Cultural Barriers to Effective Communication
Effective communication with people of different cultures is especially
challenging. Cultures provide people with ways of thinking--ways of seeing,
hearing, and interpreting the world. Thus the same words can mean different
things to people from different cultures, even when they talk the "same"
language. When the languages are different, and translation has to be used to
communicate, the potential for misunderstandings increases.
Stella Ting-Toomey describes three ways in which culture interferes with
effective cross-cultural understanding. First is what she calls "cognitive
constraints." These are the frames of reference or world views that provide a
backdrop that all new information is compared to or inserted into.
Second are "behavior constraints." Each culture has its own rules about
proper behavior which affect verbal and nonverbal communication. Whether one
looks the other person in the eye-or not; whether one says what one means
overtly or talks around the issue; how close the people stand to each other when
they are talking--all of these and many more are rules of politeness which
differ from culture to culture.
Ting-Toomey's third factor is "emotional constraints." Different cultures
regulate the display of emotion differently. Some cultures get very emotional
when they are debating an issue. They yell, they cry, they exhibit their anger,
fear, frustration, and other feelings openly. Other cultures try to keep their
emotions hidden, exhibiting or sharing only the "rational" or factual aspects of
the situation.
All of these differences tend to lead to communication problems. If the
people involved are not aware of the potential for such problems, they are even
more likely to fall victim to them, although it takes more than awareness to
overcome these problems and communicate effectively across cultures.
[from University of Colorado, USA: http://www.colorado.edu/conflict/peace/problem/cultrbar.htm]
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