My Cultural Upbringing Culture for me goes back to the beginning of my life, where I learned that boys don’t play with dolls or makeup. Fighting was the only way to solve a problem and to respect your elders no matter what. Homosexuality for males would get you out cast from the family and upon entering any home you had to remove your foot wear. “Societies exert a great deal of pressure on people to conform to the way things are done in that culture” (Sole, 2011, section 6.2). That type of pressure
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------------------------------------------------- Multicultural Competency Paper Dr. Rawls, Andre Multicultural Psychology / 535 May 07, 2014 Multicultural Diversity The information in the following paper will include answers to the following questions: what biases, perceptions, attitudes and beliefs might I hold about culturally different groups? How might these attitudes or perceptions influence my interaction with individuals who are culturally different from myself? How knowledgeable
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A religion is an organized collection of beliefs, cultural systems, and world views that relate humanity to an order of existence.[note 1] Many religions have narratives, symbols, and sacred histories that aim to explain the meaning of life and/or to explain the origin of life or the Universe. From their beliefs about the cosmos and human nature, people may derive morality, ethics, religious laws or a preferred lifestyle. According to some estimates, there are roughly 4,200 religions in the world
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Choose one of the frameworks for categorizing and comparing cultures from your reading. Summarize the framework and its main components for categorizing culture. Explain how you may implement this framework in a current or future professional setting. Explain the potential strengths and pitfalls of using this framework within your professional setting. The Kluckhohn and Strodtbeck framework identifies six dimensions of culture, problems that all societies face. The framework then offers three
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Cultural Relativism Cultural relativism, or CR, is the view that good and bad are determined by the beliefs of a society, or in other words, moral principles are based upon the culture’s collective norms of what is good and bad. Normality is culturally defined. This implies that morality is a social construct and therefore the moral codes you hold, are a direct reflection of the societies codes in which you live. Further, the morals held by your society are not objective facts, but rather, varied
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Cultural diversity is the quality of diverse or different cultures, as opposed to monoculture, as in the global monoculture, or a homogenization of cultures, akin to cultural decay. The phrase cultural diversity can also refer to having different cultures respect each other's differences. The phrase "cultural diversity" is also sometimes used to mean the variety of human societies or cultures in a specific region, or in the world as a whole. The culturally destructive action of globalization is often
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Cultural Competence Tara Culberson Texas Tech University Healthcare is universal but there are many different views of how healthcare should be administered and given. Different cultures vary in the beliefs surrounding healthcare and the people of those cultures have norms that they believe should be followed when receiving healthcare. Cultural competence can only be administered when the healthcare professionals are educated and value the beliefs of their patients. Joey Guzman is a 19-year-old
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High Vs. Low Context High Context vs. Low Context Cultures There are many distinct differences between high context and low context cultures. While many cultures are noticeably high context or low context they are not that exclusively. Many cultures have certain aspects of the other; this is also true with hearing and deaf cultures. I will explain the differences between the two then how they intertwine. A high context culture is one that contains many close connections and may be difficult to enter
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Editorial from Hanna Cho The text ,,Chicken Tikka Massala‘‘ is an extract from a speech given by Robin Cook on 19th April, 2001 and deals with the topic of Britishness, reflecting different aspects of multiculturalism. Cook starts off with the statement that the British are not a race, but a group of countless different races. Then he goes on talking about the history of Britain and mentions several ethnic groups that had an impact on Britain. For example, he mentions Richard the Lionheart
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Reflection Paper Your name Institutional Affiliations History has been in existence since the formation of the earth and existence of mankind. The life and form of human beings have evolved over the years. While all human beings have same origin historically, evolution and development of human life and their living conditions led to inequality among different groups of people and different parts of the world. As a result, there are many pieces of
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