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Cross-Cultural Management EssentialsLaajuus (5 cr)

Code: HB00CD21

Credits

5 op

Teaching language

  • English

Responsible person

  • Barbara Crawford

Objective

The objective of the course

CCM Essentials is a foundational course regarding the multitude of components embedded in cross-cultural management. Building each week on new aspects of cross-cultural management and/or developmental elements of a multicultural identity, you will become aware of how the role of culture in human society has socialized you as an individual in ways both conscious and unconscious, as well as been exposed to ways to adapt oneself to be more culturally aware and sensitive to the influence of culture on many aspects of life and business.

After completing this course, you will be more aware of (1) how the multiple aspects of culture (defined quite broadly) impact business perspectives and interaction, whether that is on in international level (i.e., you are outside your home culture) or in regard to multicultural aspects of your home environment, and (2) your own personal perspectives, perceptions, and behaviors as a cultural being so that you can be more successful in the outcomes of point 1.

Course competence

Internationality and Multiculturalism: You will learn about and reflect on various aspects of culture and cultural practices that support your development within an international business environment and assists you in developing empathy toward and appreciation of members of other cultures.

The learning objectives of the course

At the end of this course, you will be more familiar with the many components that impact cultures (group-level) and your own identity (individual-level). Additionally, your increased awareness of the aspects of context, and the interplay between the components and the context, provides the opportunity to understand the ongoing process of personal development and skills development as a business professional.

Content

Areas of exploration in the class include values, cultural dimensions, interaction and meta-communication, the role of knowledge, among others. For IB students, the course also allows students to participate in the X-Culture Project, in which you will be placed on an international global team to propose a solution to a real-company's brief.

Qualifications

As a foundational course, no pre-requisites are established except that you must be on campus and attend class.

Assessment criteria, satisfactory (1)

Individual tasks typically are graded proportionately based on a total of 100 points for the class. Each assignment (and some points awarded for engaged participation and attendance) is allotted specific points (accompanying the assignment description in Moodle). At the end of the course, the points you accumulate will be translated into the university's scale of 0-5. In this point system, you must earn 45 points to pass the course with a 1; earning 85 points or more results in your earning a 5.

Sufficient (1): You will cognitively understand that culture is a key component of every group and society; that culture represents a vast number of components that affects each individual member of a culture; and the culture is a group construct that does not exist on the individual level.

Satisfactory (2): From the theory and related class activities, you will demonstrate an understanding of the difference between the group-level construct of culture and the personal-level construct of identity and how each impacts you and others as individual beings and members of groups. You will be able to articulate the multiple ways culture is expressed and impacts perceptions and behaviors.

Assessment criteria, good (3)

Good (3): The key knowledge you can demonstrate, both in behavior and assignments, are the group-level understanding of culture, the role of cultural dimensions in group-level norms and expectations, the areas of values and identity as your personal expressions of socialization, and the importance of intercultural interaction and multicultural contexts.

Very Good (4): As a result of exposure to theory, activities, and multicultural groupwork, you can identify how culture is formed and expressed at the group level, and how that group construct influences and impacts individuals at the personal level. You are able to analyze the various dimensions (cultural level) and values (personal level) as they apply to your life and those within interaction and group situations. You are aware that many aspects of culture are automated as a result of socialization, but also recognize that you have the ability to avoid automated responses. Through reflective writing, you can demonstrate insight into your own behaviors and choices in multiple relationships and contexts.

Assessment criteria, excellent (5)

Excellent (5): You will comprehend and demonstrate how culture as a group-level construct is intimately enmeshed with one's personality and socialized experiences and understand how this construct is influenced by context. Additionally, you will be able to recognize how culture influences--consciously and unconsciously--your perceptions and automated behaviors, but also will be able to self-reflect and self-moderate to make informed behavioral choices when interacting with multiple culturally influenced dissimilarities and contexts, in group work, in leadership roles, and in multicultural environments. As a result of your reflective thinking and writing, you can recognize your own personal development as an intercultural being.

Materials

The materials needed to complete the course will be either given to you by the teacher or you will gather yourself from peer-reviewed research that will be properly cited/referenced.

By design, you will not be provided with a syllabus for the course; the course proceeds with information only a week or two in advance. Among other skills this perspective provides is tolerance for ambiguity, an essential intercultural skill in which people must operate in environments and contexts where not everything is apparent. For the IB degree students' implementations, the X-Culture project dates will be scheduled prior to the start of the course and the content of the course revolves around those firm dates.

Further information

Your attendance in class is essential for your ability to complete the assignments and tasks--and to personally benefit. The course builds over the semester, and thus multiple absences will jeopardize your ability to complete the course.

The information presented here is appropriate for all implementations of CCM Essentials except the implementation reserved for IB degree students. The latter group only will participate in the X-Culture project.