B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals...

105
B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness

Transcript of B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals...

Page 1: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B1

A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals

Workshop B

Educating for Cultural Awareness

Page 2: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B2

International Medical Graduates

● FACT: In 2002, 23% of physicians practicing in Canada obtained their medical degrees outside of Canada (AIPSO, 2004)

● FACT: In 2001/2002, 2039 of the 8684 residents training in Canada held MD degrees earned outside of Canada (Association of Canadian Medical Schools, 2003)

Page 3: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B3

1. Agenda

Page 4: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B4

2. Introductions

Page 5: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B5

3. Exercise: Establishing Group Norms

BRAINSTORM:

What type of environment enhances your ability to learn?

DISCUSS PROPOSALS:

All in agreement?

Page 6: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B6

4. What Would Be Helpful for You to Learn in This Workshop?

Page 7: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B7

4. Educating for Cultural Awareness Involves (Cont’d):

● Helping teachers develop an understanding of their own ethno-cultural backgrounds, beliefs, attitudes and values (self-awareness)

● Fostering acquisition of a greater understanding of and empathy for the cultural backgrounds and life experiences of IEHCPs (cultural diversity awareness)

● Promoting the development and integration of self-awareness and cultural diversity awareness into the teacher’s activities (skill development)

Page 8: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B8

4. Educating for Cultural Awareness Involves (Cont’d):

● Framing cultural competence as a process of life-long learning for educators and health professionals alike

● Developing cultural awareness and responsiveness involves developing qualities and approaches as opposed to a concrete set of tasks or expert knowledge

Page 9: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B9

4. Rationale

“Learning to think, act, lead and work productively in partnership with people of different cultures, styles, abilities, classes, nationalities, races,

sexual orientations and genders goes beyond acquiring new skills and attitudes…It requires

that the individual give up familiar ways of thinking, expectations, roles, and operating

patterns which they have come to assume are routine for all”

Salmond, 2000

Page 10: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B10

5. Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals (IEHCPs)

● Canadian citizens who pursued their training outside of Canada

● Citizens of other countries with international health professions degrees in Canada on work visas

● Immigrants to Canada who have health professions degrees from institutions outside of Canada who are hoping to practice

Page 11: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B11

5. Integrating IEHCPs Into the Canadian Health Care System

BRAINSTORM:

What skills and experiences do IEHCPs bring to Canadian health care systems?

What challenges might they face in their integration to Canadian health care?

Page 12: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B12

5. Skills and Experiences of IEHCPs

● Knowledge of other countries, cultures, and health care systems

● Clinical expertise, often specialized

● May be older with more life experiences

● Knowledge of diseases less common in Canada

● Diagnostic and treatment knowledge less reliant on technology

Page 13: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B13

5. Potential Challenges to Practice for IEHCPs

● A number of entry routes to licensure and practice

● Adjustment to new cultures, health beliefs and health care systems

● Language issues even for those fluent in English

● Personal adjustment issues: loss of self-identity, extended family support, and/or self-esteem problems

Page 14: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B14

5. Potential Challenges to Practice for IEHCPs (Cont’d)

● Discrimination and racism

● Lack of training in cross-cultural communication strategies, certain bodies of medical knowledge, or clinical skills

● Familiarity with different educational styles

● Economic challenges

● Lack of institutional support for cultural or religious needs

Page 15: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B15

BRAINSTORM:

What have you learned by working with IEHCPs?

5. Potential Challenges to Practice for IEHCPs (Cont’d)

Page 16: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B16

5. Challenges for Teachers of IEHCPs● A lack of knowledge of cross-cultural educational

strategies

● Working with learners who do not speak English as a first language

● A lack of cultural awareness and sensitivity to the backgrounds, cultural patterns and needs of their internationally educated students

● A lack of institutional support issues for the teacher or the IEHCP

Page 17: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B17

Workshop Component 1

Developing Cultural and Self-Awareness

Page 18: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B18

1. What is Culture?

BRAINSTORM:

What does the term “culture” mean to you?

