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Asalam Alaikum MABUYAY! Greetings of Peace! Kuya Rey

Rey Culture Shock 2005

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Page 1: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Asalam AlaikumMABUYAY!

Greetings of Peace!

Kuya Rey

Page 2: Rey Culture Shock 2005

How was your trip?

Page 3: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I met Prof. Nagasura Madale when he came here a couple of

years back.

I’m happy to renew ties.

Page 4: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMFirst & Foremost, Filipino

            

Page 5: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMVisayan

CebuanoWaray-Waray

            

Page 6: Rey Culture Shock 2005

               

I AMChinese

Page 7: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMCatholic

Page 8: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMTaoist

Page 9: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMBuddhist

Page 10: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMConfucian

                         

Page 11: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMAnimist

Page 12: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMEcumenical

Page 13: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMInterfaith

Page 14: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I AMWithin me, there is conflict & harmony

Page 15: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I HAVE BEEN TO:

Lanao del SurMaguindanao

Page 16: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Lumad Communities

Page 17: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Northern Mindanao

Bukidnon,

Camiguin,

Misamis Oriental

Page 18: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Central MindanaoNorth CotabatoSouth Cotabato

Page 19: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Western MindanaoLanao del Norte,

Zamboanga del Norte, Zamboanga del Sur

Page 20: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Southern MindanaoDavaoDavao del NorteDavao del Sur

Page 21: Rey Culture Shock 2005

CULTURE SHOCKRey Ty

Kuya Rey

Page 22: Rey Culture Shock 2005

EAST WIND,WEST WIND

Page 23: Rey Culture Shock 2005

TAKE YOUR OWN PHOTOSNIU

Faculty, Management

& Staff are

NOT your personal photographers

Page 24: Rey Culture Shock 2005

COURTESY

Page 25: Rey Culture Shock 2005

CONFUCIUS SAYS:

• Great minds discuss ideas.

• Average minds discuss events.

• Small minds discuss people.

Page 26: Rey Culture Shock 2005
Page 27: Rey Culture Shock 2005

DIGNITY

• There is dignity in all work: manual, mental and all.

• Factory work, university work, grocery work, restaurant work

Page 28: Rey Culture Shock 2005

RESPECT

• Treat everyone with respect.

• Treat others as you want to be treated.

Page 29: Rey Culture Shock 2005

NON-DISCRIMINATION

• Treat people of all colors equally: black, brown, white…

• Treat people of different incomes equally: poor, middle class, rich

• Treat people of all professions equally: drivers, janitors, custodians, professors, waitresses, directors, secretaries

Page 30: Rey Culture Shock 2005

HUMILITY

• Humility is a sign of maturity

• Be humble, NOT hambug (Filipino word for “arrogant”)!

Page 31: Rey Culture Shock 2005

4 MINIMUM WORDS

• 1. Hi!

• 2. Please…

• 3. Bye!

• 4. Thanks!

Page 32: Rey Culture Shock 2005

GREET

• Greet everyone who you work with or who works with you or for you

• Drivers, secretaries, instructors, waiters, waitresses

Page 33: Rey Culture Shock 2005

CROSSING THE STREET

• Do not jaywalk

• Make sure the light for pedestrians is green.

• When crossing a pedestrian lane, first, turn your head left & look left, then wave a “thank you” sign or say “thank you”, cross carefully, and turn your head right and look right, then make a “thank you” sign, and cross carefully.

Page 34: Rey Culture Shock 2005

A. Enculturation = process of learning the

culture of your birth

Page 35: Rey Culture Shock 2005

B. Acculturation = process of learning a culture different from

your native culture

Page 36: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Enculturation process of learning the culture of

your birth

Page 37: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Acculturation process of learning a culture

different from your native culture

Page 38: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Culture Shock

• When placed in a foreign culture people tend to experience culture shock, the frustration from having to learn to cope with new cultural cues and expectations

Page 39: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Sources of Problems in Communication

• Language differences

• Nonverbal patterns

• Stereotypes

• Evaluation of behaviors

• Stress

Page 40: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Months Living in New Culture

1 2 3 4 5 6

Acc

epta

nce

of N

ew C

ultu

re

High

Low

Frustration

Understanding

Elation

Stages of Culture Shock

Daniels & Radebaugh, Int’l Business

Page 41: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Culture ShockCulture shock is the process of adjusting to a new

country and a new culture.

