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Bennett scale

The Bennett scale, also called the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity (DMIS), was developed by Milton Bennett.[1] The framework describes the different ways in which people can react to cultural differences.[1] Bennett's initial idea was for trainers to utilize the model to evaluate trainees' intercultural awareness and help them improve intercultural sensitivity, also sometimes referred to as cultural sensitivity, which is the ability of accepting and adapting to a brand new and different culture.[2]

Organized into six stages of increasing sensitivity to difference, the DMIS identifies the underlying cognitive orientations individuals use to understand cultural difference. Each position along the continuum represents increasingly complex perceptual organizations of cultural difference, which in turn allow increasingly sophisticated experiences of other cultures. By identifying the underlying experience of cultural difference, predictions about behavior and attitudes can be made and education can be tailored to facilitate development along the continuum. The first three stages are ethnocentric as one sees his own culture as central to reality. Climbing the scale, one develops a more and more ethnorelative point of view, meaning that one experiences one's own culture as in the context of other cultures. By the fourth stage, ethnocentric views are replaced by ethnorelative views.[1][2][3][4]

Developmental model of intercultural sensitivity (Six stages of Bennett scale) Edit

1-3 stages reflect ethnocentrism in cross-cultural communication. During these three phases, a person sees his/her original culture as the most superior one and takes it as the criteria to judge other cultures.[2]

  1. Denial of difference
    • Individuals experience their own culture as the only "real" one, while other cultures are either not noticed at all or are understood in an undifferentiated, simplistic manner.[3] People at this position are generally uninterested in cultural difference, but when confronted with difference their seemingly benign acceptance may change to aggressive attempts to avoid or eliminate it.[3] Most of the time, this is a result of physical or social isolation, where the person's views are never challenged and are at the center of their reality.[3] Members of dominant culture are more likely to have a denial orientation towards cultural diversity.[4]
  2. Defense of difference
    • Differences are acknowledged, but they are denigrated rather than embraced.[2] Rather, one' s own culture is experienced as the most "evolved" or best way to live.[3] This position is characterized by dualistic us/them thinking and frequently accompanied by overt negative stereotyping.[4] They will openly belittle the differences among their culture and another, denigrating race, gender or any other indicator of difference. People at this position are more openly threatened by cultural difference and more likely to be acting aggressively against it.[3]
  3. Minimization of difference
    • People recognize superficial cultural differences in food, customs, etc. and have somewhat positive view about cultural differences.[2] But they still emphasize human similarity in physical structure, psychological needs, and/or assumed adherence to universal values.[2][3] People at this position are likely to assume that they are no longer ethnocentric, and they tend to overestimate their tolerance while underestimating the effect (e.g. “privilege”) of their own culture.[3] They usually assumes that our own set of fundamental behavioral categories are absolute and universal.[1]
  4. Acceptance of difference
    • One's own culture is experienced as one of a number of equally complex worldviews.[3] People at this position appreciate and accept the existence of culturally different ways of organizing human existence, although they do not necessarily like or agree with every way.[2][3] They can identify how culture affects a wide range of human experience and they have a framework for organizing observations of cultural difference.[3] We recognize people from this stage through their desire to be informed or proactively learn about alien cultures, and not to confirm prejudices.[2]
  5. Adaptation to difference
    • Individuals are able to expand their own worldviews to accurately understand other cultures and behave in a variety of culturally appropriate ways.[3] In this stage, multicultural participants start to develop intercultural communication skills, change their communication styles, and effectively use empathy or frame of reference shifting, to understand and be understood across cultural boundaries.[3][2] At this stage, one is able to act properly outside of one's own culture.[3]
  6. Integration of difference
    • One's experience of self is expanded to include the movement in and out of different cultural worldviews.[3] People at this position have a definition of self that is "marginal" (not central) to any particular culture, allowing this individual to shift rather smoothly from one cultural worldview to another.[3] At this point, a will to comprehend and adopt various beliefs and norms begins to emerge, demonstrating a high level of intercultural sensitivity.[2]

4-6 stages reflect ethnorelativism in cross-cultural communication. During these three phases, a person gradually treats all culture as reasonable and try to understand every behavior from the aspect of cultures behind.[2]

Evolutionary strategies Edit

In his theory, Bennett describes what changes occur when evolving through each step of the scale. Summarized, they are the following:[3]

  1. From denial to defense: the person acquires an awareness of difference between cultures
  2. From defense to minimization: negative judgments are depolarized, and the person is introduced to similarities between cultures.
  3. From minimization to acceptance: the subject grasps the importance of intercultural difference.
  4. From acceptance to adaptation: exploration and research into the other culture begins
  5. From adaptation to integration: subject develops empathy towards the other culture.