Page 19: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B19

1. What is Culture? (Cont’d)

● A debated term

● Common agreement: A shared set of values, beliefs, and learned patterns of behaviour that provide meaning to our lives (Bonder, Martin & Miracle, 2001; Carrillo, Green & Betancourt, 1999)

Page 20: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B20

1. What is Culture? (Cont’d)

“Culture can be seen as an integrated pattern of learned beliefs and behaviors that can be

shared among groups and include thoughts, styles of communicating, ways in interacting,

views of roles and relationships, values, practices, and customs. Culture shapes how we

explain and value our world, and provides us with the lens through which we find meaning.”

(cont’d next slide)

Page 21: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B21

1. What is Culture? (Cont’d)

“It should be considered not as ‘exotic’ or about ‘others’, but instead as part of all of us and our individual influences (including socioeconomic

status, religion, gender, sexual orientation, occupation, disability, etc.). We are all influenced by, and belong to, multiple cultures that include,

but go beyond, race and ethnicity.”

Betancourt, 2003

Page 22: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B22

1. What is Culture? (Cont’d)

BRAINSTORM:

What is striking to you about these conceptualizations of culture?

Page 23: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B23

1. What Can We Pull Out from These Conceptualizations of Culture?

● No single cultural identity captures our individuality

● Persons within cultures are not homogenous

● Culture is much more than ethnicity

● An inherent logic in every culture (Kohls, 1984)

Page 24: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B24

“Culture is ever-changing and thus cannot be reduced to stereotypic descriptions of population groups’ cultural health beliefs, norms, behaviors

and values.”

Tervalon, 2003

1. What Can We Pull Out from These Conceptualizations of Culture? (Cont’d)

Page 25: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B25

BRAINSTORM:

What other than culture influences our beliefs and behaviours?

Page 26: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B26

2. What Other Than Culture Influences Our Beliefs and Behaviours?

● Personalities

● Self-awareness

● Past experiences

● Economic status

● Education

● Physical environments

Page 27: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B27

● Our identities are more complex than our cultural associations; we are neither solely influenced by one culture nor completely a product of our culture

2. What Other Than Culture Influences Our Beliefs and Behaviours? (Cont’d)

Page 28: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B28

3. Exercise: Cultural Awareness

BRAINSTORM:

How would you describe cultural awareness and responsiveness?

In what ways can a teacher demonstrate cultural awareness?

Page 29: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B29

3. Cultural Awareness Defined

● An appreciation and consciousness of differences among groups with simultaneous acknowledgment of the uniqueness of each individual

Page 30: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B30

3. Cultural Awareness Guiding Principles

“Maintenance of a broad, objective, and open attitude toward individuals and their cultures” and avoiding “seeing all individuals as alike”

This requires willingness “of individuals and institutions to unearth, examine and shed light on their underlying assumptions about people

whose cultures differ from their own”

Wells, 2000

Page 31: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B31

3. Cultural Awareness in Action

Page 32: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B32

3. Cultural Awareness (Cont’d)

BRAINSTORM:

What are potential barriers to teaching in culturally aware and responsive ways?

Page 33: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B33

3. Cultural Awareness?

Page 34: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B34

3. Cultural Awareness? (Cont’d)

● Are there any problems with this comment?

● How much, and how quickly, can we expect those from other countries to change?

Page 35: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B35

How do they affect us?

4. What are Our Cultures?

Page 36: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B36

4. Discovering Cultural Values Through Proverbs

● Examples:

– Cleanliness is next to godliness

– A stitch in time saves nine

– Waste not, want not

● Others?

● Values in the proverb?

Page 37: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B37

5. Exercise: Our Cultural Identities

● Individual exercise

● Small group discussion: Discuss answers, as you feel comfortable

● Larger group discussion: Themes, perceptions, concerns

● Did anyone talk about citizenship, skin color, socio-economic class, ability?

