

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26

cultural violence

prejudice beliefs about other cultural groups, manifests in feeling of indifference and discriminatory practices that deprive individuals of human rights

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27

xenophobia

fear and hatred of anything foreign

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28

ethnocentrism

ethnocentric belief of one culture being the center of everything, feeling their culture to be superior to other cultures

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29

Deardorff model level 1: Requisite Attitudes

Respect (various cultures n diversity)

Openness (to intercultural learning)

Curiosity and Discovery (tolerating ambiguity and discovery)

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30

Deardorff model level 2: Knowledge and Comprehension

Cultural self awareness

Deep understanding and knowledge of culture

cultural specific knowledge

Sociolinguistic Awareness

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31

Deardorff model level 3: Skills

Listen

Observe

Interpret

Analyze

Evaluate

Relate

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32

Deardorff model level 4: Desired internal outcome

Adaptability (to different communication styles)

flexibility (selecting and using appropriate communication styles)

ethnorelative view

empathy

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33

Deardorff model level 5: Desired External Outcome

behaving and communicating effectively based on one’s intercultural knowledge, skills, and attitudes

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34

Milton Bennett’s stage model of intercultural sensitivity

Ethnocentric

Denial stage 🡪 fail to acknowledge existence of cultural differences

Defense stage 🡪 acknowledge cultural differences as threatening

Minimization stage 🡪 trivialize cultural differences and put little significance on differences

Ethnorelative

Acceptance stage 🡪 understand and respect cultural differences

Adaption stage 🡪 develop intercultural communication skills

Integration stage 🡪 multicultural view

<p></p><p><strong>Ethnocentric</strong></p><p><strong>Denial</strong> stage 🡪 fail to acknowledge existence of cultural differences</p><p><strong>Defense </strong>stage 🡪 acknowledge cultural differences as threatening</p><p><strong>Minimization </strong>stage 🡪 trivialize cultural differences and put little significance on differences</p><p></p><p><strong>Ethnorelative</strong></p><p><strong>Acceptance </strong>stage 🡪 understand and respect cultural differences</p><p><strong>Adaption</strong> stage 🡪 develop intercultural communication skills</p><p><strong>Integration</strong> stage 🡪 multicultural view</p>
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35

intercultural communication competence

some people are more able communicators than other people

better ability through experiences with other cultures

most people can learn and be trained to improve those skills

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36

competent communication should at least include two outcomes

it should be appropriate

it should be effective

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37

cultural frame of reference

influences how we interpret and value appropriateness, as well as effectiveness of someone’s communication behavior

what we know about another culture influences our judgement

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38

fossilizing

staying in one stage (f.e. denial stage) and not moving on

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39

conflict transformation

changing conflict, proactive means of bringing the conflict participants together

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40

social justice

belief in fair treatment and equal access to valued resources for all in multicultural society

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41

social capital

beneficial interactions between people, participation to bring social justice

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42

prejudice

negative attitudes towards a group or members of a group

certain attitude against another culture, ethnicity and / or race

ethnocentricity

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43

ingroup

a group to whom you belong and anyone else is perceived as belonging to group

natural impulse to favor ingroups (which we belong) over outgroups (which we don’t belong)

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44

Gordon Allport intergroup contact theory

four conditions for optimal intergroup contact to avoid prejudice: equal group status within the situation, common goals, intergroup cooperation and authority support

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45

implicit prejudice

association and knee jerk reactions we have in response to other cultures that is usually hidden

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46

explicit prejudice

open negative attitudes and hostile behavior towards other cultures

openly voiced or shown attitude against other cultures

harder and more resistant to change

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47

stereotyping

apply a behavior to a group of people and assume everyone practices this application

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48

orientalizing

idea that some cultural practice is placed higher in judgement because it’s exotic and therefore more beautiful or more interesting

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49

automatic stereotyping

spontaneity

efficiency

uncontrollability

unconsciousness

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50

social identity theory

group affiliations satisfy fundamental need for positive self esteem

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51

outgroup homogeneity bias

exaggerate similarities, use stereotypes, and overlook individual differences among outgroup members compared to ingroup members

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52

ultimate attribution error

we are more likely to attribute bad behaviors of ingroup members to things beyond their control

compared to outgroup member (attribute bad behavior within their control)

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