Can a single book prepare you to cope with cultural differences around the world?Figuring Foreigners Out: A Practical Guide can with its self-training approach! Craig Storti, author of The Art of Crossing Cultures and The Art of Coming Home, uses his knowledge and creativity to make this an exceptional resource. Universal and easily applied to everyday situations, this book is for anyone who wants to understand those who are culturally different. Educators, trainers and individuals will profit from this user-friendly workbook, as readers can work through their exercises on their own or in a group.Figuring Foreigners Out is one of the few books that individuals can work through and, without the aid of a structured training program, effectively prepare for dealing with cultural differences. It is high-priority reading for anyone working with foreign cultures overseas (expatriates, diplomats, study abroad students, volunteers, missionaries or military personnal) or at home (at work, school or in the community). Contents Acknowledgments Introduction 1 What is Culture? 2 Building Blocks of Culture 3 Styles of Communication 4 Culture in the Work Place 5 The Cross-Cultural Perspective Epilogue Recommended Reading
Another read in preparation for my study abroad semester in Jordan. Was it a little daunting to see that Middle Eastern societies always (and I mean always) ended up on the opposite end of whatever cultural spectrum this book presented from the United States? Yeahhhh. But I'll be fineeeeee this is why I decided to live in Jordan for a full three months and two weeks so that I could really start to understand it.
I got this book on Kindle and used the highlighting and note-taking feature to fill out the workbook sections. I was worried that the prompts would ask me to write super long essays, but it was a lot of multiple-choice which drove home the lessons but didn't take me a long time to fill out...which is nice because I still have another whole book to read this coming week.
I do not pretend to have any kind of expertise in cross-cultural studies, but I thought that this book was a good way to be introduced to some of the elementary issues of the subject. The book seemed to be concise and yet contain a great deal of information. Rather than simply presenting all of the information in a lecture format, a lot of it was transmitted inductively through reading and participating in various exercises. I purchased the book in an electronic format which made interacting with the workbook aspects of the text frustrating but nonetheless helpful. Knowing myself, I would have probably had the same difficulty if I had a hard-copy of the book (I'm hesitant to mark tests in books for fear that I will want to take them again objectively later). I did, however, find it frustrating that because each chapter contained the same kinds of exercises he used the exact same wording for the instructions and precautions for each of them throughout the book. This made it difficult to remain focused enough to re-read those paragraphs again a third and fourth time. Perhaps his goal is to reinforce the dangers of stereotyping but this may have been accomplished at the expense of sounding extremely redundant. Overall, I appreciated the intent of the book and think he accomplished his goal of getting his audience to examine their own cultural assumptions and become aware of differing cultural assumptions. Throughout the book I found myself thinking, Wow, I would never have interpreted that behavior in that way. An eye-opening and practical introduction to interacting with those people who do not come from the same culture or who have different cultural values as you do.
Despite this book's bizarrely insensitive title, it actually contains rather helpful information on navigating different cultural standards. It's tailored more to the business world than to general audiences desiring to improve cultural competency, but its contents (with ample concrete examples and exercises!) are a very solid theoretical framework for understanding how cultural assumptions shape people's reactions to everyday situations.
Little of this was new to me, but it had been a long time since I had read much on cross-cultural communication/interactions, so it was a good reminder to me, as well as a well-organized resource I can refer to in the future.
This was a practical and fun book! The quizzes and exercises on each page made it enjoyable, engaging, and had me understanding my own cultural bias much deeper!
(For school) Not a fan. Learned a lot, but I could have learned a lot more from other books with the same thickness that didn't try to reteach material to you over and over again in very vague ways.
A great workbook (and it's designed as one) to help understand intercultural interactions, cultural building blocks & how to interact better across cultures. Providing examples of dialogues (such as from Storti's own Cross-Cultural Dialogues book), checklists, and situations, this will help any reader understand their own cultural values, and how to become a more effective intercultural communicator. An absolute must-read for anyone relocating, working in a multinational company, or dealing with multiple cultures on even an infrequent basis.
This book introduces you to many concepts to help you realize that you need to be thoughtful about your approach to others. I found myself thinking that this would be helpful for all of my interactions and not just people from a culture other than my own. This book is just the tip of the iceberg; it is clear that successful communication across cultures is a skill that will only come with practice & time.
This is a very good introduction to cross cultural relationships and ministries. Reminded of my bachelors degree in sociology. Good book to read for missionaries and cross cultural workers