Page 38: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B38

6. Our Cultures

● We all belong to multiple cultures and sub-cultures

● Our cultures, as well as our personality, socio-economic status, education and physical environments, shape our perspective, or vantage

Page 39: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B39

6. The Blind Ones and The Matter of the Elephant

● What does this story say to you?

● Can you think of examples in your personal or professional life where these multiple versions of the experience exist?

Page 40: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B40

6. Our Cultural Vantage Point

“‘Vantage’: any observing mind has a specific point of view, and that point of view has physical, psychological, and cultural dimension that restrict how much can be observed at any

moment.”

Bonder, Martin & Miracle, 2001

Page 41: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B41

6. Culture & Bias

● “Bias”: preferences, instinctive orientations or beliefs that shape our responses to each situation, some of which are rooted in heritage (LaMountain & Abramms, 1993)

● Being aware of our biases helps us to manage them better, making us more effective when working with people from less familiar cultural backgrounds

Page 42: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B42

7. Exercise: Reaching Consensus

● Groups of 3-4

● Read worksheet individually. Write “A” if you agree with the statement as is, or “D” if you disagree

● Once all have completed the list, review as a group

● On points of discrepancy among group members, discuss concerns and re-write the sentence in a way that all can agree

Page 43: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B43

7. Exercise: Reaching Consensus (Cont’d)

● Large group discussion: Each small group offers one sentence they altered, with an explanation of why the change was necessary

● Do you think this exercise would be different in more of a diverse group?

Page 44: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B44

8. Exploring Medical Culture

“Biomedicine is characterized as both a part of the larger culture, reflecting its mainstream norms, values, and beliefs, and as a culture in itself,

based on the classical scientific model, with its own language, structure, norms, values, and

beliefs”

Loustaunau & Sobo, 1997

Page 45: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B45

8. Exploring Health Care Culture (Cont’d)

Page 46: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B46

8. Exploring Health Care Culture (Cont’)

● Please describe similar experiences

● Do you agree or disagree with her understanding of medical knowledge as a new lens? Why or why not?

Page 47: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B47

Workshop Component 2:

Cultural Diversity Awareness and Sensitivity

Page 48: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B48

1. Exposure to Various Cultures

● Individual exercise

● With a partner, discuss which groups were easiest, and which were more challenging to answer, reflecting on why this was the case

● Larger group: Insights? Questions?

Page 49: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B49

2. Ethnocentrism and Stereotypes

● How we each experience cross-cultural interactions is shaped, in part, by our ability to challenge ethnocentrism and stereotypes

Page 50: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B50

2. Case Studies

● “Why Don’t You Just Take Something?”

● “Professional Attributes”

Page 51: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B51

3. Ethnocentrism

“Ethnocentrism involves using one’s own standards, values, and beliefs to make

judgments about someone else. The standards against which others are measured are

understood to be superior, true, or morally correct.”

Loustaunau & Sobo, 1997

Page 52: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B52

3. Ethnocentrism (Cont’d)

“The tendency to use one’s own culture as the yardstick against which other cultural practices

are measured and judged. This ethnocentric tendency is likely to result in cultural imposition.”

Wells, 2000, citing Campinha-Bacote & Ferguson, 1991

Page 53: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B53

3. Is Ethnocentrism an Issue in Health Care?

Page 54: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B54

3. Is Ethnocentrism an Issue in Health Care? (Cont’d)

● What is the physician assuming in this statement?

● What are the problems with this assumption?

● Is it possible that health care professionals drop their cultural backgrounds when they walk into the clinic, the hospital, or the school?

Page 55: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B55

3. Is Ethnocentrism an Issue in Health Care? (Cont’d)

● Transfers into medicine via the basic tenets of science, where scientific knowledge is understood as ‘correct’ or ‘true’

● Assumes that medical knowledge is outside of cultural considerations. Medical knowledge is considered the correct way to explain illness phenomenon (Loustaunau & Sobo, 1997)

● Health care professionals are assumed to be homogenous (Beagan, 2000)

Page 56: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B56

4. Introducing Stereotypes

Page 57: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B57

4. Introducing Stereotypes (Cont’d)

Page 58: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B58

4. Case studies

● “Everything You Need To Know About…”

● “Too Sensitive?”

