Going international

Going International: Part 1 – “Bridging the Cultural Gap”

Student A
1. Give three examples from the video of how different cultures do fundamental things in different ways.
2. Howare these things done in Norway?
– Greeting each other
– How we dress
– How and what we eat
– E.g., Norwegians (both men and women) greet each other by shakinghands.

Student B
1. Why does the video say that stereotypes can be dangerous?
2. Come up with the stereotype description for TWO of the cultures we focus on in the course.
-Stereotypes take a few group characteristics and then apply them to individuals.
– Stereotypes are only partially accurate; they are not the whole picture.
– Stereotypes are toonarrow.
– Individuals don’t like being categorized. They may be offended.

Student C
1. According to the video, how does the American orientation to time differ from some other cultures?2. How might you explain the American orientation to time?
– The Americans are rigid-time oriented, while many of the cultures portrayed in the video were fluid-time oriented.- One explanation might be that the American business culture is deal-focused. For Americans time is money and a quick decision is a good decision.

Student D
1. What criticisms did peoplemake about American business people?
2. What might be the reasons for these “cultural clashes”?
– When they are abroad they forget that they are the foreigners.
– They wanteverything done instantly.
– They overstate their accomplishments.
– They don’t mix the feelings of the heart with the feelings of the head.
– They think that what you cando in the US you can do all over the world.
– One reason might be that all cultures are ethnocentric; we all think our own way of doing things is best.

“Going International:…