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Developing Multicultural Sensitivity
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Do whatever you need to
do to educate yourself about the community you are serving to rid
yourself of societally-constructed stereotypes, e.g. through study,
observation, and asking questions. |
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Understand and accept (to a certain
extent) a community's resistance to or even rejection of your questions
and inquiries. These are defense mechanisms developed usually from
the experience of dealing wih hostile or patronizing persons in the
power group |
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Give yourself permission to feel uncomfortable
with a culture that is new to you. Understand how your own acculturation
may conflict with the values of persons from cultures other than yours.
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Approach members of the community
you are serving with openness. Avoid judgementalism even when judgements
are borne out by individuals. |
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Be mindful of the manner
in which you speak to persons from cultures different than yours,
even if you speak the same language. Does your culture language communicate
respect for their experience, their culture? Are you speaking to be
understood or to impress, confuse, or ditance yourself from their
experiences and culture. Does the superior-inferior duality operate
in your language? Are you being sensitive to persons for whom English
is not the first language or who do not speak English at all? Does
your language make people feel empowered or does it make them feel
powerless? |
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Communicate respect, i.e. an honoring
of what people have come through to have arrived at Rutgers and what
that means for them culturally. |
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Develop your listening skills. Learn
to hear what the person is saying, not what you think he/she is saying,
and not what you want to hear. How do your own cultural values interfere
with your ability to listen? |
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Never be reticent about asking if
you are being understood and if you are understanding what is being
communicated to you. |
(Copyright,
Cheryl Clarke, Rutgers University, 1990, 1996, 1999)
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