Page 59: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B59

4. Introducing Stereotypes (Cont’d)

● Review responses to “Our cultural identities”

● Are there any disconnects between the cultural associations you have and those that others perceive you have?

● What type of problems arise due to this disconnect?

Page 60: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B60

5. Stereotypes

“Stereotypes are generalizations or categorizations about a particular group

based on some common feature (e.g. appearance, ethnicity, gender, etc.).

Stereotyping is a common phenomenon… Categorization is a useful way to cope with the myriad stimuli that occur in our environment. Stereotyping groups of individuals is a way of

extending the natural tendency to categorize.” Bonder, Miracle & Martin, 2001

Page 61: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B61

5. Stereotypes (Cont’d)

● Viewing all members of a cultural group as alike, homogenous, leaving no room for individual variation or exception to common cultural patterns (Wells, 2000)

● Believing that all persons from a given culture prescribe to all characteristics attributed to that culture (Kemp & Rasbridge, 2004)

Page 62: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B62

5. Stereotypes (Cont’d)

● Relying solely on basic and imperfect markers of identity (such as ethnicity or gender) to set expectations about and interpretation an individual’s behaviours (Turbes, Krebs & Axtell, 2002)

Page 63: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B63

5. Stereotypes (Cont’d)

● Statements that rely on stereotypes often start with (or imply) “Africans are…” or “Muslims all…”

● Help us deal with complex information or insufficient information, but are destructive, obscuring the rich cultural tapestry from our comprehension (Kohls, 1984)

Page 64: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B64

6. Exercise: The Iceberg

When meeting someone new:

– What is immediately apparent?

– What is not immediately apparent?

– What are the implications of this when working with people from other cultures?

Page 65: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B65

7. What Are the Pitfalls of Stereotyping?

● Judging another too soon (Brownlee, 1978)

● Generalizing from a non-typical group within a larger society (Brownlee, 1978)

● Generalizing from the dominant or powerful group within a culture

Page 66: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B66

7. Pitfalls of Stereotyping (Cont’d)

● Forgetting the possibility of variation and change within the group

● Reliance on stereotypes lead to cultural misunderstandings, prejudice and discrimination, which can be enshrined in policy (Helman, 2001)

Page 67: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B67

8. Exercise: Stereotypes and Group Dynamics

● Five volunteers

● For discussion: Should we serve beer and chips at the orientation barbeque?

Page 68: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B68

8. Exercise: Stereotypes and Group Dynamics (Cont’d)

● Debriefing:

– Personal insights?

– Larger group insights?

– Withdrawal? Anger? Aggression?

– What clued you onto this response?

– Volunteers – guess labels, then remove

Page 69: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B69

9. Taking Difference into Account

● What does it mean to take difference into account without relying on stereotypes?

● What does this approach assume?

● Which approach is most likely to support the education of an IEHCP?

Page 70: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B70

9. Taking Difference into Account (Cont’d)

● Use generalization as a starting point, as opposed to using stereotype as an endpoint, the closed door after which no new information is sought (Galanti, 1997 in Kemp & Rasbridge, 2004)

Page 71: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B71

Workshop Component 3:

Skill Development

Page 72: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B72

1. Cross-Cultural Communication

● Review: “Culture can be seen as an integrated pattern of learned beliefs and behaviors that can be shared among groups and include thoughts, styles of communicating, ways in interacting, views of roles and relationships, values, practices, and customs” (Betancourt, 2003, p. 3)

● Focus is now shifting to culture and communication

Page 73: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B73

2. Exercise: Active Listening

● Find a partner. Designate first talker

● Talker: Discuss a matter of personal interest or importance without interruption for 2 minutes, while the partner listens (without writing)

● Listener: Verbally summarize

● Talker: If inaccurate, corrects, and the listener re-summarizes

● Repeat until mutual understanding

● Switch roles

Page 74: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B74

2. Exercise: Active Listening (Cont’d)

● Large group discussion: What was striking about this process?

