SESSION: INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION Internationalisation@home.

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SESSION: INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION Internationalisation@home

Transcript of SESSION: INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION Internationalisation@home.

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SESSION: INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION

Internationalisation@home

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Intro: Intercultural competence Definitions: communication, culture,

intercultural communication What causes communication

problems in an intercultural setting Verbal communication Non-verbal communication

Richard Lewis’ model of intercultural communication

Introduction to assignment

Contents

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Intro: Intercultural competence

“The 21st century is upon us. As inhabitants of this post-millennium world, you no longer have a choice about whether to live and communicate among many cultures. Your only choice is whether you will learn to do it well...”

Lustig, Koester & Taylor

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Intro: Intercultural competence

The imperative for intercultural competence

Demographic imperative Technological imperative Economic imperative Peace imperative Interpersonal imperative

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What is communication?

Verbal and non-verbal (90%)

Culture Culture

Person

A

Person

B

Send/Receive Messages through Various Channels

Encode/ Decode Encode/ Decode

Noise Noise Noise

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What is culture?

The collective programming of the mind which distinguishes the members of one human group from another.

A learned set of shared interpretations about beliefs, values, norms and social practices which affect the behaviours of a relatively large group of people

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Layers of Culture

National Regional Educational Professional Gender Class Religious Generational Ethnic Corporate Personal

country

family

sports club

company

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Culture, an iceberg …

SymbolsRituals

HeroesSocial practices

ValuesNormsBeliefs

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Values …

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Rituals …

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What is intercultural communication?Intercultural communication is a symbolic, interpretive, transactional & contextual process in which people from different cultures create shared meanings. It occurs when large and important cultural differences create dissimilar interpretations and expectations about how to communicate competently

Sender & receiver have different cultural backgrounds

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WHAT CAUSES COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS IN AN

INTERCULTURAL SETTING?

Verbal and Non-verbal communication

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Non-native speakers (often at least one of them) One-on-one translations Translation of jokes, sayings, a pun …

often not possible Time relativity in a global

perspective Use of other measures

gallon, mile, ounce, …

What can go wrong – verbal (1)

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WASHINGTON (AP) — “Failure to convert English measures to metric values caused the loss of the Mars Climate Orbiter, a spacecraft that smashed into the planet instead of reaching a safe orbit, a NASA investigation concluded Wednesday. […]An investigation board concluded that NASA engineers failed to convert English measures of rocket thrusts to Newton, a metric system measuring rocket force. One English pound of force equals 4.45 Newton. A small difference between the two values caused the spacecraft to approach Mars at too low an altitude and the craft is thought to have smashed into the planet’s atmosphere and was destroyed.”

What can go wrong – verbal (2)

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Pronunciation of words “Sh” cannot be pronounced in Finnish The English “th”

Different vocabulary Snow (Inuit) Green (Zulu)

What can go wrong – verbal (3)

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Verbal communicationHindi English

Baap (pitagi), maa Father, mother

Baba (dada), amma (dadi)

Father’s father, father’s mother

Nana, nani Mother’s father, mother’s mother

Taaya, taayi Father’s/wife of father’s elder brother

Chacha, chachi Father’s/wife of father’s younger brother

Mama, mami Mother’s/wife of mother’s brother

Booa, fooa Father’s sister, husband of father’s sister

Mausi, mausa Mother’s/ husband of mother’s sister

Bahai Brother

Bhabhi Brother’s wife

Bhatija, bhatiji Brother’s son/daughter

Bahin Sister

….

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Politeness Vous / tu – u / jij - you First names Japan: “I” is different in different

contexts Grammar

Existence of present tense Past tenses (was/has been)

My grandfather never went abroad ≠ has never gone abroad

Le subjonctif n’existe pas en néerlandais

What can go wrong – verbal (4)

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Irish Mist

What can go wrong - examples

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What can go wrong – examples

GM Chevy NOVA

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What can go wrong – examples

Mazda Laputa

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Slogans Parker Pen

"It won't leak in your pocket and embarrass you" translated into "It won't leak in your pocket and make you pregnant” in Spanish

Pepsi "Come Alive With the Pepsi Generation"

translated into "Pepsi Brings Your Ancestors Back From the Grave" in Chinese

What can go wrong – examples

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Body-language Nodding = YES or NO ??? Laughing = happiness or insecurity ??? Avoiding eye contact = respect or shame ??? Physical distance - touching each other - kissing

What can go wrong – non-verbal (1)

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Colours Red = political colour of …

EU: left-sided political parties US: Republicans

White = colour of … EU: marriage Catholics: joy China, Muslim: death

What can go wrong – non-verbal (2)

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Symbols Different meanings Not understandable outside the group

What can go wrong – non-verbal (3)

Thumbs up = OK, …

but offensive in Greece

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Values: nudity

What can go wrong – non-verbal (4)

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Values: diseases

What can go wrong – non-verbal (5)

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What can go wrong - non-verbal (6)

Values: religion

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Direction in which we read Left to right, top to bottom, …… problems if the message is read from

right to left

What can go wrong – (non)verbal (7)

Our usual perspectivehttp://www.sasi.group.shef.ac.uk/worldmapper/index.html

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RICHARD LEWIS’ MODEL

www.howest.be

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Richard Lewis’ model of Cultural Categories

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National Communication Patterns– Italy –

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National Communication Patterns– Finland –

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National Communication Patterns– Germany –

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National Communication Patterns– UK –

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Listening Habits

– Belgium –

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‘Tolerance, intercultural dialogue and respect for diversity are more essential than ever in a world where people are becoming more and more closely interconnected.’

Kofi Annan

Conclusion