Title: Culture and Culture Learning Process
1Culture and Culture Learning Process
Chapter Three
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2Defining Culture
- Culture is socially constructed
- Culture is shared by its members
- Culture is both objective and subjective
- Culture may be defined by geography, ethnicity,
language, religion, history, or other important
social characteristics - Culture is socially transmitted
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3Culture in Everyday Use
- Terms commonly used to describe social groups
that share important cultural elements are - Subculture
- Microculture
- Ethnic group
- Minority group
- People of color
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4Subculture
- Some examples of subcultures are
- Corporate culture
- Adolescent culture
- Drug culture
- Culture of poverty
- Academic culture
-
- Subcultures share characteristics that
distinguish them from the larger society in which
they are embedded these characteristics may be a
set of ideas and practices or some demographic
similarity
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5Microculture
- Microcultures also share distinguishing
characteristics, but tend to be more closely
linked to the larger society, often serving in
mediating roles
- Some examples of microcultures are
- The family
- The workplace
- The classroom
- The school
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6Ethnic Group
- Some examples of ethnic groups are
- Irish American
- Native American
- Lebanese American
- African American
- Members of ethnic groups share a common
heritage, a common history, and often a common
language loyalty to ones ethnic identity can be
very powerful
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7Minority Group
- Members of minority groups occupy a
subordinate position in a society they may be
separated from the dominant society by
disapproval and discrimination
- Some examples of minority groups in the United
States are - Racial minorities
- Women
- People with disabilities
- Language minorities
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8People of Color
- This term refers to members of non-white
minority groups it is often preferred to the
term minority group, but does not clearly
identify specific loyalties
- For example, native Spanish-speakers may identify
themselves as Hispanic people of color, but their
cultural identity may be Puerto Rican, Mexican,
or Salvadoran
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9Culture Solves Common Human Problems
- Means of communicationlanguage
- Determination of powerstatus
- Regulation of reproductionfamily
- Systems of rulesgovernment
- Relationship to naturemagic, myth, religion,
science - Conception of timetemporality
- Significant lessonshistory
- Cultural representationsmusic, story, dance, art
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10The Contributions of Cross-Cultural Psychology
- While sociology and anthropology study groups,
and psychology studies individuals,
cross-cultural psychology studies the
interactions that occur when individuals from
different groups meet - Cross-cultural psychologists may approach this
problem from one or both of two perspectives -
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11Culture Is Both Objective and Subjective
- Objective culture
- Physical artifacts
- Language
- Clothing
- Food
- Decorative objects
- Subjective culture
- Attitudes
- Values
- Norms of behavior
- Social roles
- Meaning of objective cultural elements
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12Two Ways to Understand Culture
- Culture-Specific Approaches
- Help to understand a particular cultural group,
for example, Native Americans - Does not account for in-group differences
- Culture-General Approaches
- Help to understand how culture works in
peoples lives a universal perspective - Suggests questions to ask of any culture
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13The Culture-Learning Process
- Sources of Cultural Knowledge and Identity
- Individuals in complex societies like the United
States tend to identify themselves as belonging
to various cultural and social groups, depending
on their personal biographies - There are twelve major sources of cultural
identity that influence teaching and learning
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14Cultural Knowledge Is Transmitted by People and
Experiences
- We gain the knowledge that contributes to our
cultural identities through interaction with
various socializing agents - These agents mediate our cultural knowledge in
particular ways
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15How We Learn Culture Socialization
- Three stages of socialization
- Primary socializationof infants and young
children by the family and early caregivers - Secondary socializationin childhood and
adolescence, by the school, the religious
affiliation, the peer group, the neighborhood,
and the media - Adult socializationthe workplace, travel, and
assuming new roles in life
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16Some Results of Socialization
- Because the process of socialization is
intended to cause individuals to internalize
knowledge, attitudes, values, and beliefs, it has
several results which should not be surprising
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17Ethnocentrism
- The tendency people have to evaluate others
according to their own standards and experience - While this tendency can help bind people
together, it can also present serious obstacles
to cross-cultural interactions
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18Perception
- Stimuli received by our senses would overwhelm us
if it werent somehow reduced thus, - What we perceivewhat we see, hear, feel, taste,
and smellis shaped in part by our culture
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19Categorization
- Categorization is the cognitive process by which
all human beings simplify their world by grouping
similar stimuli - Our categories give meaning to our perceptions
- A prototype image best characterizes the meaning
of a category - Example for the category bird, we usually
think of robins, not chickens
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20Stereotypes
- Stereotypes are socially constructed categories
of people - They usually obscure differences within groups
- They are frequently negative and play to
ethnocentric ideas of the other
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21Some Limits on Socialization
- While socialization is a powerful process, it
does have limits. - It is limited by a childs physical limits
- It is limited because it is never finished, and
thus never absolute it can be changed - It is limited because human beings are not
passive recipients, but also actors in their
environments
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22Understanding Cultural Differences
- In a complex, pluralistic society like the United
States, all people are in some ways multicultural - While we all draw on common sources of knowledge,
we are socialized by different agents, with
different perspectives on that knowledge
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23Variations in Cultural Environments
- Although the sources of cultural identity are the
same in all societies, the content in those
sources may be different - Moreover, each community varies considerably in
the number and character of its socializing
agents - cont.
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24- Given this complexity, it is wise to consider the
possible cultural elements in our own lives and
in the lives of others - Despite this potential for variation among
individuals and within groups, there are
similarities or generalizations that can be made
about individuals who identify with particular
groups cont.
Variations in Cultural Environments
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25Variations in Cultural Environments
- What is needed is a more sophisticated
- way of looking at diversity
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26Such an approach to diversity involves several
elements
- Questioning the dominant model, or the
prototype image
- Looking for commonalities among our differences
- Thinking of differences as resources to learn from
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27Something to Think About
-
-
- By ignoring the cultural and social forms
that are authorized by youth and simultaneously
empower and disempower them, educators risk
complicity in silencing and negating their
students. - This is unwittingly accomplished by refusing to
recognize the importance of those sites and
social practices outside of schools that actively
shape student experiences and through which
students often define and construct their sense
of identity, politics, and culture. - Giroux and Simon
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Human Diversity in Education, 5/e