Stages of Culture Shock:1) Preliminary:Preparation, Excitement2) Spectator: Honeymoon, Fascination,

Euphoria3) Shock: Irritability, Hostility, Depression,

Sadness4) Acculturation: Understanding and

Adjustment5) Integration and Acceptance6) Reverse Culture Shock: Re-Entry

Page 42: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Honeymoon Honeymoon Culture of Recovery & Origin Adjustment Adjustment Overseas Home Disorientation Confrontation with Disorientation the new culture Confrontation with self and/or familiar

Page 43: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Clash Clash of of

Cultures?Cultures?

Page 44: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Implications for Us

• Be conscious of your own nonverbal behavior• Avoid judging student’s behavior by your values• Recognize that the learning environment in the

U.S. may differ from what the you are accustomed to

Page 45: Rey Culture Shock 2005

WHAT IS CULTURE?

Page 46: Rey Culture Shock 2005

CULTURE

• Edward B. Tylor: "Culture or civilization, taken in its wide ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society." (1871)

Page 47: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Culture

• Definition• Components of culture• Technology and culture• Cultural Diversity• Theoretical Analysis

Page 48: Rey Culture Shock 2005

CULTURE

• 1. the arts collectively: art, music, literature, and related intellectual activities

• Culture is necessary for a healthy society.

• 2. knowledge and sophistication: enlightenment and sophistication acquired through education and exposure to the arts

• They are people of culture.• 3. shared beliefs and values of a group: the beliefs,

customs, practices, and social behavior of a particular nation or people

• Southeast Asian culture

Page 49: Rey Culture Shock 2005

• 4. people with shared beliefs and practices: a group of people whose shared beliefs and practices identify the particular place, class, or time to which they belong

• 5. shared attitudes: a particular set of attitudes that characterizes a group of people

• The company tries hard to avoid a blame culture.• 6. growing biological material in special conditions:

the growing of biological material, especially plants, microorganisms, or animal tissue, in a nutrient substance in specially controlled conditions for scientific, medical, or commercial purposes

Page 50: Rey Culture Shock 2005

• 7. biology biological material grown in special conditions: biological material, especially plants, microorganisms, or animal tissue, grown in a nutrient substance culture medium in specially controlled conditions for scientific, medical, or commercial purposes

• 8. tillage: the cultivation of the land or soil in

preparation for growing crops or plants

• 9. improvement: the development of a skill or expertise through training or education

• physical culture

Page 51: Rey Culture Shock 2005

I. Culture = specialized lifestyle of a group of people including: values, beliefs, artifacts, behaviors and communication styles.

Page 52: Rey Culture Shock 2005

What is Culture?

• Culture is the values, beliefs, behavior, and material objects that together form a people’s way of life.

• Can also be referred to as that which differentiates human beings from other creatures.

• It is a shared way of life or social heritage

Page 53: Rey Culture Shock 2005

CULTURES

• Dominant Culture

• Sub-Cultures

• Counter-Cultures or Alternative Cultures

• Minority Cultures

• Suppressed and Minoritized Cultures

Page 54: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Types of culture

• Non-material culture – intangible human creations

• Material culture – tangible creations of a society

• Shapes what we do

• Helps form our personalities

• Informs our definition of what is ‘normal ‘

Page 55: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of Culture• Symbols

• Language

• Values and Beliefs

• Norms

• Ideal and Real Culture

Page 56: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture• Symbols:

A symbol is anything that carries a particular meaning recognized by people who share a culture (a flag, a word, a flashing red light, a raised fist, an animal etc).

-Diverse meanings can be given to different variations of the same object, for example, the winking of an eye.

-Culture shock is a result of inability to read meanings in an unfamiliar environment.

-Symbolic meanings also vary within the same society.

Page 57: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture (contd’)

• LanguageA system of symbols that allows

people to communicate with one another.

Functions:--Enhances communication-Ensures continuity of culture-Identifies societies or groups-Determines how the world is perceived

Page 58: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture (contd’)

• Values and Beliefs

-VALUES are culturally defined standards by which people assess desirability, goodness, and beauty and that serve as broad guidelines for social living.

