Global education through an intercultural lens
Competences consist of attitude, skills and knowledge. Therefore, the development of global
competences through global education requires not only information but also an ethnorelative
attitude with intercultural skills. This is in order to relate to the world with an intercultural
sensitive approach. According to the Bennett scale of intercultural sensitivity the first stage of
becoming interculturally sensitive is denial. In the denial stage we are lacking of knowledge
and skills which leads to a denial attitude. Living in our own bubble denying the existence of
differences and other ways of living. In this stage the global education competence is not
developed nor tackled. The barriers can vary from geographical to social distance. This is in
the core of ethnocentrism.
Through global education people can challenge their own barriers through exposure to new
information within new contexts and settings like being in intercultural learning
environments and discussions or through media. To get out from the denial stage indicated by
the Bennett scale we need much more than knowledge. Like the American poet Maja
Angelou said “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you
did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”. The statement of Angelou goes
in line with the elements of a competence where we need an attitude that is impacted by
feelings and not only skills and knowledge. Here comes the importance of creating engaging
and safe environments where people are free to feel and express without being afraid of
judgment and oppression. An approach of inclusive educational environments toward
interculturalism and to eliminate all forms of discrimination. It is one of the main core values
for the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goal 4, quality education.
After getting poorly informed or even accidently exposed to different cultures and approaches
the second stage in the intercultural sensitivity scale is defense. This stage can be related to
Xenophobia, where people are taking a defensive approach because they are not correctly
informed about other cultures not only on an informational level but also on an emotional
level. In the stage of defense there is poor information connected to lack of empathy that
leads to fearful attitude. Fear from something that we do not fully understand and therefore
we cannot fully empathize with. In this stage a various of hate statements can appear like
“They came to destroy our country, they want to change our culture, they came to steal our
jobs or they came to live on our cost”. In this stage we need quality education and global
education the most, because in this stage we are hindering sustainable development by being
driven by fear instead of the prosperity of interculturalism and the positive impact of
migration in the development of our resources and mutual wellbeing. In this stage citizens are
shifting an eye away from main global issues that affects our local and global realities, like
the exploitation of the global south. This exploitation increases inequalities, tax heaven, tax
injustices and unfair trade practices. It leads to discriminative policies and negative
nationalism of closed borders that hinders international cooperation for development and our
human rights for freedom of mobility and peace.
Emphasizing on educational approaches such as the pedagogy of the oppressed by Freire can
contribute in the development of empathy by providing information on a human to human
level. This can shift us from the defense stage to the minimization stage in the Bennett scale
of intercultural sensitivity. In the minimization stage we are still living with an ethnocentric
approach, because we are minimizing interculturalism and our differences rather than
employing them toward our mutual wellbeing and for the achievement of the Sustainable
Development Goals. In this stage we are acknowledging the existence of other cultures but
we do not accept it. We can identify this stage in the narrative of assimilation of one culture
into another rather than integration between cultures. We still look to the world from an
ethnocentric point of view. We perceive other cultures are wrong. In the same time, we do
not blame the people who were born in other cultures. We welcome them but we ask them to
fully assimilate in our culture. In this stage we are not developing because we are not
exchanging good practices, we are not learning from our differences and therefore we are
limiting our opportunities for cooperation toward wellbeing and better living.
To develop our intercultural sensitivity further and to proceed from ethnocentrism to
ethnorelativisim we need to stimulate an attitude that other cultures are not wrong or right
they are just different. We need this to shift from the minimization stage to the acceptance
stage in the intercultural sensitivity scale. The acceptance stage is the first stage of
ethnorelativism. We implement the experiential learning cycle by Kolb in this stage. This is
where people have a first-hand experience through simulation activities and role playing
followed by reflective questions on attitude and skills from an intercultural lens. This is what
we follow in our educational programs under the framework of Faces Of Migration program.
In these programs the participants complete the full experiential learning cycle from
experience to reflection, evaluation and then repeating the experience again with full
awareness, like Einstein said we do not learn from the experience but we learn by reflecting
on it. In our educational programs to shift from the minimization to acceptance stage we
answer the questions of why we need to understand our global issues and how accepting them
rather than minimizing them can lead to the improvement of our lives and wellbeing?
Being in the acceptance stage is satisfactory to a certain extent because we are shifting from
ethnocentrism to ethnorelativism but it is not enough. After acceptance of global issues and
different intercultural approaches we need to learn how to adapt them in our life goals and
missions toward the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. Like this we can
proceed further to the adaptation stage in the Bennet scale of intercultural sensitivity which
we consider as an important path for the development of global competences. Through the
experiential learning cycle, we give a rich educational environment for participants coming
from various backgrounds to practice and reflect on their global competences and what they
can do better to employ it in their careers and life missions tackling the magical circle of why,
what and how. In our global educational programs in this stage we facilitate a learning
process where participants can view the positive potentials of globalism and interculturalism.
They come up with action plans based on empathy. They explore how they can align their
personal path with their professional path in an intercultural sensitive way for the
achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. When we find these answers, we reach
the highest stage of intercultural sensitivity which is integration. The participants became
competent in integrating global issues with their local realities as inseparable. Therefore, in
this stage integration means positive change for a Europe that is sustainable for all.
Resources:
Laurens van Apeldoorn (2019) Exploitation, international taxation, and global justice,
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Lee Olson C, Kroeger KR. Global Competency and Intercultural Sensitivity. Journal of
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Li, M., Mobley, W. H., & Kelly, A. (2013). When Do Global Leaders Learn Best to Develop
Cultural Intelligence? An Investigation of the Moderating Role of Experiential Learning
Style. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 12(1), 32-50.
doi:10.5465/amle.2011.0014