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Four Stages of Acculturation
Citation preview
By
Victoria Evans
&
Jebren Zakar
During this initial phase the students will
experience a period of excitement over the
newness of the surroundings.
August 18, 2005
My first long California summer and I’ve been
enjoying just sitting under the grapefruit tree in my
tiny backyard smelling the jasmine and orange
blossom, and living off corn tortillas and avocados.
Strangely enough, I love the racoons, all the ethnic food
that is so easily accessible in California, and the
natural beauty of the area.
This stages ranges from mild irritability to deep
psychological panic and crisis. Culture shock is associate
with the learner’s feelings of estrangement, anger,
hostility, indecision, frustration, unhappiness, sadness,
loneliness, homesickness, and even physical illness.
Persons undergoing culture shock view their new world
with resentment and alternate between being angry at
others for not understanding them and being filled with
self-pity.
March 24, 2007
I have been feeling homesick, longing for Europe,
seeking out French food, movies and books, and having a sense of being lost in the US. I feel confused about where I ought to be, and find myself often despising the way things
are done in America, while trying to hide my prejudices and judgements from my close US friends. I think this is a sign telling me that I made a big mistake in relocating to the US.
Described as a feeling of homelessness, where one
feels neither bound firmly to one’s native culture
nor fully adapted to the second culture. This stage
is typified by what is called “culture stress”. As
individuals begin to accept the differences in
thinking and feeling that surround them, they
slowly become more empathic with other persons
in the second culture.
September 24, 2008
I keep joking ruefully that I am stuck in the middle of the Atlantic, but the days are getting better. Although there are many things about California that I love and appreciate, I still feel confused about my feelings of homesickness for Europe.
This fourth stage represents near or full recovery
as shown by acceptance of the new culture and
self-confidence in the “new” person who has
developed in this culture.
November 30, 2010
I am starting to see why I loved California when I first
arrived. I have began to take walks around the little
Northern California town I live in while smiling at it’s
beauty. I relished soy chai and Thai food, and local farmer's markets. I love the vast computer-linked library system, the local geeks, quaint wooden cottages, and bay trees. I now feel fully myself, with all of my European-ness, living in California, and I have began to deepen my relationships with American friends. I have no regrets moving here and decided to apply for citizenship.