BELIEFS are specific statements that people hold to be true (e.g. The possibility that the US will one day have a female president - based on the shared value of equal opportunity)

Page 59: Rey Culture Shock 2005

What is/are Philippine culture(s)?

Page 60: Rey Culture Shock 2005

What are the similarities between the U.S. and Philippine

cultures?

Page 61: Rey Culture Shock 2005

What are the differences between the U.S. and Philippine

cultures?

Page 62: Rey Culture Shock 2005

IdentityIndividualism vs. collectivism

• Highly individualistic– Weak family ties.– Privacy is normal.– Lasting relationship difficult to achieve.– Confrontation is normal.– Teachers encourage individual initiative.– Students expected to speak up.– Purpose of education is learning how to

learn.

Page 63: Rey Culture Shock 2005

• Highly collectivistic– Strong family ties.– Harmony should be maintained

and confrontation avoided.– Students’ individual initiatives

discouraged.– Students will not speak up in class.– Purpose of education is learning

how to do.

Page 64: Rey Culture Shock 2005

HierarchyPower distance

• High power distance– Parents teach children obedience.– Students dependent on teacher.– Teacher-centered education.– Teachers initiate all communication

in class.

Page 65: Rey Culture Shock 2005

• Low power distance societies– Parents treat children as equals.– Children treat parents and older

relatives as equals.– Teachers treat students as equals.– Student-centered education.– Quality of learning depends on two-way

communication and excellence of students.

Page 66: Rey Culture Shock 2005

DIFFERENCES

• USA• Egalitarian• Informal• Individualistic• Task Oriented• Short-Term, Fluid

Relationship• Uncertainty

Avoidance

• Philippines• Hierarchical• Formal• Group-Oriented• Relationship-Focused• Long-Term, Stable

Relationship• Certainty Avoidance

Page 67: Rey Culture Shock 2005

DIFFERENCES

• Direct Indirect

• Competitive Cooperative

• Analytic Relational

• Future Focused Past/present

• Earned Status Inherited Status

Page 68: Rey Culture Shock 2005

SYMPTOMS OF CULTURE SHOCK

• fight,

• flight,

• filter and

• flex

Page 69: Rey Culture Shock 2005

SYMPTOMS OF CULTURE SHOCK

• Physical Emotional • Inability to sleep Homesickness• Excessive sleeping Irritability• Chronic fatigue Boredom• Head- or backaches Anger• Weight gain or loss Depression• Frequent illness Low self-esteem • Skin rashes Arrogance• Substance abuse Hypercriticality• Compulsive behaviors Withdrawal

Page 70: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture (contd’)• U S Values

(according to Sociologist Robin Williams)1. Equal opportunity

2. Achievement and success

3. Material comfort

4. Activity and work

5. Practicality and efficiency

6. Progress

7. Science

8. Democracy and free enterprise

9. Freedom

10. Racism and group superiority

Page 71: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture (contd’)• Conflict of Values

-Some dominant cultural values contradict others. For example, racism and group superiority go against the equality of opportunity.

NORMS-Rules and expectations by which society guides the behavior of its members

• TYPES– PROSCRIPTIVE

• Should nots, prohibited– PRESCRIPTIVE

• Shoulds, prescribed like medicine

Page 72: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture (contd’)

FURTHER BREAKDOWN:-

• MORES (“MORE-ays”)-These are norms that are widely observed and have great moral significance.

• FOLKWAYS-Norms for routine or casual interaction (e.g. appropriate greeting or dressing)

Page 73: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Components of culture (contd’)• “Ideal” and “Real” Culture

Ideal culture prescribes how we should behave.

Real culture describes what actually occurs in our everyday life.

Page 74: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Visible Culture

Food

Fiestas

Famous People

Page 75: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Impact of Visible Culture

• Language differences

• Role expectations for male and females

• Level of parent involvement in schooling

• Parents’ understanding of grading practices

Page 76: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Deep Culture

• Values, beliefs that influence they way people think, act, communicate

• Unspoken rules• Unconscious rules

Page 77: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Impact of Deep Culture

• The greatest challenges people face in adjusting to a new culture

• An important part of the dynamics of the teaching-learning process in all classrooms

• Impact on the way students learn and the way we teach

Frequency of stimulation Types of questions asked

Page 78: Rey Culture Shock 2005

How Culture Affects Our Lives

• The effects of our own culture generally remain imperceptible to us.

