May 2019
As international educators, we should have plenty of Cultural Intelligence drive

 
 
One of the fascinating aspects of this month's Cultural Intelligence (CQ) workshop in Toronto was having the opportunity to take the CQ assessment and see where I stand. 

It turns out that I am below average in CQ Drive, the level of interest, persistence and confidence during multicultural interactions. While the assessment does not tell me why my CQ drive is low, I theorize that since English is used around the world it's sometimes easy to sit back and assume that everyone will adapt to me. It gives me something to work on in the coming months!

In this newsletter, we share a blog by David Livermore, the head of the Cultural Intelligence Center. He argues that rather than teaching faculty, recruitment staff, homestay coordinators and host families about specific cultural differences, we should focus on ensuring that they are curious. Read all about it below. 

At the workshop, the participating international educators had many interesting discussions. Was an agent who ignored recruitment deadlines simply under different cultural expectations - or was he incompetent? How do we deal with parents from other cultures who seem to be very demanding?

We've added some new dates across Canada for the Cultural Intelligence workshops. See below for details. We hope you can join us! 

* * *

Are you an employer looking to fill an opening with a top candidate with experience in international education? Be sure to post your opening on our international education job board. Your first listing is completely free! For details, contact us. 

As always, please get in touch if you have any questions or comments. 



Fall Cultural Intelligence Workshops
in Vancouver, Toronto and Halifax

Our Cultural Intelligence Workshop in Toronto was such a success that we've decided to expand our workshop offerings this fall. 

These workshops are being led by Malvina Rapko, a certified Cultural Intelligence (CQ) facilitator and educator. She has a broad knowledge of the challenges in international education, having served as the recruitment manager and homestay coordinator at the Saskatoon International High School Program. In addition, she has been an immigrant settlement worker and served with WUSC. 

To register, simply click on the workshop of your choice: 

Toronto Cultural Intelligence - Tuesday, Nov. 12
Toronto Unconscious Bias - Wednesday, Nov. 13
Halifax Cultural Intelligence - Friday, Nov. 15

Early Bird pricing is available until August 31. Early Bird is just $395 plus tax, which includes the CQ Assessment. Each workshop is limited to 16 participants so be sure to register early to avoid missing out!
Just stop
teaching about
cultural 
differences

By David Livermore, PhD

If you've paid any attention to our work in cultural intelligence, you know that we've been saying for a while that cultural knowledge isn't enough. You need more than a seminar on how to do business in India or how to work with Millennials to work successfully with those cultures. 

But now, a mounting body of research suggests it would actually be better to not teach cultural differences at all if that's the only thing you're going to do. Dozens of studies find that cultural knowledge leads to stereotyping and perpetuating bias rather than building cultural intelligence (CQ).

Why?

Knowledge without curiosity leads to stereotypes.

Once you learn characteristics about Indians or Millennials, there's a tendency to start putting any Indian or Millennial in a box. Then, when you encounter an inexplicable behavior, you fill in the blank with a crass stereotype rather than suspending judgment and seeking to understand more.

Knowledge without cultural humility leads to arrogance.

Once you get some insight into a culture, you may end up being over-confident about your ability to understand what's going on. It may actually be better to remain open-minded and culturally ignorant than to go in thinking your cursory understanding about another culture means you "get them."

Knowledge without intersectionality leads to irrelevance.

The groundbreaking work on Intersectionality, referring to an individual's overlapping identities (race, gender, social class, sexual orientation, function, etc.) illuminates the danger of reducing someone to any one part of their identity. An Indian woman is not only an Indian, she's also influenced by her gender, social class, professional role, and much more. How will you know which part of her identity will be most relevant when you interact with her?

Knowledge without skills leads to ineffectiveness.

If knowledge was all we needed to work successfully with diverse groups, we should have this figured out by now. But some of the individuals with the highest level of knowledge about different cultural groups can't for the life of them figure out how to actually get along with people who are different.

