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Cultural Relativism

Cultural Relativism. DAY ONE. Before we begin…. We talked about how CULTURE can be described as the features of EVERYDAY LIFE We also made sure to be careful with GENERALIZATIONS , or taking general information about a culture and applying it to individuals Why?

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Cultural Relativism

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  1. Cultural Relativism DAY ONE

  2. Before we begin… • We talked about how CULTURE can be described as the features of EVERYDAY LIFE • We also made sure to be careful with GENERALIZATIONS, or taking general information about a culture and applying it to individuals • Why? • Generalizations (are) and help to reinforce stereotypes. • Stereotypesare simplified, fixed beliefs about a group of people. They are untrue & offensive.

  3. Cultural Relevance • It is ALWAYS important to view people from different cultures through a “cultural lens” • A cultural lens accounts for differencesin behaviors, beliefs, values, traditions, and personalities. • A cultural lens allows you to take in to account a person’s culture without ASSUMING anything about them. • It requires you to have knowledge and understanding of different cultures.

  4. Cultural Awareness • Cultural Awareness explains that “many differences between people can be attributed to the influence of culture” • Being “culturally aware” is increasingly important as we become a more multicultural society • Why? • Learning about culture is fun and interesting

  5. Warm up exercise: • Look at the following picture for about twenty seconds • See how much you can remember

  6. So… • How much did you remember? • WHAT types of info did you remember? • Any metaphors? • You are likely to see and interpret different details—just as witnesses to crimes and accidents often differ as to the details of what they saw. • Just as people from different cultures view events, social situations, and behaviors differently.

  7. Our picture metaphor shows that: • 1. People from different cultures view events, social situations, and behaviors differently. • 2. No two people see the same thing in exactly the same way. • 3. Culture influences how you see reality.

  8. Important to note: • No two people see the same thing in exactly the same way. • All people bring to the situation their own values, beliefs, and life experiences—and powers of observation. • We all believe that we observe reality—things as they are • But what actually happens is that the mind interprets what the eyes see and gives it meaning

  9. Thinking further… • In other words, what we see is as much in the mind as it is in reality. • Consider this: the mind of a person from one culture is going to be different in many ways from the mind of a person from another culture. • THIS IS THE explanation for that most fundamental of all cross-cultural issues: the fact that two people looking upon the same reality, the same example of behavior, may see things very differently.

  10. CULTURE IS KEY! • Looking at Worksheet 6, let’s give our honest and FIRST reaction for each • What do we think? • NOW let’s take a look at Worksheet 7 with the same situations only WITH a CULTURAL CONTEXT • How have your responses changed?

  11. Reflections • How would this information be important while traveling? • When else might it be important? • If you were to go to another culture, you would need to be careful not to make judgments about a particular behavior or custom until you understood the cultural context—and the reasons that behavior was accepted as "normal”.

  12. More Reflections… • It's easy to misinterpret things people do in a cross-cultural setting. To keep from misunderstanding the behavior of individuals from another culture, you have to try to see the world from their point of view, not yours. • Why might it be possible for me to misunderstand individuals from another culture? • How can I learn to see things from another culture's point of view? Why is it important?

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