● How might this conversation differ in cross-cultural contexts?

Page 75: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B75

3. Effective Communication

● The key to effective cross-cultural interactions, whether with an IEHCP, a client from a different background than your own, or in your personal life, is communication

● A process by which two individuals exchange a ideas, feelings, and meanings, through verbal or non-verbal means, intentionally or unintentionally

Page 76: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B76

3. Effective Communication (Cont’d)

● Intercultural communication: two or more persons who do not belong to the same culture attempt to communicate – happens all the time!

● The involved persons might not apply the same values, beliefs, assumptions and behavioural strategies to shape their verbal and non-verbal communication strategies

Page 77: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B77

3. Effective Communication (Cont’d)

“Obtaining knowledge about the preferred levels [and style] of…communication can help avoid

misinterpreting the communication behaviors of people from other cultures”

Kim, 2002, p.41

Page 78: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B78

3. Features of Communication

● Pure communication is impossible, as we all bring prior associations to the communication process

● We communicate in many ways, and much of our communication is unconscious

● We see what we expect to see

● We don’t see what we don’t expect to see

● We all perceive things differently

Page 79: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B79

3. Features of Communication (Cont’d)

BRAINSTORM:

What are the implications of these ideas about communication when working with internationally

educated health care professionals?

Page 80: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B80

3. What Are Barriers to Effective Cross-Cultural Communication?

● Assuming similarity – that gestures and words have universal meaning

● Different non-verbal cues – variance in the extent to which cultures rely on non-verbal cues and what gestures indicate

● Verbal language use – the amount of talking/silence, use of names, slang & idioms, taboo topics, terminology

Page 81: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B81

4. Exercise: Communication Styles Simulation

● Seven volunteers for the simulation

● Read your communication task privately

● As a group, pick a location and food for a conference social event

Page 82: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B82

4. Exercise: Communication Styles Simulation (Cont’d)

● Debriefing:

– Was the style easy? Why or why not?

– What did you assume about each other?

– Larger group: Impact of the assumptions on the dynamic?

– How could this affect your work with IEHCPs?

Page 83: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B83

5. Culture & Communication Self-Awareness

● Knowing one’s own communication preferences is helpful

● It is also helpful to identify communication styles that tend to trigger your own negative emotional responses; through awareness, we can consciously attempt to lessen the impact of these triggers

Page 84: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B84

5. Exercise: Communication Profiles and Preferences

● Fill in worksheet individually

● With a partner, discuss questions on the handout

● In the large group, discuss insights and strategize ideas

Page 85: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B85

6. Effective Cross-Cultural Communication

BRAINSTORM:

What qualities do effective cross-cultural communicators embody?

What are some of the strategies by which we can bridge cross-cultural communication barriers?

Page 86: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B86

6. Tuning Into Communication Conflicts

BRAINSTORM:

How do you know when a communication conflict is happening?

Page 87: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B87

6. Tuning Into Communication Conflicts (Cont’d)

● Impatience and annoyance is a clue to a potential misunderstanding

● If questions seem intrusive or personal, recognize that this is considered essential in some cultures to build trust

● Exact mimicking does not suggest comprehension

Page 88: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B88

6. Tuning Into Communication Conflicts (Cont’d)

● Hesitation to follow recommendations may indicate a hidden cultural barrier

● Treat others as they would like to be treated

Page 89: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B89

7. Bridging Cross-Cultural Communication Barriers (Cont’d)

● Continually discover, reflect and clarify your own identities, preferences, biases

● With this awareness, consciously decide not to act on stereotypes

● Listen actively with respect, even if you disagree

● Increase your knowledge of various cultural patterns (see recommended reading)

Page 90: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B90

7. Bridging Strategies (Cont’d)

● Treat each individual as unique

● When confused, seek out more information or feedback

● Tolerate ambiguity

● Establish trust and show concern

● Be sensitive to the need to ‘save face’

● Humour and patience is key

Page 91: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B91

7. Bridging Strategies (Cont’d)

● Be attentive to non-verbal messages, while remaining aware that what gestures offend you might have different meanings.

