Title: Griffin_04
1The role of culture
Overview
2Please send me (john.lehman_at_uaf.edu) email
containing the following
- Subject ICC class
- Your name in Chinese
- Your Chinese name in Pinyin
- Your English name if you have one
- Your email address
- Please put the last 4 on one line with commas
between them - Xxx, lei yuehan, John Lehman,john.lehman_at_uaf.edu
3Please email me (john.lehman_at_uaf.edu) me the
following separated by commas)
- Your Chinese name
- Your Chinese name in pinyin
- Your English name if you have one
- your email address
- E.g. I would put xxx, Lei Yuehan, ohn Lehman,
john.lehman_at_uaf.edu
4Learning Objectives 1
- Discuss the primary characteristics of culture
- Describe the various elements of culture and
provide examples of how they influence
international communications - Identify the means by which members of a culture
communicate with each other
5Learning Objectives 2
- Discuss how religious and other values affect the
domestic environments in which organizations
operate - Explain Hofstedes primary findings about
differences in cultural values - Explain how cultural conflicts may arise
6Culture
- Culture is the collection of values, beliefs,
behaviors, customs, and attitudes that
distinguish one society from another.
7Characteristics of Culture
- Learned behavior
- Interrelated elements
- Adaptive
- Shared
8Figure 4.1 Elements of Culture
Language
Communication
Social structure
Culture
Religion
Values/ attitudes
9Social Structure
Individuals, families, and groups
Social stratification
Social mobility
10Language
- Primary aspect of cultural groups
- Shapes how people think
- Whorf hypothesis structure of the language
influences structure of thought
11Examples Yes and No Across Cultures
- Latin America
- meaning of manana
- Japan
- meaning of yes versus yes, I understand
12Nonverbal Communication
- May account for 80-90 percent of all information
transmitted among members of a culture by means
other than language.
13Forms of Nonverbal Communication 1
- Hand gestures
- Facial expression
- Posture and stance
- Clothing/hair style
- Walking behavior
- Interpersonal distance
- Touching
- Eye contact
- Architecture/interior design
- Artifacts and non-verbal symbols
- Graphic symbols
14Forms of Nonverbal Communication 2
- Art and rhetorical forms
- Smell
- Speech rate, pitch, inflection, volume
- Color symbolism
- Synchronization of speech and movement
- Taste, symbolism of food, oral gratification
- Cosmetics
- Sound signals
- Time symbolism
- Timing and pauses
- Silence
15Gift Giving and Hospitality
- Gift-giving is a major difference between Chinese
and American culture - Expectations of hospitality also differ
16Religion
- China
- government regulation
- Europe
- government support
- US
- government hands-off
- active competition/marketing
17Values and Attitudes
- Values are the principles and standards accepted
by the members attitudes encompass the actions,
feelings, and thoughts that result from those
values.
18Values and Attitudes
Time
Age
Education
Status
19Theories of Culture
- Halls Low-Context, High-Context Approach
- Cultural Cluster Approach, e.g.
- Greater China cultural area
- 9 nations of North America
- Hofstedes Five Dimensions
20Halls Low-Context High-Context Approach
- An approach to understanding communication
based on the relative emphasis on verbal and
nonverbal cues to transmit meaning
21Figure 4.2 High- and Low-Context Cultures
German Swiss Scandinavian U.S./
Canadian British Italian Spanish Greek Arab Vietna
mese Japanese Korean Chinese
Low Context
High Context
22Hofstedes Five Dimensions
Social Orientation
Power Orientation
Uncertainty Orientation
Goal Orientation
Time Orientation
23Social Orientation
Individualism Collectivism
Relative importance of the interests of the
individual versus interests of the group
24Power Orientation
Power Respect Power Tolerance
Appropriateness of power/authority within
organizations
25Figure 4.4 Social Orientation and Power
Orientation Patterns
26Uncertainty Orientation
Uncertainty Uncertainty Acceptance
Avoidance
Emotional response to uncertainty and change
27Goal Orientation
Aggressive Passive
What motivates people to achieve different goals
28Time Orientation
Long-term Short-term outlook
outlook
The extent to which members of a culture adopt a
long-term or a short-term outlook on work and
life
29The nature of communication
30The person who sends the communication
- Has a message
- The message is influenced by cultural context
- He encodes the message
- into one or more media
31Encoding
32The person who receives the communication
- receives the message
- from one or more media
- influenced by cultural context
- She decodes the message
33Decoding
34Sources of misunderstanding
- Poorly thought out message
- Poor encoding (e.g. bad writing)
- Unclear cultural context
- Inconsistent media (e.g. words do not match body
language) - Poor transmission
35Sources of misunderstanding 2
- Poor reception (did not hear clearly)
- Inconsistent media interpretation
- Unclear cultural context
- Different cultural context
- Poor decoding (e.g. did not understand)
- Preconceived answer