Application of Bennett scale for the study of various topics Edit

Diversity in education Edit

Schools play an important role in shaping the multicultural perspective of students.[5] A study published in 2011 by Frank Hernandez and Brad W. Kose found that the Bennett Scale provides a robust measure of principals' cultural competence in terms of how they understand differences.[6] Principals' DMIS orientation how they could influence their understanding of social justice and further make them implement different leadership practices for diverse schools.[6] Specifically, the researchers provided various explanations of the pervasive performance gap that sees white children outperforming their black or Latino classmates on standardised tests, academics, and school completion based on the Bennett Scale as a theoretical framework.[6] Education professionals may rationalize school policies and activities for cultural diversity and help achieve cultural equality in the educational environment by determining which of the six phases of intercultural sensitivity the particular principal is in. For instance, a principal in minimization phase may organize international cuisine festivals in the school, or use cultural and heritage festivals as opportunities for intercultural education.[7] But since it overlooks cultural distinctions, the school might not consider to launch a multicultural program or make curriculum changes that respect students' cultural nuances.[6]

Another study applied Bennett Scale to the curriculum of university general education courses.[8] In the current context of globalization and growing diversity in schools, experiencing and learning about cultural differences in the school environment is an important instructional method.[9] This study used Bennett Scale as an analytical model, coded and quantitatively analyzed data of cross-cultural sensitivity among 48 students from multicultural backgrounds receiving university general education.[8] According to the findings, a diversity curriculum that motivates students to share and practice their viewpoints on social issues is more likely to foster empathy and raise levels of cross-cultural sensitivity than one that only emphasizes information comprehension with assignments including material reading and essay writing.[8]

Intercultural communication Edit

Bennett Scale has mostly been applied to analysis on people's cross-cultural sensitivity, but some scholars have expanded its application to organizational communications. Informed by Bennett Scale and Botan's Five steps in Issue Management model, Radu Dumitrascu developed a new corporate adaption model and follow-up intercultural communication approaches for international business.[10] According to how they handle cultural diversity and cultural affiliations and localize themselves through communication, structural adjustments, strategies, and tactics, five types of organizations are defined: denying/intransigent, minimizing/resistant, minimizing/cooperative, adaptive/cooperative, integrative.[10]

Critiques of Bennett scale Edit

Bennett Scale is recognized for defining clear ethnocentric and ethnorelative stages, however, it is also considered by some scholars to be too idealistic to be practiced in the reality.[citation needed] Primary critiques include:[11]

  • Does not apply to short-term cultural adaptation because of its progressive nature
  • Neglect the relationship between interculturality and language
  • Assume monocultural origin and no previous contact with other cultures, which does not take into account people from multicultural backgrounds

