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The 21st Century Challenge: Intercultural Communication in Research Administration

NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting. Learning Objectives. Understand changing demographics of the U.S. research communityLearn characteristics and communication patterns of various cultural and generational groupsRecognize barriers to effective intercultural communication in RAConsider implications of inte

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The 21st Century Challenge: Intercultural Communication in Research Administration

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    1. The 21st Century Challenge: Intercultural Communication in Research Administration Dr. Marjorie Piechowski Director of Research Support College of Engineering & Applied Science University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Dr. Mildred Ofosu Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Sponsored Programs and Research Morgan State University

    2. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Learning Objectives Understand changing demographics of the U.S. research community Learn characteristics and communication patterns of various cultural and generational groups Recognize barriers to effective intercultural communication in RA Consider implications of intercultural communication on RA policy and procedures

    3. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Starting points: Demographics Demographics of new Ph.D. scientists and engineers in U.S. universities U.S. citizens = 25% Non-U.S. citizens = 75% Males = 60-90%, depending on field Demographics of research administrators: U.S. citizens ~ 90% Females ~ 75% Monolingual ~ 75-80%

    4. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Fall 2007 Percent of Minority and Women U.S. Faculty Data Source: Chronicle of Higher Education Almanac 2009 Full Professor: All minority = 13% Women = 26% Associate Professor: All minority = 17% Women = 39% Assistant Professor: All minority = 21% Women = 47%

    5. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Other Demographics Current U.S. population Four generational groups active in the U.S. workforce: Veterans (1925-1945) Baby Boomers (1946-1964) Generation X (1965-1980) Generation Y (1980-2000), also called Millennials

    6. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Current Workforce Composite

    7. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Source: Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America, by David Hackett Fischer Speech ways: conventional patterns of written and spoken language - pronunciation, vocabulary, syntax and grammar. Building ways: prevailing forms of vernacular architecture and high architecture, which tend to be related to one another. Family ways: the structure and function of the household and family, both ideal and actual.

    8. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Marriage ways: ideas of the marriage-bond, and cultural processes of courtship, marriage and divorce. Gender ways: customs that regulate social relations between men and women. Sex ways: conventional sexual attitudes and acts, and the treatment of sexual deviance. Child-rearing ways: ideas of child nature and customs of child nurture.

    9. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Naming ways: onomastic customs including favored forenames and the descent of names within the family. Age ways: attitudes toward age, experiences of aging, and age relationships. Death ways: attitudes toward death, mortality rituals, mortuary customs, mourning practices. Religious ways: patterns of religious worship, theology, ecclesiology and church architecture.

    10. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Magic ways: normative beliefs and practices concerning the supernatural. Learning ways: attitudes toward literacy and learning, and conventional patterns of education. Food ways: patterns of diet, nutrition, cooking, eating, feasting and fasting. Dress ways: customs of dress, demeanor, and personal adornment.

    11. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Sport ways: attitudes toward recreation and leisure; folk games and forms of organized sport. Work ways: work ethics and work experiences; attitudes toward work and the nature of work. Time ways: attitudes toward the use of time, customary methods of time keeping, and the conventional rhythms of life.

    12. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Wealth ways: attitudes toward wealth and patterns of its distribution. Rank ways: the rules by which rank is assigned, the roles that rank entails, and relations between different ranks. Social ways: conventional patterns of migration, settlement, association and affiliation.

    13. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting What Makes Up Culture? Order ways: ideas of order, ordering institutions, forms of disorder, and treatment of the disorderly. Power ways: attitudes toward authority and power; patterns of political participation. Freedom ways: prevailing ideas of liberty/restraint, and libertarian customs and institutions.

    14. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting So, what does all of this mean for research administration/administrators? Gender Ethnicity/Nationality Language Cultural and social norms/customs Generation/Age Academic field Level of education

    15. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Why We Should Care: Policies and Procedures of Research Administration Demographics/culture can influence Use of human and animal subjects Participation of minorities in research Intellectual property Research integrity Financial management of grants Export control issues Training of graduate students and post-doctoral associates

    16. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting How We Can Make a Difference: Multiple Races, Gender, Ethnicity Recognize cultural characteristics and traits of staff and P.I. clients served. Respect differences. Review policies, procedures, forms, documents, language for cultural bias. Initiate training sessions for staff. Seek input and feedback from faculty and staff clientele served.

    17. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting How We can Make a Difference: Multiple Generations Provide manager and staff training. Encourage team building. Establish knowledge transfer programs. Encourage collaborative decision making. Use multiple communication channels. Recognize efforts of all employees. Create succession plans and professional development. Offer flexible benefits and work situations.

    18. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Gateways to Effective Intercultural Communication Need to recognize, respect, and deal with differences. Intercultural communication is not easy Gateways to effective intercultural communication include: Written, oral and nonverbal communication skills Respect for differences Tolerance of ambiguity Flexibility Suspension of assumptions and judgments Willingness to see other persons point of view Time and practice

    19. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting Parting Thoughts Think about your own situation and working environment Reflect on our discussion, examples and ideas Decide what you can and will change

    20. NCURA 2009 Annual Meeting For Questions and Follow-up Dr. Marjorie Piechowski piechow4@uwm.edu 414-229-3721 Dr. Mildred Ofosu mildred.ofosu@morgan.edu 443-885-4505

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