Chapter 2 3 Comm01
Chapter 2 3 Comm01
Chapter 2 3 Comm01
Comm 01
Purposive Communication
Globalization
● process by which ideas, goods and services spread throughout the world
● driven by the convergence of political, cultural and economic systems that ultimately
promote :
- increased interaction
- integration
● Advances in technology:
-transportation
-communication
● money, technology, materials and even people flow more swiftly across national boundaries
Effects of globalization
1. individual level - the way international influence affects ordinary people within a nation
3. Be concise
4. Embrace technology
INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION
• the process of sharing and interpreting meanings with individuals from different cultures
CULTURE
It is a learned set of shared interpretations about beliefs, values, norms, and roles which affect the
behaviors of a relatively large group of people.
• Beliefs are assumptions and convictions that are held to be true, by an individual or a group
NORMS
• this rules pertain actually to culture and how people in a particular place are expected to
behave and react to given circumstances.
Intercultural Communication
‘Colere’, Latin
Intercultural Communication
-examines the influence of culture on who people are, how they act, feel, think, and speak and
listen. (DODD, 1991)
-a communicative process involving individuals from different cultures to overcome certain personal
and/or contextual barriers in order to achieve effective communication. (Vila, 2005 as cited in
Domingo, 2018)
-the sending and receiving of messages across languages and cultures. (Arent, 2009)
“Intercultural communication is the exchange and sensitivity of views across social systems and
societies; cultural groups; develop deeper tolerance and appreciation of various languages,
institutions, cultural beliefs, and practices.”
Cultural Dialectics
Individualism vs Collectivism
Individualistic cuture
- “I” perspective
Collectivist Culture
- “We” perspective
group-oriented
communication
5. Time Things are scheduled. Change is fast. Time is Time is not strictly followed..
commodity
Change is slow.
Time is a process.
6. Learning Following directions and explanations Observing then following
Deductive thinking.
9. Power and Authority People respect each other, are equal People are not equal
Highly feminine
- Value relationships, tenderness in members of both sexes and value high quality of life.
CULTURAL DIFFERENCES
❑ Ethnocentrism
❑ Understand how words, tone, and body language vary with every culture.
Negro Afro-American
White Caucasian
Homosexual Gay
Culture
• We may not be aware of the most basic features of our own culture until we come into
contact with people who do things differently
Categories of culture
Indirectness, politeness,
Preferred communication strategy Directness, confrontation, clarity
ambiguity
gender
social class
religion
age
sexual orientation
physical ability
Personal
(gender, race,
ethnicity, social
class)
organizational national
All the three intersect to determine what kind of communication is needed in a given situation
• North Americas value fairness; in some countries, people expect certain groups to receive
preferential treatment.
• In US, success is based on individual achievement; in England and France, it is more linked to
social class.
• US students are expected to complete assignments alone, if they get help from anyone,
they’re cheating; in Japan, groups routinely work together to solve problems.
• In US, being quiet is a sign that people are working; in Japan, people talk to get the work
done.
Values and beliefs are influenced by religion:
• Christianity coexists with a view of the individual as empowered to make things happen; in
some Muslim and Asian countries, it is seen as presumptuous to predict the future by
promising action by a certain date.
• The Puritan work ethic legitimizes wealth by seeing it as a sign of divine favor; in other
Christian cultures, a simpler lifestyle is considered to be closer to God.
❖ Differences in values, beliefs and practices lead to differences in what kinds of appeals
motivate people.
Basis for recognition Individual achievement Group achievement Individual status, status of class/society
Nonverbal communication
Learning about nonverbal language can help us project the image we want to project and make us
more aware of the signals we are interpreting.
Nonverbal symbol may have more than one meaning in a single culture, but even more common
across cultures.
An Arab student assumed that his US roommate disliked him intensely because the US student sat
around the room with his feet up on the furniture, sole toward the Arab roommate. Arab culture sees
the foot in general and the sole in particular as unclean; showing the sole of the foot is an insult.
BODY LANGUAGE
• Leaning forward with uncrossed arms and legs with arms away from the body
• Leaning back, arms and legs crossed or close together, and hands in pockets.
Eye contact
➢ Puerto Rican children are taught not to meet the eyes of adults
➢ In Korea, prolonged eye contact is considered rude. The lower-ranking person is expected to
look down first.