Besides, several researchers report a struggle to determine participants' orientation within the six stages of Bennett Scale due to the lack of transitional middle ground between stages.[12][13] The model is also critiqued for working well in nations where multiculturalism is easily embraced, like the United States, but its practical applicability in isolated or undeveloped nations where people have little exposure to other cultures is still questioned.[citation needed]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Bennett, Milton J. (1986-01-01). "A developmental approach to training for intercultural sensitivity". International Journal of Intercultural Relations. Special Issue: Theories and Methods in Cross-Cultural Orientation. 10 (2): 179–196. doi:10.1016/0147-1767(86)90005-2. ISSN 0147-1767.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Littlejohn, Stephen W. (2021). Theories of human communication. Karen A. Foss, John G. Oetzel (Twelfth ed.). Long Grove, Illinois. ISBN 978-1-4786-4667-9. OCLC 1259328675.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Bennett, Milton J. (2017-06-27). "Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity". The International Encyclopedia of Intercultural Communication: 1–10. doi:10.1002/9781118783665.ieicc0182. ISBN 9781118783948. S2CID 151315097.
  4. ^ a b c Hammer, Mitchell R.; Bennett, Milton J.; Wiseman, Richard (July 2003). "Measuring intercultural sensitivity: The intercultural development inventory". International Journal of Intercultural Relations. 27 (4): 421–443. doi:10.1016/s0147-1767(03)00032-4. ISSN 0147-1767.
  5. ^ Best practices, best thinking, and emerging issues in school leadership. William A. Owings, Leslie S. Kaplan. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Corwin Press. 2003. ISBN 0-7619-7862-3. OCLC 50803476.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ a b c d Hernandez, Frank; Kose, Brad W. (July 2012). "The Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity: A Tool for Understanding Principals' Cultural Competence". Education and Urban Society. 44 (4): 512–530. doi:10.1177/0013124510393336. ISSN 0013-1245. S2CID 144580919.
  7. ^ Beyond heroes and holidays : a practical guide to K-12 anti-racist, multicultural education and staff development. Enid Lee, Deborah Menkart, Margo Okazawa-Rey, Teaching for Change (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Teaching for Change. 2002. ISBN 1-878554-17-4. OCLC 51074343.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. ^ a b c Mahoney, Sandra L.; Schamber, Jon F. (2004). "Exploring the Application of a Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity to a General Education Curriculum on Diversity". The Journal of General Education. 53 (3): 311–334. doi:10.1353/jge.2005.0007. ISSN 1527-2060. S2CID 144856538.
  9. ^ Educating citizens : preparing America's undergraduates for lives of moral and civic responsibility. Anne Colby (1st ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. 2003. ISBN 978-0-7879-6515-0. OCLC 50858910.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  10. ^ a b Dumitrascu, Radu (2008-07-09). Corporate-Adaptation in International Public Relations (Thesis thesis).
  11. ^ Liddicoat, Anthony J; Papademetre, Leo; Scarino, Angela; Kohler, Michelle (2003). Report on intercultural language learning. Canberra: Department of Education, Science and Training.
  12. ^ Kashima, T. (2006). Phenomenological research on the intercultural sensitivity of returned Peace Corps volunteers in the Athens community (Doctoral dissertation, Ohio University).
  13. ^ Turner, D. A. (1991). Assessing the intercultural sensitivity of American expatriates in Kuwait.

