Lesson 6 - Local and Global Communication in Multicultural Setting
Local communication refers to communicating within one's local area using a local or common language. Global communication describes connecting across geographic, political, economic, social, and cultural divides to share information in ways that redefine power and diplomacy.
Multicultural societies contain multiple ethnic groups that live alongside one another without necessarily interacting between cultures. Intercultural communities have deep understanding and respect between all cultures. Cross-cultural communication compares differences between cultures and can bring about individual but not collective change.
Communicating across cultures is challenging because cultural rules are absorbed subconsciously from a young age. High-context cultures rely more on context versus explicit messages, while low-context cultures prefer direct communication. Sequential cultures address topics one
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Lesson 6 - Local and Global Communication in Multicultural Setting
Local communication refers to communicating within one's local area using a local or common language. Global communication describes connecting across geographic, political, economic, social, and cultural divides to share information in ways that redefine power and diplomacy.
Multicultural societies contain multiple ethnic groups that live alongside one another without necessarily interacting between cultures. Intercultural communities have deep understanding and respect between all cultures. Cross-cultural communication compares differences between cultures and can bring about individual but not collective change.
Communicating across cultures is challenging because cultural rules are absorbed subconsciously from a young age. High-context cultures rely more on context versus explicit messages, while low-context cultures prefer direct communication. Sequential cultures address topics one
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LOCAL AND GLOBAL
COMMUNICATION IN ARIS PET ANGELI A.
SUAREZ MULTICULTURAL SETTING LOCAL COMMUNICATION Local communication is being able to communicate with the members of your local area. It can either be in your local language (mother tongue), or a common language that you speak within your town. GLOBAL COMMUNIATION Global communication is the term used to describe ways to connect, share, relate and mobilize across geographic, political, economic, social and cultural divides. It redefines soft and hard power as well as information power and diplomacy in ways not considered by traditional theories of international relations. MULTICULTURAL VS. INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION
What’s the difference between
multicultural, intercultural, and cross- cultural communication? MULTICULTURAL Multicultural refers to a society that contains several cultural or ethnic groups. People live alongside one another, but each cultural group does not necessarily have engaging interactions with each other. INTERCULTURAL
Intercultural describes communities in which there is a
deep understanding and respect for all cultures. CROSS-CULTURAL
Cross-cultural deals with the comparison of different
cultures. In cross-cultural communication, differences are understood and acknowledged, and can bring about individual change, but not collective transformations. COMMUNICATING ACROSS CULTURES Communicating across cultures is challenging. Each culture has set rules that its members take for granted. Few of us are aware of our own cultural biases because cultural imprinting is begun at a very early age. And while some of a culture’s knowledge, rules, beliefs, values, phobias, and anxieties are taught explicitly, most of the information is absorbed subconsciously. HIGH CONTEXT VS LOW CONTEXT High-Context cultures (Mediterranean, Slav, Central European, Latin America, Africa, Arab, Asian, American Indian) leave much of the message unspecified, to be understood through context, nonverbal cues, and between the lines interpretation of what is actually said. Low-Context cultures (most Germanic and English-speaking countries) expect messages to be explicit and specific. SEQUENTIAL VS SYNCHRONIC In sequential cultures (like North American, English, German, Swedish, and Dutch), business people give full attention to one agenda item after another. In synchronic cultures (including South America, southern Europe and Asia) the flow of time is viewed as a sort of circle, with the past, present and future all interrelated. This viewpoint influences how organizations in those cultures approach deadlines, strategic, thinking, investments, developing talent within, and the concept of “long term” planning. AFFECTIVE VS NEUTRAL In international business practices, reason and emotion both play a role. Which of these dominates depends upon whether we are affective (readily showing emotions) or emotionally neutral in our approach. Members of neutral cultures do not telegraph their feelings, but keep them carefully controlled and subdued. In cultures with high affect, people show their feelings plainly by laughing, smiling, grimacing, scowling, and sometimes crying, shouting, or walking out the room ACTIVITY: TRUE OR FALSE 1. Anyone who is proficient speaker of a language will find communicating across cultures easy. 2. Our emotions do not matter whenever we communicate with others. 3. There is no such thing as a right culture or a wrong culture. 4. All cultures have the same way of thinking about time. 5. Communicating across cultures happens in one’s own country because of the diverse domestic workforce of many companies today.