Order Number |
636738393092 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Diversity, Different, Cultures, Our. Day-to-Day. Lives
Culturally Competent Helping
Chapter Nine
Meeting with Diversity and Different Cultures in Our Day-to-Day Lives
Just because we may know people of different ethnicities, races, and religions does not mean we understand their culture.
Eating different food and listening to different music does not equal understanding a different culture.
Avoid transferring your own values onto other people.
©2017 Cengage Learning33
The Changing Face of America
More than one-third of Americans are now racial and ethnic
minorities, and this increase is expected to continue (see Figure 9.3).
Such shifting demographics also changes the religious composition of
the country.
Other diversities include different sex role identities, sexual
minorities, those who are HIV-positive, the homeless and poor, older
people, individuals with mental disorders, those with physical
challenges, and other indices of diversity.
©2017 Cengage Learning44
The Need for Cultural Competence
Clients from diverse cultures are:
Frequently misunderstood and misdiagnosed
Often spoken down to and patronized
Have the impact of negative social forces minimized by the
helper
Find the helping relationship less helpful
Seek mental health services at lower rates
Terminate helping relationships earlier
©2017 Cengage Learning55
Sources of Helper Incompetence
Helper incompetence stems from the following viewpoints:
The melting pot myth
Incongruent expectations about the helping relationship
De-emphasizing social forces
Ethnocentric worldview
Ignorance of one’s own racist attitudes and prejudices
Inability to understanding cultural differences in the expression of
symptomatology
Unreliability of assessment and research procedures
Institutional racism
©2017 Cengage Learning66
Defining Culturally Competent Helping
Is “a consistent readiness to identify the cultural dimension of clients’ lives and a subsequent integration of cultures into counseling work” (McAuliffe, 2013b, p. 6).
Sue and Torino (2004) ² Uses modalities and defines goals consistent with life experiences and
cultural values of clients ² Utilizes universal and culture-specific helping strategies and roles ² Recognizes client identities to include individual, group, and universal
dimensions ² Balances aspects of individualism and collectivism in assessment, diagnosis,
and treatment. ² Understands three identities: individual, group, and universal ² Determines if the client has an individualistic perspective or a collective
perspective ² See Figure 9.4 and discuss
©2017 Cengage Learning77
Developing Cultural Competence
Multicultural Counseling Competencies Model 1. Having appropriate attitudes and beliefs—being aware of
one’s own assumptions, values, and biases (See Reflection Exercise 9.1)
Knowledge about clients’ culture is needed to better understand them • Being aware of one’s own cultural heritage and how it
affects their relationship with clients • See Reflection Exercise 9.2
A repertoire of skills or tools that can be effectively applied to clients of diverse backgrounds (See Reflection Exercise 9.3)
©2017 Cengage Learning88
Advocacy Competencies and Social Justice Work
Purpose of Social Justice Work ² To broaden culturally competent helping by including a wide
range of activities that affect the client’s broader system. This ultimately creates a better life for the client.