I could keep going but the point is, after several decades of courses, books, and videos teaching people about cultural differences, it's time to stop. Of course, the best choice is to teach cultural knowledge along with the other CQ capabilities that are proven to predict one's effectiveness in relating and working with people from diverse backgrounds. But it would honestly be better to do nothing at all than only teach cultural awareness and sensitivity.

Here's a much more strategic approach.

1. Start with CQ Drive

Over the last decade, we have surveyed nearly 100,000 professionals from over 100 countries and there's only one consistent characteristic among every culturally intelligent individual. It's not where you grew up, how many languages you speak, whether you're part of an under-represented group or how far you've traveled. It's your curiosity, or something we call your CQ Drive. This is your interest and openness to other ways of doing things. And it's your confidence and ability to persevere in the midst of intercultural challenges.

Before teaching about cultural differences, address the motivation by clarifying the goal. What's the objective behind improving intercultural interactions and how does it relate to the broader goal you wish to accomplish as an individual, team, or organization?

Also keep in mind that no amount of information about how a culture operates means much if you're physically or emotionally exhausted. There are times when I understand what's going on in an interaction with someone from a different background, but I just don't have the energy to deal with it. It starts with CQ Drive.

2. Teach archetypes first, then cultural specifics
 
I don't really think you should fully stop teaching about cultural differences. But my overstated title was intended to be more than just an attention-getter. We really must get the message through that if you only teach knowledge about different cultures, it can actually be far more determinantal than doing nothing at all.

However, when combined with the other capabilities of cultural intelligence, the most valuable knowledge to begin with is learning broad archetypes that help with comparing one group with another. These might include:
  • Key Historical Differences
  • Family Systems (Kinship, Extended, Nuclear)
  • Religious Context
  • Cultural Values
Then within those broad archetypes, you can talk about the tendencies of a particular cultural group. In other words, don't teach about Millennials or Chinese as a stand-alone topic. Be sure the discussion is rooted in a broader taxonomy of cultural systems and values so that individuals are equipped for the intersectionality of individual's identities and the diversity that exists within any culture.

Rather than working toward a mastery of cultural knowledge, emphasize the kind of information that is most helpful to know and where to find reliable sources.

3. CQ Strategy is even more important than we thought

Based upon a meta-analysis of dozens of academic studies on CQ, we've discovered that CQ Strategy, or Metacognitive CQ, is even more important than we originally thought. CQ Strategy strengthens the effects of the other CQ capabilities. It's what allows you to use your drive and knowledge to make sense of culturally diverse experiences so you can plan accordingly.

With the objective in mind (CQ Drive) and a broad understanding of cultural tendencies (CQ Knowledge), what plan is going to work best? Meta-cognitive CQ, the more precise concept behind CQ Strategy, is a more sophisticated, nuanced approach to relating and working with people from different backgrounds, rather than just blindly assuming that all Boomers want to be treated the same way.

4. Equip for Adaptive Performance (CQ on the fly!).

I'm often asked for advice about how to handle a specific intercultural dilemma (e.g. "Our partner in Brazil consistently misses agreed upon deadlines. What should we do?"). My first response to most of these questions is, "It depends!". It sounds like a cop out and it's fair to expect me to offer some additional guidance. But working and living in today's multicultural, globalized world requires a much more situational, strategic approach that is informed by understanding about cultural differences without over applying them to every situation.

We're doing a lot of work currently with the special forces community in the U.S. military. Their leaders consistently tell me they have to find ways to equip their officers with "adaptive performance" - the ability to learn on the fly and figure things out as you go.

CQ predicts adaptive performance. But no one CQ capability leads to adaptive performance, and particularly not CQ Knowledge. All four are needed, otherwise, you end up with an insufficient approach.

Information by itself rarely solves anything. We know that, yet it becomes the easy default as soon as we encounter a need to work better with a different group. Clearly there's a place for teaching cultural differences but resist the urge to build knowledge too quickly. There are far more important components to developing cultural intelligence.  
International Education
Jobs in Canada


Here are some of the current international education opportunities: 

 
Visit the job board for more!     

The job board is here to help employers find the best candidates in international education.
To post an international education career opening please contact us.