In
my life, I interact with and communicate with a variety of individuals belonging
to different groups and cultures on a regular basis. When I thought about the ways in which I
communicate with them, I realized that I adapt my style of communication
according to context and who I am speaking to. At times, while I make a conscious
decision to alter how I communicate, at other times I do it unconsciously. For
example, although I would communicate differently with my parents than I would
with close friends, the change in style happens automatically. However, if I
were communicating with a new parent attending my preschool program, first of
all I would alter my style of communicate to be professional in comparison to
the casual language I would use with friends and family and secondly I would
listen to the individual, ask questions and look for non-verbal cues before
making a conscious decision on the appropriate style of communication. Even
among friends, due to difference in cultural contexts, how I communicate with
friends in Sri Lanka differs to how I communicate with friends in the US.
My
ultimate goal in all my communications is to ensure that I am being culturally sensitive
towards everyone I communicate with and being respectful towards all. In order to achieve that, both in my
professional life as well as in my personal life, I have realized that I need
to make conscious decisions about what I should say or not say so as not to
offend anyone as a result of differences in race, religion, political
affiliation, sexual orientation, varying abilities, cultural traditions and
beliefs etc. For example when I recently met a close friend’s husband for the
first time, I realized that I couldn’t communicate with him the same way I
could with my friend. As we conversed I learned we had very different views on
some topics and had to be cautious and conscious of what I said so as not to
offend him. For example, unlike my friend who is Christian, he was an atheist and
I being of the Christian Faith myself, I realized it would be best if we avoided
discussing religion so no one would be left feeling offended in anyway.
This week’s resources (Gonzalez-Mena,
J., 2010) taught me
several strategies that I believe would help me be a more effective communicator
when interacting with others from different groups and cultures:
-
Acknowledge the fact that the way we see
the world is not the only way or the right way and take the time to see things and
understand things through the eyes of others before rushing to judgment.
-
Take the time to be aware of my own
non-verbal behaviors as well as take the time to understand the meaning behind
the behaviors of others.
-
Not make assumptions about cultural groups
or feel as if I can predict someone’s behavior just because I have some
knowledge of their culture.
References:
Gonzalez-Mena,
J. (2010). 50 strategies for communicating and working with diverse families.
Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc.
Hi Keshika,
ReplyDeleteIn response to your post, it was one that I enjoyed reading this week. It was very informative, interesting and very appealing.Its very good when we are able to fully analyze ourselves and behaviors in other to communicate with others from various cultural background. Once again great post
Hi Keshika,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your post. It is very insightful. Thanks for sharing.
Amy
Hi Keshika,
ReplyDeleteYour post was very interesting I especially liked the strategies that you learned from the resources. Good post!
LaRoyia
Hello Keshika,
ReplyDeleteI agree with your viewpoints regarding changing your communication in order to be sensitive to another's perspective in order to not offend and to be respectful of them. It is hard to find a common ground sometimes with others who have such diverse viewpoints, but both participants should always be mutually respective on the other.
I like that you discussed non-verbal communication because it is a very big part of communication. I read somewhere that only 7% of what we say we say with words and 93% we say non-verbally. I have spent the last couple of weeks really watching people communicate but focusing on what they are saying non-verbally. Thanks for your post!
ReplyDelete