• These learned and shared ways penetrate our being.

• Culture becomes the lens through which we perceive and evaluate what is going on around us.

Page 79: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cultural Orientations

• Culture Shock - the disorientation that people experience when they come into contact with a different culture.

• Ethnocentrism - the tendency to use one’s own culture as a yardstick for judging the ways of other societies.

• It can create in group loyalties or lead to harmful discrimination.

Page 80: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Subcultures andCountercultures

• Subculture - a world within the larger world of the dominant culture.

• A subculture has a distinctive way of looking at life.

• The values and norms tend to be compatible with the larger society.

• Counterculture - a subculture whose values place its members in opposition to the values of the broader culture.

• An assault on core values is always met with resistance.

Page 81: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cultural Universals

• Cultural universals - values, norms, or other cultural traits that are found everywhere.

• Although there are universal human activities, there is no universally accepted way of doing any of them.

• Humans have no biological imperative that results in one particular form of behavior throughout the world.

Page 82: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cultural Lag, Diffusion, and Leveling

• Cultural lag - not all parts of a culture change at the same pace.

• Material culture usually changes before nonmaterial culture.

• Cultural diffusion – the spread of cultural characteristics from one group to another.

• Travel and communication unite us.– Cultural leveling - a

process in which cultures become similar to one another.

Page 83: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cross-Cultural Miscommunication

• Problem is not due to lack of goodwill.

• Problem is that meaning is not contained in words or actions alone.

• Message is interpreted by the receiver.

• At times non-verbal communication can be misinterpreted

Page 84: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Minorities in USA Today

12% African American

13% Latinos (Hispanic)

4% Asian and Pacific Islanders

1% Native American

Page 85: Rey Culture Shock 2005

EgalitarianEgalitarian

IndividualisticIndividualistic

Task OrientedTask Oriented

Shorter-Term Fluid RelationshipShorter-Term Fluid Relationship

InformalInformal

Post-ModernPost-Modern

Cultural AnalysisCultural Analysis

Page 86: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cultural AnalysisCultural Analysis

HierarchicalHierarchical

Group-orientedGroup-oriented

Relationship FocusedRelationship Focused

Longer-term Stable RelationshipLonger-term Stable Relationship

FormalFormal

TraditionalTraditional

Page 87: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cultural AnalysisCultural Analysis

Direct CommunicationDirect Communication

Analytic ThinkingAnalytic Thinking

Future Focus; InnovativeFuture Focus; Innovative

Status is earnedStatus is earned

CompetitiveCompetitive

POST-MODERNPOST-MODERN

Page 88: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Cultural AnalysisCultural Analysis

Indirect CommunicationIndirect Communication

Relational ThinkingRelational Thinking

Past/Present Focus; ConservativePast/Present Focus; Conservative

Status is inheritedStatus is inherited

CooperativeCooperative

TRADITIONALTRADITIONAL

Page 89: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Power Differences

High Power Distance

power is in the hands of a few

Brazil India

Page 90: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Low Power Distance power is evenly distributed

throughout the citizenry

Denmark New Zealand

Page 91: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Collectivistpromotes group values as most

important

Page 92: Rey Culture Shock 2005

High-Context most information is the context or

person rather than the verbal message

Page 93: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Low-Context most information is stated explicitly

in the verbal messageU.S.A.

Page 94: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Are we Are we stereotypingstereotyping

??Stop!Stop!

Page 95: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Generalizing Generalizing vs. vs.

StereotypingStereotyping

Page 96: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Understanding the U.S. Culture

Characteristics considered as “typically American”:

•Individuality

•Independence & Self-reliance

•Honesty & Frankness

•Competitiveness

•Measuring Success

                                                 

           

Page 97: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Social Customs

Greetings

Use of Names

Friendliness & Friendships

Page 98: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Greetings

Formal Greetings:"How do you do" "Good morning" "Good afternoon," & "Good evening"

Usually people will simply say: "Hi" or "Hello “ or “What’s up?” or

“Howdy?”

