Why is cultural competence important? How is culture like an iceberg? Briefly explain each level of cultural competence. Why is cultural competence important in understanding and appreciating culture?
Why is cultural competence important? How is culture like an iceberg? Briefly explain each level of cultural competence. Why is cultural competence important in understanding and appreciating culture?
Why is cultural competence important? How is culture like an iceberg? Briefly explain each level of cultural competence. Why is cultural competence important in understanding and appreciating culture?
Why is cultural competence important? How is culture like an iceberg? Briefly explain each level of cultural competence. Why is cultural competence important in understanding and appreciating culture?
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On Cultural Competence
1. Why is cultural competence important?
Cultural competence is the ability of a person to effectively interact, work, and develop meaningful relationships with people of various cultural backgrounds. It encourages the acknowledgement and acceptance of differences in appearance, behavior and culture. Gaining cultural competence is a lifelong process of increasing self-awareness, developing social skills and behaviors around diversity, and gaining the ability to advocate for others. It goes beyond tolerance, which implies that one is simply willing to overlook differences. Instead, it includes recognizing and respecting diversity through our words and actions in all contexts. Today’s world is diverse and global. Technology has made interactions across cultures around the world a very common experience. Recognizing our increasingly globalized society, many industries and professional organizations are emphasizing the importance of cultural competence as essential in today’s workplace. Successfully navigating our globalized society entails being able to understand and appreciate diversity in its many forms, and to effectively engage and communicate with people from different cultures.
2. How is culture like an iceberg?
When we see an iceberg, the portion which is visible above water is, in reality, only a small piece of a much larger whole. Similarly, people often think of culture as the numerous observable characteristics of a group that we can see with our eyes, be it their food, dances, music, arts, or greeting rituals. The reality, however, is that these are merely an external manifestation of the deeper and broader components of culture – the complex ideas and deeply-held preferences and priorities known as attitudes and values. Below the water line are a culture’s core values. These are primarily learned ideas of what is good, right, desirable, and acceptable, as well as what is bad, wrong, undesirable, and unacceptable. In many cases, different cultural groups share the similar core values (such as “honesty”, or “respect”, or “family”), but these are often interpreted differently in different situations and incorporated in unique ways into specific attitudes we apply in daily situations. Ultimately, these internal forces become visible to the casual observer in the form of observable behaviors, such as the words we use, the way we act, the laws we enact, and the ways we communicate with each other. So, like an iceberg, there are things that we can see and describe easily… but there are also many deeply rooted ideas that we can only understand by analyzing values, studying institutions, and in many cases, reflecting on our own core values.
3. Briefly explain each level of cultural competence.
Cross (1989) states that cultural competence is a complex framework, and that there is a tendency for systems and organizations to want a textbook solution, a quick fix, a recipe, or a “how to”, step-by-step approach. The complexity of achieving cultural competence does not allow for such an easy solution. The Cross framework emphasizes that the process of achieving cultural competency occurs along a continuum and sets forth six stages including: 1) cultural destructiveness, 2) cultural incapacity, 3) cultural blindness, 4) cultural pre- competence, 5) cultural competency, and 6) cultural proficiency. Cultural destructiveness is characterized by attitudes, policies, structures, and practices within a system or organization that are destructive to a cultural group. Cultural incapacity is the lack of capacity of systems and organizations to respond effectively to the needs, interests, and preferences of culturally and linguistically diverse groups. Cultural blindness is an expressed philosophy of viewing and treating all people as the same. Cultural pre-competence is a level of awareness within systems or organizations of their strengths and areas for growth to respond effectively to culturally and linguistically diverse populations. Cultural competence means to demonstrate an acceptance and respect for cultural differences. Cultural proficiency is when systems and organizations hold culture in high esteem and uses this as a foundation to guide all of their endeavors.
4. Why is cultural competence important in understanding and appreciating culture?
Cultural competence is about our will and actions to build understanding between people, to be respectful and open to different cultural perspectives, strengthen cultural security and work towards equality in opportunity. Relationship building is fundamental to cultural competence and is based on the foundations of understanding each other’s expectations and attitudes, and subsequently building on the strength of each other’s knowledge, using a wide range of community members and resources to build on their understandings. Underlying cultural competence are the principles of trust, respect for diversity, equity, fairness, and social justice. Culture is the fundamental building block of identity and the development of a strong cultural identity is essential to an individual’s healthy sense of who they are and where they belong. It is more than being respectful of the cultures represented in the service or even the community. It is much more than awareness of cultural differences, more than knowledge of the customs and values of those different to our own. Cultural competence is the ability to understand, communicate with and effectively interact with people across cultures. Principles relevant to cultural competence include fostering secure, respectful, and reciprocal relationships, partnerships, high expectations, and equity and respect for diversity. We are all born belonging to a culture, which is not only influenced by traditional practices, heritage, and ancestral knowledge, but also by the experiences, values and beliefs of individual families and communities. Respecting diversity means valuing and reflecting the practices, values and beliefs of families and communities.