culture: basic concepts Flashcards
Culture
The shared attitudes, values, expectations, habits, customs, and rituals of a group that are transmitted from one generation to the next and provide members with rules for living and adapting to the environment
Multicultural Counseling
The awareness and incorporation into the counseling process of diverse cultural identities. All counseling can be viewed as multicultural counseling in that all helping relationships involve two or more individuals with different worldviews as a result of ethnicity, race, social class, gender, sexual orientation, and religion. Often referred to as the “fourth force” in counseling.
cultural identity
Derived from an individual’s sense of belonging to specific subgroups of various cultural groups or categories.
cultural encapsulation
Occurs when the dominant cultural view is regarded in counseling as more important than minority values. Cultural encapsulation can lead counselors to evaluate and treat diverse clients from the dominant perspective, disregarding clients’ individual cultures and values.
Multicultural and Social Justice Counseling Competencies (MSJCC)
four developmental domains of counselor self-awareness, counseling relationship, client worldview, and counseling and advocacy interventions. client. For the first three domains, guidelines in terms of attitudes and beliefs, knowledge, skills, and action are provided. The fourth specifies that social action should be employed at six levels: intrapersonal, interpersonal, institutional, community, public policy, and international.
etic
A multicultural perspective that endorses the idea of cultural neutrality and maintains that universal qualities of counseling can be generalized across cultures. Counselors who work from this perspective minimize individual cultural differences, and instead focus on basic counseling processes and strategies that can be broadly applied.
emic
A multicultural perspective that maintains counseling approaches should be specific to a client’s culture. A counselor working from an emic perspective would tailor counseling approaches that are consistent with a specific client’s worldview.
Nonverbal communication types:
- High/low-context communication
- Paralanguage
- Kinesics.
- Chronemics,
- Proxemics,
High-context communication:
involves individuals relaying messages by relying heavily on surroundings; it is assumed that “many things can be left unsaid,” and thus nonverbal cues create social harmony.
Low-context communication:
refers to individuals communicating primarily verbally to express thoughts and feelings.
Paralanguage:
refers to verbal cues other than words. These may be volume, tempo, prolongation of sound, disfluencies (e.g., utterances such as uh and um), and pitch (highness or lowness of one’s voice).
Kinesics:
involve postures, body movements, and positions. These might include facial expressions, eye contact and gazes, and touch.
Chronemics:
how individuals conceptualize and act toward time.
Monochromic time:
refers to an orientation toward time in a linear fashion (use of schedules and advanced planning of activities)
polychromic time:
refers to the value of time as secondary to relationships among people.