Page 99: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Use of Names

It is acceptable to use the first name of someone approximately of your same age or younger.

You should say "Mr." (for men) or "Ms." (for women) and the person's last name when talking to people in positions of authority.

Do not be shy to ask people how they would like you to call them.

Page 100: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Social Invitations

An invitation is not firm unless a time and place is set.

If you have accepted an invitation or if a meeting has been set, Americans usually expect you to arrive at the agreed location at the right time.

Page 101: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Friendliness and Friendships

It is common for Americans to be informal and casual, even with perfect strangers.

Do not be surprised if somebody you do not know says "Hi!" to you for no reason.

People often say “How are you?”. The accepted response is “Fine, thank you.”

Page 102: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Interpersonal Relationships

Directness, openness, and honesty

Friendliness and informality

Confrontation (vs. Indirection in non-western cultures)

Page 103: Rey Culture Shock 2005

When formally invited to someone's home, it is considerate to bring a gift to your host.

Thank your host or hostess when you leave.

It is considerate to send a thank you note as well or to telephone your thanks the following day.

Customs Regarding Hospitality

Page 104: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Punctuality is one of the most highly valued personal traits.

If you know you will be unable to arrive on time, it is customary to telephone the hosts to let them know when you will arrive.

To be late for an invitation/engagement is considered insulting to the person who is kept waiting.

Page 105: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Behaviors and actions which will almost always get a negative reaction from most Americans:

- 1. being late

- 2. not keeping appointments

- 3. not calling to explain why, and

- 4. treating women as less important than men

Page 106: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Behaviors and actions not regarded as being positive or negative in the U.S:

- 1. using the left hand to give something to someone

- 2. calling someone using the right index finger

- 3. looking directly in the eyes of an elder or a woman (other than one's wife)

- 4. putting one's foot/feet on top of the office desk/chair

Should these behaviors occur, no insult or disrespect is intended or assumed.

Page 107: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Personal Space

Americans tend to require more personal space than in other cultures.

If the person to whom you are speaking backs away a little, don't try to close the gap.

Avoid physical contact while you are speaking,

Page 108: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Telephone Etiquette

When you call someone, it is polite to identify yourself

It is not polite to call someone before 9 am or after 10 pm, unless it is an emergency.

The only exception would be if he or she told you it is ok to call earlier or later.

Page 109: Rey Culture Shock 2005

1. ETHNOCENTRISM2.CULTURAL RELATIVISM3. COMMON HUMAN VALUES

Page 110: Rey Culture Shock 2005

1. Racist2. Romantic3. Cosmopolitan

ATTITUDES

Page 111: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Ethnocentric

Polycentric

Geocentric

Bitter,

Sweet, &

Bittersweet

ATTITUDES

Int’l Business, Ch. 16

Hiring and Managing Employees, by Wild, Wild, & Han

Page 112: Rey Culture Shock 2005

TRAITS THAT CORRELATE WITH FAILURE IN CROSS-CULTURAL

INTERACTIONS

• Low tolerance to ambiguity or high uncertainty avoidance

• Overly task-oriented or high need for individual achievement

• Closed-minded & inflexible

Page 113: Rey Culture Shock 2005

As you try to become familiar with the new culture, keep the following in mind….

Page 114: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Do not travel with misconceptions!

Page 115: Rey Culture Shock 2005

 

Do not be judgmental.

Residence Halls

Page 116: Rey Culture Shock 2005

                                                                                                                                    

Keep an open mind.

Be sensitive to new culture cues you will be receiving.

Page 117: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Take a positive attitude & open mind with you

Page 118: Rey Culture Shock 2005

Explore DeKaIb & Chicago!!!

Strive to know as much as you can…

Page 119: Rey Culture Shock 2005

However, IN ORDER NOT TO CROSS ETHICAL BOUNDARIES…

Inform others about your religious or dietary restrictions

1) pro-actively (best) or2) reactively (too late?)

Page 120: Rey Culture Shock 2005
Page 121: Rey Culture Shock 2005

SALAMAT PO!

THANK YOU!