● When unsure, ask for clarification

● Avoid language with unsure or questionable connotations

● Walk in another’s shoes (cognizant that you will still feel with your own feet)

Page 92: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B92

8. Exercise: Cultural Awareness Revisited

● Review your earlier ideas

● How would you describe a culturally aware and responsive teacher?

● What potential resources available here can help you learn about other cultures?

Page 93: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B93

8. Exercise: Cultural Awareness Revisited (Cont’d)

● What specific strategies can teachers use to further their self-awareness?

● How can you integrate cultural awareness into your teaching?

Page 94: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B94

8. How Can We as Teachers Become More Culturally Aware & Responsive?

● Access cultural information from reputable sources, including IEHCP learners

● Continue developing cross-cultural communication and teaching skills

● Commit to regular self-assessment via reflection

● Evaluate/seek feedback about your teaching skills regularly, including from peers and learners

Page 95: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B95

8. Effective Cross-Cultural Teaching

● Utilize your scientific mindedness. Develop a hypothesis based on observation and experience before information gathering

● Example: A new IEHCP in your tutorial group is quiet. Why might this be? Which possibility is most likely and why? How will you test your hypothesis?

Page 96: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B96

8. Effective Cross-Cultural Teaching

● Cultivate your sense of when generalizations are appropriate, and when you need to individualize

● Example: A Polish IEHCP is starting to work in Family Medicine. Do you know what issues may present? Will they present with this learner?

Page 97: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B97

8. Effective Cross-Cultural Teaching (Cont’d)

● Use knowledge about cultural groups, their environments and useful educational techniques as baseline for comparison, not assumed to hold true

● Example: You know that in traditional Muslim cultures, men do not examine women. You have a new Muslim IEHCP in Family Medicine. How will you sort out their learning needs/comfort?

Page 98: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B98

9. Cultural Awareness in IEHCPs

BRAINSTORM:

How can we support IEHCPs in their adjustment and cultural awareness skill development?

Page 99: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B99

9. Supporting Cultural Awareness in IEHCPs:

● Create opportunity and prioritize time for IEHCPs and Canadian learners to attend similar training, specific to cross-cultural care

● Encourage regular self-assessment and reflection:

– Videotape yourself in action & review with colleagues

– Through a journal

Page 100: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B100

9. Supporting Cultural Awareness in IEHCPs:

● Have the IEHCP keep a journal of cross-cultural experiences that were difficult and/or successful – both the situation and their own actions and reactions. Review periodically with the IEHCP or a group of learners, as a non-evaluative activity

Page 101: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B101

9. Supporting Cultural Awareness in IEHCPs (Cont’d):

● Utilize some of the communication resources here to help IEHCPs develop a sense of their own communication values and preferences

● Assist the IEHCP in locating resources well- suited to their learning needs

● Role model culturally responsive approaches to care

Page 102: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B102

10. Case Studies

● “The Quiet Student”

● “Sexuality in the Clinical Setting”

Page 103: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B103

11. Communication Skills Competency

Howell’s (1982) model:

● Unconscious incompetence

● Conscious incompetence

● Conscious competence

● Unconscious competence

Note: Competence suggests an endpoint, a complete mastery. Being culturally responsive is a life-long process

Page 104: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B104

“Exposure and comfort are as important as knowledge.”

LaMountain & Abramms, 1993

Page 105: B1 A Faculty Development Program for Teachers of Internationally Educated Health Care Professionals Workshop B Educating for Cultural Awareness.

B105

11. Moving Forward

(A) Exercise: Individual Action Planning

OR

(B) Exercise: Group Action Planning