1 / 30

When Cultures Collide: generic cultural differences

When Cultures Collide: generic cultural differences. Minjuan Wang Educational Technology San Diego State University mwang@mail.sdsu.edu. What is Culture?. What is Culture? . Beliefs and behaviors accepted within communities

casey
Download Presentation

When Cultures Collide: generic cultural differences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. When Cultures Collide:generic cultural differences Minjuan Wang Educational Technology San Diego State University mwang@mail.sdsu.edu

  2. What is Culture?

  3. What is Culture? • Beliefs and behaviors accepted within communities • that may range from small family units to national or intra-national systems • Signs (body language, symbols) • Tools (other behavioral patterns and procedures set to function within the culture

  4. Shakehands • In the US? • mutual understanding and agreement • In Middle Eastern Countries? • 'serious' negotiations are just beginning. • Japan? • Seinfeld episode • China?

  5. Many Types… • Ethnic culture • Speak up, motivation (extrinsic, intrinsic) • Local culture • Using examples • Academic culture • Honesty, grading scales, teamwork • Disciplinary culture

  6. Why Culture? • Global online learning reaching 160 million by 2025 • Even a small slice of that would mean handsome financial returns to the universities (Goodfellow, 2001, p.65).

  7. The World is Flat!

  8. The 10 Forces • Open sourcing • Out sourcing • Offshoring • Running with Ganelles, eating with lions • Insourcing • Your world is synchronized! • In-forming • The Steroids • Digital, Mobile, Personal, Virtual • The Berlin Wall (89) • Netscape went public (95) • Let’s do lunch: have your application talk to my application • Web-enabled workflow; the vast network of “underground pluming”

  9. Is Learning….. • Abstract rules, concepts, facts, processes, skills, or procedures? • Or the construction of internal models of outside reality • consistent with their understanding of the cultural contexts in which they operate. (Pincas, 2001, p. 31).

  10. Models of Cross-Cultural Instructional Interaction • Looking at culture from the schema theory • “Culture can be seen as a body of knowledge contained in schemata whereby culturally appropriate behavior is generated” (Thompson, 1998 in Wilson, 2001, p. 53)

  11. Models of Cross-Cultural Instructional Interaction • Cultural discontinuities occur when the schemata of a learner and instructional designer do not correspond.

  12. Cultural Discontinuities • Unfamiliar seas with schematic signs and tools • Following are some mismatch between schemas

  13. Humors that are not funny • Seinfeld commercial for American Express • Confucian and Buddaist (truth, sincerity, politeness) • Will Sarcasm and Crazy jokes work? • Jokes about religion, sex, minorities, older people; black humor • Germans and Japanese • If no one laughs, tell them to a Korean • Turkish jokes

  14. International Humor • Let’s write about elephants • Hunting elephants in British East Africa • The love life of elephants in French Equatorial Africa • The origin and development of the Indian elephant in the year 1200-1950 (600 pages) • How to breed bigger and better elephants

  15. International Humor (2) • How we sent an elephant to the moon • Elephant and the welfare state • Techniques of elephant fighting • Spaniard • As a means of transportation before railway • What the elephants think about us? • Norway and Norway’s mountains

  16. A Way with Words • Germany • Next week I should become a new car • What is your death line (deadline)? • Japan • I have spilt up my boyfriend • My father is a doctor, my mother is a typerwriter • Are you hopeful of any change? I am hopeless.

  17. Mismatch between Schemas • Body languages • A-OK: obscene in Brazil; $$ in Japan • Touching a child’s head? • not in south-east Asia • Avoiding eye contact: suspicious? • Stare and Blinking eyes? • Widened eyes • Astonishment or anger?

  18. Culture-Specific Advertising • First bite at the Big Apple • Fly United Airlines • DELTA SERVICE • Every year we fly more people than the largest airlines of Great Britain, Germany and France..Combined

  19. Culture-Specific Advertising • Lufthansa • There's no better way to fly • Eastern Airlines • We have to earn our wings every day.Eastern Airlines. The Wings of Man. • Air France • Air France. One of the best places on earth

  20. More Airline Ads • Bangkok Airways • Asia's boutique airline - Exclusive Service to Exotic Gems • Braniff Airways • We Better be Better, We're Braniff  If You've Got It, Flaunt It

  21. Martin Airline, flying their planes way too close for comfort?

  22. Categorizing Culture • Linear-active, Multi-active, Reactive • See handouts • Japanese, Chinese: listening culture but lengthy discourse to attain ultimate harmony • Dialogue-oriented or data-oriented

  23. From Dialogue to Data-oriented • 1. Latin Americans • 2. Italians, Spanish, Portuguese, French • 3. Arabs, Africans • 4. Indians, Parkistanis • 5.Chileans • 6. Hungarians, Romanians • 7. Slaves • 8. American subcultures • 9. Benelux • 10. British, Australians • 11. Scandinavians • 12. North Americans, New Z, South A • 13. Germans, Swiss

  24. Why are they so quiet? • Listening culture! • Allow ideas to mature • Tend to be accommodating in decisions • Resilience! • Economic success • Japan, Asian tigers, Finland

  25. The Use of Time (1) • Past-----present--------future • Can’t bear to be idle • Past (over) • Present: today’s tasks (A->B->C->D->E) • Future (plans for Jan. worries for Feb.) • 8 hours of his time cost $400!

  26. The Use of Time (2) • Southern Europeans • Multi-active • Best way to invest their time? • Complete a human transaction • Priority: thrill or significance of each meeting • Italian: “why are you so angry because I came at 9.30?” • German, “because it says 9am in my diary” • “Why don’t you write 9.30 and then we’ll both be happy?”

  27. Punctuality in Spain • Messes up schedules • A (start late), B, C(merges with Lunch) D(not starting until 4:30) E(delayed) F (cancelled or meet in bar) • A subjective commodity; manipulated • “My time is up; I have to rush” • Spaniard or Arab, only use these if death were imminent

  28. Chinese? • Value time • Penchant for humility • Expect generous allocation of time for discussion • Dwell on details of a transaction • Walk around the pool to make decisions • Careful nurturing of personal relationships

  29. More topics from When Cultures Collide • Leadership styles (handout) • Horizons and Team building (some nice charts)—(p. 86) • Bridging the communication gap • Manners and Taboos • Audience expectations during presentation (handout) • Online/Video Games (welcomeJoe) • Profile of many culture: • good references if you need them!

  30. Add some Graphics Here • Managing styles • The collision of Japanese and Latin culture • Characters of Multicultural manager • For Day 2 • Tips for training and motivating Asians • For Day 2

More Related