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Cross-Cultural Psychology Psychology 3053.001 Raymond T. Garza, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Spring 2009 M.W. 4:00-5:15.

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Presentation on theme: "Cross-Cultural Psychology Psychology 3053.001 Raymond T. Garza, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Spring 2009 M.W. 4:00-5:15."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cross-Cultural Psychology Psychology 3053.001 Raymond T. Garza, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Spring 2009 M.W. 4:00-5:15

2 Cross-Cultural Psychology: Introduction and Overview  How does culture affect human behavior?  Is psychology relevant in developing countries?  How do personality and child-rearing practices differ across cultures?  Do multi-cultural work groups perform well in organizations?  Is crossing cultures stressful?  What methods should you use for conducting cross-cultural research?

3 Course Objectives  Examine the role of culture in the development and validation of psychological theories at the conceptual level.  Increase awareness and understanding of the critical issues in the application of psychological theories developed in the United States and Western Europe to other cultural groups, including ethnic minority subgroups.

4 Course Objective (continued)  Examine the cultural appropriateness of various research methods and procedures.  Examine the role of culture in personality and social development.  Review cultural issues in specific content areas including human developmental processes, inter-group relations and communication, leadership and organizational behavior, and clinical assessment and treatment.

5 Overarching Topics  Defining culture  Factors that influence culture  Groups that have cultures  Contrasting culture, race, personality and popular culture  The psychological contents of culture  How does culture influence human behaviors and mental processes?  The contribution of the study of culture

6 What is Culture?  We use “culture” to describe and explain broad range of activities, behaviors, events and structures  Descriptive, historical, normative, psychological, structural, genetic  General characteristics, food & clothing, housing & technology, economy & transportation, individual & family activities, community & government, welfare, religion & science, sex & life cycle  As a result, much confusion and ambiguity

7  One of the most well-known and quoted often definitions was put forth by Kroeber & Kluckholm (1952):  “Culture consists of patterns, explicit and implicit, of and for behavior acquired and transmitted by symbols, constituting the distinctive achievements of human groups, including their embodiments of artifacts; the essential core of culture consists of traditional (i.e., historically derived and selected) ideas and especially their attached values; culture systems may on one hand be considered as products of action, on the other as conditioning elements of further action” (p. 181).

8 THE STUDY OF CULTURE IN PSYCHOLOGY

9 Cross-Cultural Research and Psychology  Most theories in psychology based on studies with American university students  Are these theories true for all people, regardless of gender, race, ethnicity, culture, class or lifestyle?  Cross-cultural psychology answers this question by testing people of differing cultural backgrounds

10 Cross-Cultural Research and Psychology  Definition of cross-cultural psychology  Research method testing the cultural parameters of psychological knowledge by comparing data from participants of more than one cultural background  Cross-cultural psychology is scientific philosophy  Not topic specific

11 Cross-Cultural Research and Psychology  Contribution of Cross-cultural psychology  tests limitations of our knowledge in psychology by examining whether theories are universal or culture-specific  methodological change in psychology studies by varying cultural background of the samples being studied

12 The Growth of Cross-Cultural Psychology  Cross-cultural psychology has had a substantial impact on psychology worldwide, especially in the in the past decade or two.  In part, this popularity is due to increased awareness of importance of culture and increasing frequency of intercultural conflicts.  Cross-cultural studies in cross-cultural and culture and psychology journals, and increasingly, in top-tier mainstream journals.

13 Figure 1.1

14 Where does culture come from? Figure 1.2

15 Where does culture come from?  In order to survive, people had to meet biological needs (e.g. reproduction, eating) AND social motives (e.g. negotiating complex hierarchies)  Universally need to come up with solutions on how to adapt to environment to address needs and motives

16 Where does culture come from?  These solutions dependent on context (e.g. physical environment, social factors, types & sizes of families and communities).

17 Where does culture come from?  These solutions are culture  Product of interaction between universal biological needs, social motives and context  Solution to the problem of individual’s adaptation to their contexts to address their social motives and biological needs

18 Is culture a uniquely human product?  Many aspects of human culture are shared with other animals  Therefore culture is NOT uniquely human product

19 What is unique about human culture?  Unique human skills 1) Language 2) Complex social cognition 3) Ratchet effect  As a result, human culture have three characteristics: complexity, differentiation, institutionalization  Humans evolved to have human culture

20 The difference between society and culture  Society is “a system of interrelationships among people”  Both humans and non-human animals have society  Culture is meanings and information associated with social networks  Humans give social groups unique meaning  Non-humans do not have human culture associated with social groups

21 Factors Influencing Culture  Ecological Factors  geography, climate, natural resources  Social Factors  population density, affluence, technology, government, media, religion  Biological Factors  temperament, personality

22 A Meta-theoretical Framework  How can we categorize the various systems and variables that make up culture? 1. The Ecology: - physical environment, resources, geography. 2. The Subsistence System:  methods of exploitation of the ecology to survive – agriculture, fishing, gathering, industrial work.

23 A Framework… 3. The Socio-cultural System:  institutions, roles, norms and values as they exist outside the individual. 4. The Individual System:  perception, learning, subjective culture, including the perception of elements of the cultural system. 5. The Inter-individual System: - patterns of social behavior, including child rearing methods.

24 Groups that have Culture  Nationality  Country of origin and each country has own culture (as well as subcultures)  Ethnicity  Racial, national or cultural origins  Gender  Behaviors society/culture deems appropriate for men and women

25 Groups that have Culture  Disability  Some type of physical impairment in senses, limb, or other parts of bodies  Sexual Orientation  Person with whom one forms sexual relationships


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