| Literature DB >> 27890048 |
Zareen Zaidi1, Daniëlle Verstegen2, Rashmi Vyas3, Omayma Hamed4,5, Tim Dornan2, Page Morahan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We live in an age when education is being internationalized. This can confront students with 'cultural hegemony' that can result from the unequal distribution of power and privilege in global society. The name that is given to awareness of social inequality is 'critical consciousness'. Cross-cultural dialogue provides an opportunity for learners to develop critical consciousness to counter cultural hegemony. The purpose of this research was to understand how learners engage with cross-cultural dialogue, so we can help them do so more effectively in the future.Entities:
Keywords: critical consciousness; cross-cultural communication; culturally responsive andragogy; discourse analysis; educational cultural hegemony
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27890048 PMCID: PMC5124632 DOI: 10.3402/meo.v21.33145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Description of scenarios
| Scenario in brief with research design focus | The scenarios as provided to participants |
|---|---|
| Scenario 1: ‘The Dilemma of Yes and No’ described cultural differences in non-verbal communication through a description of head nodding horizontally (side to side – more of a circular motion). This is used customarily in South India to say ‘Yes’, while in the United States the same movement means ‘No’. | We recently moved to the United States from South India. My daughter who is studying in elementary school came to me with a question. My daughter said that when teacher asked in the class if she had understood and she said yes by shaking her head the teacher would come to her seat and say ‘don't worry I will help you’. My daughter was puzzled. I of course now enlightened by my Ethiopian friend's experience asked her immediately how did she shake her head. My daughter showed me – horizontally side to side (more of a circular motion) as is customary in South India to say ‘Yes’ which means ‘No’ in United States. I laughed and explained to her that head shaking means different things in different culture. What is considered a ‘Yes’ in South India is a ‘No’ somewhere else and vice versa. So I told her to just speak up and say that she had understood. |
| Scenario 2: ‘Multicultural Learning Environments and Educators’ described difficulties faced by facilitators in multicultural learning environments. The dilemma presented was how to achieve balance between providing extra support to students who are not accustomed to the critical reflection skill needed as part of the course, and treating all students similarly. | I would agree with you about the difficulty of setting standards when the tests are not as good as they could be, and the teachers are not aware of this problem. However … This view will not help things to improve and there is a way to improve things by using standard setting methods – not necessarily setting the standards (yet). When I was in New Mexico, I worked with Miriam Friedman Ben David for several years in assessment. She and a team of people developed an assessment system for the entire institution. Standard setting was part of it. The exercise of setting standards is highly educational for all teachers who participate. One of the most powerful strategies for changing the quality of tests is when the teachers realize that the tests they have been writing and using are not the best or even OK. They are not interested in someone telling them this. However, when this realization takes place during a standard setting exercise, when teachers examine the questions, one by one, and debate the answers and the assumptions about the questions and the answers it becomes self-evident that the questions are poorly done, ambiguous, that the some of the items are not important, and so on. They realize this in a group of their peers, in a group of ‘experts’ and they see that they don't agree about things and that a standard makes sense. |
| Scenario 3: ‘Who Says Islam is Tough’ described the Tanoura Dance (‘whirling darawish’), a Sufi custom in Islam, of worship through dance aimed at bringing about cleansing and awakening of the heart. | See how Egyptians feel the beauty of God and how they worship HIM through a dance. Tannura Dance (Al Daraweesh) has a very special characteristic as it relies on the dancer's unlimited moves in circles. Believers of this concept see the universe stems from the same point of rotation. As the universe starts and ends from the same point, the dancer will always start and end his movement from that point. He moves anticlockwise, very much like the pilgrims’ movement around Kaba (The Muslims’ holy shrine). The dance is symbolic of our life journey. The dancer brings his colorful skirts (diversity in life) up and down projecting the ups and downs of our lives. The four drums (Duff) in his hands represent the four seasons. We revolve in life. We give birth and new life. We revolve and then ends up subliming into the divine soul to start another life there in the other world. |
| Scenario 4: ‘Program Evaluation’ described the impact of cultural uniformity among participants within a leadership program in India, compared to the FAIMER Institute with participants from across the globe. | Why is the CML group (FAIMER Regional Institute, Ludhiana India) more active on the ml-web? I think one of the reasons may be a ‘uniformity’ or similarity of the regional Institute fellows? In contrast, when you look at the Philadelphia crowd, there is a wide variety of fellows. Some may have difficulty with language and expression? Others may not understand the format of certain web discussions or not find it interesting/stimulating. Others may not think the discussion is useful because they cannot relate it to their own work and hence the discussion for them is very abstract and only on paper? |