➢ In Muslim countries, women and men are not supposed to have eye contact.
Gestures
• The “thumbs up” sign that means “good work” or “go ahead” in the US and most of western
Europe is a vulgar insult in Greece.
• The circle formed with the thumb and first finger that means OK in the US is obscene in
Southern Italy an can mean “you’re worth nothing” in France and Belgium.
Space
• Most North Americans, North Europeans, and Asians want a bigger personal space than do
Latin Americans, French, Italians, and Arabs.
• People of the same age and sex take less personal space than do mixed-age or mixed-sex
groups
• Latin Americans will stand closer to people of the same sex than North Americans would,
but North Americans stand closer to people of the opposite sex.
Touch
• Repeated studies have shown that babies need to be touched to grow and thrive and that
older people are healthier mentally and physically if they are touched.
• Some people shake hands in greeting but otherwise don’t like to be touched at all , except
by family members or loved ones
• Touch is interpreted as power. More powerful people touch less powerful people
• Most parts of North America allow opposite-sex couples to hold hands in public but frown
on the same behavior in same sex couple; people in Asia, Middle East and South America
allow male friends or female friends to hold hands in public but not for friends of the
opposite sex
• US offices: the size, placement and privacy of one’s office connote status; large corner
offices have the highest status; an individual office with door that closes connotes more
status than a desk in a common area.
• Japanese offices: they see private offices as ”inappropriate and inefficient”; only the very
highest executives and directors have private offices and even they will also have desks in
the common areas.
• Japanese homes: have smaller rooms than most US homes; have less furniture and arrange
it differently (small table in the center of the room, while western furniture lines the walls
leaving a large space at the center)
• US: a person sitting at the head of the table is assumed to be the group’s leader.
Time
• In the US, they keep time by the calendar and the clock; other cultures may keep time by the
seasons and the moon, the sun, internal “body clocks,” or a personal feeling that “the time is
right”.
• North Americans who believe that “time is money” are often frustrated in negotiations with
people who take a much more leisurely approach. (many cultures want to establish a
personal relationship before they decide whether to do business with each other)
Clothes carry nonverbal messages of success, prestige, and competence. Clothing denotes not only
status but also occupational group( uniform, badges).
Colors: Americans wear black to funerals, while brides wear white; in pre-communist China and
some South American tribes, white is the color of mourning; purple flowers are given to the dead in
Mexico; Korea use red ink to record deaths but never to write living people.
Youth is valued in the US, some color their hair and undergo facelift; in Japan, grey hair is a sign of
wisdom and respect.
Height connotes status in many parts of the world: executive offices are usually on the top floors
while the underlings work below; studies show that employers hire the taller applicant over the
shorter one with the same qualifications; but some perceive tall people to be slow.
ORAL COMMUNICATION
Conversational style
• Your answers to the following questions reveal your own conversational style:
1. How long a pause tells you that it’s your turn to speak
2. Do you see interruption as rude? Or do you say things while other people are still talking to
show that you are interested?
3. Do you show interest by asking lots of questions? or do you see questions as intrusive?
There’s no better or worse conversational style, but people with different conversational styles may
feel uncomfortable without knowing why:
• People who talk quickly may be frustrated by someone who talks slowly
• Younger generations often use a rising inflection on statements as well as questions . They
see this as gentler and more polite. – Their senior counterparts see this speech pattern as
hesitant.
• Women are more likely to nod and say yes or mm hmm than men are. (Women – I’m
listening, go on; Men- I agree)
ex. Someone good enough to play at Wimbledon may say he/she “plays a little tennis”
ex. A US businessman negotiating with a German said “I know it’s impossible, but we can do
it”
Compliments
❖ The kinds of statements that people interpret as compliments and socially correct way to
respond to compliments also vary among cultures:
Silence
• Americans have difficulty doing business in Japan because they do not realize that silence
almost always means that the Japanese do not like the Americans’ ideas.
• During a period of military tension, Greek traffic air controllers responded with silence when
Egyptian planes requested permission to land. The Greeks intended silence as refusal; the
Egyptians interpreted silence as consent. Several people were killed when the Greeks fired
on the planes as they approached the runway.
• Women sometimes use silence to respond to comments they find offensive, hoping that
silence will signal their lack of appreciation. Men may think that silence means appreciation.
