Week 6 Flashcards

1
Q

What is culture?

A

The shared set of values, beliefs, attitudes and behaviours typifying a group of people or population - the things we learn from the people around us, family, friends, community

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2
Q

What is enculturation?

A

Process of absorbing and internalising the rules of the culture we live in

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3
Q

Culture plays an important role in?

A

Communication

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4
Q

People from one culture may vary to a greater extent from each other than?

A

The whole group differs from another cultural group

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5
Q

What is an individualistic culture?

A

Places greater perceptions of self and I over perceptions of we, us or the group. Traits include being independent and autonomous - commonly western societies

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6
Q

What is an collectivist culture?

A

Places greater value on perceptions of we, s or the group over perceptions of self and I - resources are shared

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7
Q

What is intrapersonal?

A

Pertaining to factors that exist within a person. Eg gender or age

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8
Q

What are microsystems? (proximate culture)

A

Family, school, neighborhood - systems that are closest to you

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9
Q

Whare are macrosystem? (distal culture)

A

Collectivist or individualistic orientations, laws & policies, history, social conditions- systems that are further away

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10
Q

Australia is a ___ nation

A

Multicultural

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11
Q

What is cultural competence?

A

Understanding your own culture and the culture of others and having the skills to adapt your practice to be applicable to the culture of the person with whom you are interacting

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12
Q

What is ethnocentrism?

A

The belief that the cultural group you identify with is superior to all other cultural groups

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13
Q

What is xenophobia?

A

The fear of people from another culture

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14
Q

Three areas of the concept of competency?

A

Awareness - reflects a persons conscious understanding that there are intricate cultural issues that have a variable impact on people
Knowledge - refers to the direct facts you have learnt about a particular culture
Skill - refers to the tools in our toolkit that equip you to combine your awareness and knowledge to effectively communicate with a person from a different culture

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15
Q

Basic themes when communicating effectively across culture?

A

Respect, caring, listening and attending

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16
Q

Can non-verbal communication be interpreted different across cultures?

A

Yes

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17
Q

Do all cultures believe looking someone in the eye is ok?

A

No, some cultures believe it is inappropriate

18
Q

What issues do minority groups face that impact on the way we communicate?

A

Stereotypes and myths (discrimination), concepts of health and ill-health (spiritual origin), kinship and traditional law, gender issues (mens and womens business) wide diversity of cultures and language groups, disadvantages (access, employment, education, justice) and multi-generational legacies of trauma and grief

19
Q

What are the two main categories of behaviour?

A

Overt and covert

20
Q

What is overt behaviour?

A

Those which are directly observable, such as talking, running, scratching or blinking

21
Q

What is convert behaviour?

A

Those which go on inside the skin.

22
Q

What are the four communication styles?

A

Formal, informal, direct and indirect

23
Q

What are the characteristics of formal communication?

A

Values silence, physical closeness, soft eye contact, formal greeting and high context

24
Q

What are the characteristics of informal communication?

A

Avoid silence, physical distance, direct eye contact, animated body language, short greeting and low context

25
Q

What are the characteristics of direct communication?

A

Individual, self asserting, use I, focus on what is said and disagreement valued

26
Q

What are the characteristics of indirect communication?

A

No personal “face”, unassuming, uses we, focus on what is implied and harmony values

27
Q

Meaning of the message - what are the two types of context communication?

A

High and low

28
Q

What is low context communication?

A

Meaning is conveyed verbally and is explicit

29
Q

What is high context communication?

A

Meaning is conveyed by situation and context - what is not being said

30
Q

What are the two ways time can be seen in regards to communication?

A

Sequential or synchronic

31
Q

What is sequential communication?

A

Time is seen as a linear commodity, to spend, save or waste - people give their full attention to one topic after another

32
Q

What is synchronic communication?

A

Time is a constant flow to be experienced in the moment - the flow of time is viewed as a sort of circle, with the past, present and future all interrelated

33
Q

What are the two types of emotional language?

A

Affective and neutral

34
Q

What is affective language?

A

Cultures with high affect show their feelings plainly by laughing, smiling, grimacing, scowling, shouting etc

35
Q

What is neutral langugae?

A

Neutral cultures do not telegraph their feelings but keep them carefully controlled and subdued

36
Q

What is the formula for impending communication?

A

Verbal + non-vernal + power + context = loss of meaning

37
Q

What are the six models relevant to cultural training?

A
  1. Cultural awareness
  2. Cultural competence
  3. Cultural safety
  4. Cultural security
  5. Cultural respect
  6. Transcultural care
38
Q

What is cultural awareness?

A

Generally aims to increase participants awareness of cultural, social and historical factors applying to Aboriginal and TSI peoples generally and to their groups and communities

39
Q

What is transcultural care?

A

Formal areas of study and practice in the cultural beliefs, values and life ways of diverse cultures and in the use of knowledge to provide cultural-specific or cultural-universal care to individuals, families and groups of particular cultures

40
Q

What is cultural respect?

A

Upholding the rights of Aboriginal and TSI peoples to maintain, protect and develop their culture and achieve equitable health outcomes

41
Q

What is cultural safety?

A

Aims to directly address the effects of colonialism within the dominant health systems by focusing on the level of cultural safety felt by an individual seeking health care

42
Q

What is cultural security?

A

Empathises that the responsibility for the provision of culturally secure health services lies with the system as a whole rather than the individual health workers