bennett, scale, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, april, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, mes. This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bennett scale also called the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity DMIS was developed by Milton Bennett 1 The framework describes the different ways in which people can react to cultural differences 1 Bennett s initial idea was for trainers to utilize the model to evaluate trainees intercultural awareness and help them improve intercultural sensitivity also sometimes referred to as cultural sensitivity which is the ability of accepting and adapting to a brand new and different culture 2 Organized into six stages of increasing sensitivity to difference the DMIS identifies the underlying cognitive orientations individuals use to understand cultural difference Each position along the continuum represents increasingly complex perceptual organizations of cultural difference which in turn allow increasingly sophisticated experiences of other cultures By identifying the underlying experience of cultural difference predictions about behavior and attitudes can be made and education can be tailored to facilitate development along the continuum The first three stages are ethnocentric as one sees his own culture as central to reality Climbing the scale one develops a more and more ethnorelative point of view meaning that one experiences one s own culture as in the context of other cultures By the fourth stage ethnocentric views are replaced by ethnorelative views 1 2 3 4 Contents 1 Developmental model of intercultural sensitivity Six stages of Bennett scale 2 Evolutionary strategies 3 Application of Bennett scale for the study of various topics 3 1 Diversity in education 3 2 Intercultural communication 4 Critiques of Bennett scale 5 ReferencesDevelopmental model of intercultural sensitivity Six stages of Bennett scale Edit1 3 stages reflect ethnocentrism in cross cultural communication During these three phases a person sees his her original culture as the most superior one and takes it as the criteria to judge other cultures 2 Denial of difference Individuals experience their own culture as the only real one while other cultures are either not noticed at all or are understood in an undifferentiated simplistic manner 3 People at this position are generally uninterested in cultural difference but when confronted with difference their seemingly benign acceptance may change to aggressive attempts to avoid or eliminate it 3 Most of the time this is a result of physical or social isolation where the person s views are never challenged and are at the center of their reality 3 Members of dominant culture are more likely to have a denial orientation towards cultural diversity 4 Defense of difference Differences are acknowledged but they are denigrated rather than embraced 2 Rather one s own culture is experienced as the most evolved or best way to live 3 This position is characterized by dualistic us them thinking and frequently accompanied by overt negative stereotyping 4 They will openly belittle the differences among their culture and another denigrating race gender or any other indicator of difference People at this position are more openly threatened by cultural difference and more likely to be acting aggressively against it 3 Minimization of difference People recognize superficial cultural differences in food customs etc and have somewhat positive view about cultural differences 2 But they still emphasize human similarity in physical structure psychological needs and or assumed adherence to universal values 2 3 People at this position are likely to assume that they are no longer ethnocentric and they tend to overestimate their tolerance while underestimating the effect e g privilege of their own culture 3 They usually assumes that our own set of fundamental behavioral categories are absolute and universal 1 Acceptance of difference One s own culture is experienced as one of a number of equally complex worldviews 3 People at this position appreciate and accept the existence of culturally different ways of organizing human existence although they do not necessarily like or agree with every way 2 3 They can identify how culture affects a wide range of human experience and they have a framework for organizing observations of cultural difference 3 We recognize people from this stage through their desire to be informed or proactively learn about alien cultures and not to confirm prejudices 2 Adaptation to difference Individuals are able to expand their own worldviews to accurately understand other cultures and behave in a variety of culturally appropriate ways 3 In this stage multicultural participants start to develop intercultural communication skills change their communication styles and effectively use empathy or frame of reference shifting to understand and be understood across cultural boundaries 3 2 At this stage one is able to act properly outside of one s own culture 3 Integration of difference One s experience of self is expanded to include the movement in and out of different cultural worldviews 3 People at this position have a definition of self that is marginal not central to any particular culture allowing this individual to shift rather smoothly from one cultural worldview to another 3 At this point a will to comprehend and adopt various beliefs and norms begins to emerge demonstrating a high level of intercultural sensitivity 2 4 6 stages reflect ethnorelativism in cross cultural communication During these three phases a person gradually treats all culture as reasonable and try to understand every behavior from the aspect of cultures behind 2 Evolutionary strategies EditIn his theory Bennett describes what changes occur when evolving through each step of the scale Summarized they are the following 3 From denial to defense the person acquires an awareness of difference between cultures From defense to minimization negative judgments are depolarized and the person is introduced to similarities between cultures From minimization to acceptance the subject grasps the importance of intercultural difference From acceptance to adaptation exploration and research into the other culture begins From adaptation to integration subject develops empathy towards the other culture Application of Bennett scale for the study of various topics EditDiversity in education Edit Schools play an important role in shaping the multicultural perspective of students 5 A study published in 2011 by Frank Hernandez and Brad W Kose found that the Bennett Scale provides a robust measure of principals cultural competence