Cultural Contrasts in Business Introductions
Generation Y
Gen Next
• Some Millenials shake their heads at Baby Boomers’ mandate that employees start at entry-
level jobs or work beyond 40hrs a week; being rich is their most important life goal.
• No generation has been as plugged in as the Millenials, who are accomplished multi-taskers.
They show great facility in gathering information.
• Supervisors relying on “snail mail”, voice mail, or even mail messages to contact Millenial
employees may find they’re better off texting or adopting newer technologies.
❖ People are individuals, as much as they are members of groups, and for many Millenials,
Gen-Xers, and Baby Boomers, intergenerational conflicts are non-existent.
1. Be aware that your preferred values and behaviors are influenced by culture and are not
necessarily “right”
• Make a special effort to avoid phrases that could be seen as arrogant or uncaring.
• Cultural mistakes float away in the air; those made in writing are permanently recorded.
Cultural Contrasts in Written Persuasive Documents
Future relationship
Closing Specific request Desire to maintain harmony
personal greeting
Politeness, indirectness,
values Efficiency, directness, action Status, continuation
relationship
Bias-free language
• Language that does not discriminate against people on the basis of sex, physical condition,
race, age, or any category.
Nonsexist language
• Make sure your writing is free from sexism in four areas: words and phrases, job titles,
pronouns, and courtesy titles.
• Not every containing man is sexist. Manager is not sexist, it comes from the Latin manus,
meaning hand.
Biased: You and your husband or wife are cordially invited to the dinner.
Better: You and your guest are cordially invited to the dinner.
Job titles
• Use neutral titles which do not imply that a job is held only by men or only by women.
• While some job titles reflect gender stereotypes, many are already neutral: accountant,
banker, doctor, engineer, inspector, manager, nurse, pilot, secretary, technician, etc.
ex. Supervisors must certify that the timesheets for their departments are correct.
2. Use second-person/you
ex. You must certify that the time sheet for your department is correct.
3. Substitute an article (a, an, the) for the pronoun, or revise the sentence so that the pronoun is
unnecessary.
ex. The supervisor must certify that the time sheet for the department is correct.
4. When you must focus on the action of an individual, use pronoun pairs.
ex. The supervisor must certify that the time sheet for his or her deparyment is correct.
When you mention these characteristics, give them for everyone in your story – not just the non-
Caucasian or non-young-to-middle-aged adults.
Oriental – Asian
❖ Older people and mature customers are more generally accepted terms than senior
citizens or golden agers.
She is an intelligent black woman. – suggests that most black women are stupid
• Check visuals for possible bias. The general impression should suggest that diversity is
welcome and normal.
If all men appear in business suits and the women in maid’s uniforms, the pictures are sexist.
If the only blacks and Latinos pictures are factory workers, the photos show racism.
CULTURAL DIFFERENCES
▪ Ethnocentrism is the tendency to see your own culture as superior to all others. It is
a key characteristic of failed intercultural communication efforts.
▪ Cultural relativism is understanding the behavior of other groups on the basis of the
context in which the behavior occurs rather than from your own frame of reference.
In short, it is the acceptance of other cultural groups as equal in value to one’s own.
• US/Europe vs. Saudi Arabia- Showing the sole of a shoe or crossing legs
“Effective communication and the ability to understand cultural differences are skills that are too
frequently deficient both in students and in educators”
▪ The melting-pot philosophy is the view that different cultures should be assimilated
into the dominant culture. Cultural differences were submerged and eradicated as
quickly as possible rather than accepted by the parent culture and allowed to thrive.
▪ Cultural pluralism advocates respect for uniqueness, tolerance for difference, and
adherence to the principle of cultural relativity. In a multicultural society, every
group is believed to do things differently, and that’s okay.
LANGUAGE REGISTERS
A variety of language used in a particular social setting, using certain words, phrases and
contractions that are not normally used in other settings- or if they did, they may sound strange or
out of place. (Youssef, 2015)
▪ Formal
▪ Consultative
▪ Casual
▪ Intimate
Private and interpersonal
▪ Aggressive
▪ Passive
▪ Submissive
▪ Assertive
❑ FORMAL REGISTER
❑ INFORMAL REGISTER
❑ NEUTRAL REGISTER