Advocacy Competencies ² Acting with the client, community, and public
Client empowerment ² Community collaboration ² Public information
Acting on behalf of the client, community, and public ² Client advocacy ² Systems advocacy ² Social/political advocacy
©2017 Cengage Learning99
Tripartite Model of Personal Identity (Sue and Sue, 2013)
The Individual Level ² Client’s unique genetics and distinctive experiences
The Group Level ² The various factors a person may have in common with other
people (e.g., race, gender, age, culture)
The Universal Level ² Shared experiences that define all of us as human
Biological/physical similarities ² Common life experiences (birth, death, love, sadness, etc.) ² Self-awareness ² Ability to use symbols, such as language
See Figure 9.7
©2017 Cengage Learning1010
RESPECTFUL Model (D’Andrea and Daniels, 2005)
R: religious/spiritual identity ² E: economic class background ² S: sexual identity ² P: level of psychology development ² E: ethnic/racial identity ² C: chronological/developmental challenges ² T: various forms of trauma/threats to well-being ² F: family background and history ² U: unique physical characteristics ² L: location of residence and language differences
©2017 Cengage Learning1111
Becoming Culturally Sensitive: Knowledge and Words (slide 1 of 4)
Culture — expressed through common values, habits, norms of behavior, symbols, artifacts, language, and customs
Prejudice — judging a person or a group based on preconceived notions about the group
Stereotypes — rigidly held beliefs that most or all members of a group share certain characteristics, behaviors, or beliefs
Racism — a specific belief that one race is superior to another
Discrimination — an active behavior that results in differential treatment of individuals within specific ethnic or cultural groups
Microaggression — a subtle type of discrimination that is conscious or unconscious and includes brief, subtle, and common putdowns or indignities directed toward individuals from diverse cultures
©2017 Cengage Learning1212
Becoming Culturally Sensitive: Knowledge and Words (slide 2 of 4)
Ethnicity — a group of people who share a common ancestry, which may include specific cultural and social patterns such as a similar language, values, religion, foods, and artistic expressions (not based on genetic heritage)
Minority (or nondominant group) — any person or group of people who are being singled out due to their cultural or physical characteristics and are being systematically oppressed by those individuals who are in a position of power
Power Differentials — real or perceived power disparities between people ² Race — traditionally defined as permanent physical differences as perceived
by an external authority. Used to be based on genetics; now issue is clouded and unclear, so better to avoid this term (see Reflection Exercise 9.4)
Religion — an organized or unified set of practices and beliefs that have moral underpinnings and define a group’s way of understanding the world
©2017 Cengage Learning1313
Becoming Culturally Sensitive: Knowledge and Words (slide 3 of 4)
Spirituality — residing in a person, not a group. Defines the person’s understanding of self, self in relationship to others, and self in relationship to a self-defined higher power or lack thereof.
Sexism — discrimination or stigmatization of another due to his or her gender
Heterosexism — (formerly known as homophobia) discrimination, denigration, or stigmatization of a person for nonheterosexual behaviors
Sexual Prejudice — a blanket term for negative attitudes targeted toward homosexual, bisexual, heterosexual, or transgender individuals
Sexual Orientation — the predominant gender for which a person has consistent attachments, longings, and sexual fantasies (Szymanski, 2013).
©2017 Cengage Learning1414
Becoming Culturally Sensitive: Knowledge and Words (slide 4 of 4)
Social Class ² The perceived ranking of an individual within a society and the
amount of power an individual wields ² Based on factors such as education, income, and wealth ² Even though individuals may share a similar culture, ethnicity, or
race, they may have little in common with one another due to differences in social class.
Political Correctness —the identification of a universally nonoffensive group label is difficult. ² Instructor read out loud: Italicized paragraph on top of p. 225 ² Students: What do you think? ² Other words?
©2017 Cengage Learning1515
Ethical, Professional, and Legal Issues/Effective Human Service Professional
We are often unaware of our own prejudices and bias, and thus it is important to actively work on our knowledge and skills.
Read out loud each statement from NOHS ethical code, found in Appendix B.
The effective human service professional realizes that becoming culturally competent is a process with many stages.
©2017 Cengage Learning1616
Summary
²The range of diversity that exists in the U.S. and the world
²The need for cultural competence
²What is culturally competent helping?
²The importance of social justice work
²Basic definitions of common words and terms
²Political correctness
²Ethical code
²The stages of becoming a culturally competent human service
professional
Slide 1
Slide 2
The Changing Face of America
The Need for Cultural Competence
Sources of Helper Incompetence
Defining Culturally Competent Helping
Developing Cultural Competence
Advocacy Competencies and Social Justice Work
Tripartite Model of Personal Identity (Sue and Sue, 2013)
RESPECTFUL Model (D’Andrea and Daniels, 2005)
Slide 11
Slide 12
Slide 13
Slide 14
Slide 15
Summary
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