in terms of how they understand differences 6 Principals DMIS orientation how they could influence their understanding of social justice and further make them implement different leadership practices for diverse schools 6 Specifically the researchers provided various explanations of the pervasive performance gap that sees white children outperforming their black or Latino classmates on standardised tests academics and school completion based on the Bennett Scale as a theoretical framework 6 Education professionals may rationalize school policies and activities for cultural diversity and help achieve cultural equality in the educational environment by determining which of the six phases of intercultural sensitivity the particular principal is in For instance a principal in minimization phase may organize international cuisine festivals in the school or use cultural and heritage festivals as opportunities for intercultural education 7 But since it overlooks cultural distinctions the school might not consider to launch a multicultural program or make curriculum changes that respect students cultural nuances 6 Another study applied Bennett Scale to the curriculum of university general education courses 8 In the current context of globalization and growing diversity in schools experiencing and learning about cultural differences in the school environment is an important instructional method 9 This study used Bennett Scale as an analytical model coded and quantitatively analyzed data of cross cultural sensitivity among 48 students from multicultural backgrounds receiving university general education 8 According to the findings a diversity curriculum that motivates students to share and practice their viewpoints on social issues is more likely to foster empathy and raise levels of cross cultural sensitivity than one that only emphasizes information comprehension with assignments including material reading and essay writing 8 Intercultural communication Edit Bennett Scale has mostly been applied to analysis on people s cross cultural sensitivity but some scholars have expanded its application to organizational communications Informed by Bennett Scale and Botan s Five steps in Issue Management model Radu Dumitrascu developed a new corporate adaption model and follow up intercultural communication approaches for international business 10 According to how they handle cultural diversity and cultural affiliations and localize themselves through communication structural adjustments strategies and tactics five types of organizations are defined denying intransigent minimizing resistant minimizing cooperative adaptive cooperative integrative 10 Critiques of Bennett scale EditBennett Scale is recognized for defining clear ethnocentric and ethnorelative stages however it is also considered by some scholars to be too idealistic to be practiced in the reality citation needed Primary critiques include 11 Does not apply to short term cultural adaptation because of its progressive natureNeglect the relationship between interculturality and language Assume monocultural origin and no previous contact with other cultures which does not take into account people from multicultural backgroundsBesides several researchers report a struggle to determine participants orientation within the six stages of Bennett Scale due to the lack of transitional middle ground between stages 12 13 The model is also critiqued for working well in nations where multiculturalism is easily embraced like the United States but its practical applicability in isolated or undeveloped nations where people have little exposure to other cultures is still questioned citation needed References Edit a b c d Bennett Milton J 1986 01 01 A developmental approach to training for intercultural sensitivity International Journal of Intercultural Relations Special Issue Theories and Methods in Cross Cultural Orientation 10 2 179 196 doi 10 1016 0147 1767 86 90005 2 ISSN 0147 1767 a b c d e f g h i j k Littlejohn Stephen W 2021 Theories of human communication Karen A Foss John G Oetzel Twelfth ed Long Grove Illinois ISBN 978 1 4786 4667 9 OCLC 1259328675 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Bennett Milton J 2017 06 27 Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity The International Encyclopedia of Intercultural Communication 1 10 doi 10 1002 9781118783665 ieicc0182 ISBN 9781118783948 S2CID 151315097 a b c Hammer Mitchell R Bennett Milton J Wiseman Richard July 2003 Measuring intercultural sensitivity The intercultural development inventory International Journal of Intercultural Relations 27 4 421 443 doi 10 1016 s0147 1767 03 00032 4 ISSN 0147 1767 Best practices best thinking and emerging issues in school leadership William A Owings Leslie S Kaplan Thousand Oaks Calif Corwin Press 2003 ISBN 0 7619 7862 3 OCLC 50803476 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d Hernandez Frank Kose Brad W July 2012 The Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity A Tool for Understanding Principals Cultural Competence Education and Urban Society 44 4 512 530 doi 10 1177 0013124510393336 ISSN 0013 1245 S2CID 144580919 Beyond heroes and holidays a practical guide to K 12 anti racist multicultural education and staff development Enid Lee Deborah Menkart Margo Okazawa Rey Teaching for Change 2nd ed Washington D C Teaching for Change 2002 ISBN 1 878554 17 4 OCLC 51074343 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Mahoney Sandra L Schamber Jon F 2004 Exploring the Application of a Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity to a General Education Curriculum on Diversity The Journal of General Education 53 3 311 334 doi 10 1353 jge 2005 0007 ISSN 1527 2060 S2CID 144856538 Educating citizens preparing America s undergraduates for lives of moral and civic responsibility Anne Colby 1st ed San Francisco CA Jossey Bass 2003 ISBN 978 0 7879 6515 0 OCLC 50858910 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Dumitrascu Radu 2008 07 09 Corporate Adaptation in International Public Relations Thesis thesis Liddicoat Anthony J Papademetre Leo Scarino Angela Kohler Michelle 2003 Report on intercultural language learning Canberra Department of Education Science and Training Kashima T 2006 Phenomenological research on the intercultural sensitivity of returned Peace Corps volunteers in the Athens community Doctoral dissertation Ohio University Turner D A 1991 Assessing the intercultural sensitivity of American expatriates in Kuwait Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bennett scale amp oldid 1178558745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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