I spoke to three of my faculty members and asked
them their definitions of culture and diversity. Katie who is
Hispanic/Norwegian, Madison who is Caucasian, and Tieanna who is African
American. The aspects of culture that I’ve studied which were present in their
definitions are the set of customs, family history, beliefs, norms and
traditions. The aspects of diversity that I have studied in this course which
were present were a blend of different races, religion, and appreciation of
differences all together in an area. Katie found it difficult to define culture
beyond customs; I feel she was worried about saying anything offensive. She
spoke about diversity in terms of how it exists within a particular community.
Madison linked culture as a byproduct of diversity rather than a separate idea.
When describing diversity she mentioned the varied aspects of diversity but
included meshing with the main (dominant) culture and assuring that everyone
fit in. Tieanna’s definitions of both were short and precise, beliefs, traditions
and a mixture of race, peoples and religions. The aspects that have been
omitted are the ones that may be perceived as more negative, cultural discontinuity,
prejudice, cultural blindness. The way that these concepts were defined was
fairly similar to the way that I would have defined them initially. I noticed
that the ‘deep’ culture was not mentioned as much as the ‘surface” culture.
After having been in this course the past few weeks that is something which I
would now add to my definitions.
Jennifer,
ReplyDeleteI think that when most people think of culture they only consider the surface culture. I learned years ago that culture and diversity means so many different aspects of a persons life and upbringing that it has actually changed my personal worldview. -- Deon
Hello Jennifer,
ReplyDeleteWhat a great assignment to see how people that we are around view diversity and culture. Seems like this class has enhanced my understanding of culture and diversity. I understand that we can look at differences among others and find strengths in the diversity.
Thanks for the blog,
Tierra