Sociocultural Approach: Cultural Norms (Enculturation and Acculturation)

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42 Terms

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Cultural norms

Unique set of attitudes, beliefs and behaviors specific to a particular culture

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Culture

Unique information system, shared by a group and transmitted across- generations (cultural transmission i.e. teaching)

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Socialization (i.e. learning)

Process in which social norms are incorporated by individuals

-Learning as a universal process

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Enculturation (i.e. learning)

Immersion in your OWN culture and acquisition of the cultural norms

Process of learning a culture as it takes place in a specific culture

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Acculturation

Acquiring the cultural norms of a different culture

- Internalizing the norms of the dominant culture where you have migrated

Example: when a person moves to a different country

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Globalization

increasing interconnectedness among all cultures

- acculturation to a global culture

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Theory behind Chiu, 1972

Socialization practices and cultural norms influence the cognitive style of students in China and the US

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Participants in Chiu, 1972

221 Chinese, 316 US; comparable SES and rural communities

Grades 4 and 5

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Key questions raised about the bidirectional relationship of culture

Is enculturation a passive or active process?

How does enculturation influence cognition?

Do enculturation and acculturation interact?

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Bidirectional Relationship of cultural norms

Cultural norms influence the individual behavior and Cultural norms grow out of individual behavior

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What is the result of acculturation?

changes in both cultures

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Who are usually the participants in acculturation research?

migrants

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Who proposed the Four strategies of cultural change?

Berry, 1997

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What are the Four strategies of cultural change?

- Bicultural/Integration

- Assimilation

- Separation

- Marginalization

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Bicultural/Integration

Strong ties to ethnicity and large culture

"I am proud of both my ethnicity, but I identify just as much with my country

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Assimilation

Weak feelings of ethnicity, but a strong sense of acculturation

"I'm an American, period."

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Separation

Strong ethnicity but weak feelings of acculturation

"My ethnicity comes first; if I join the mainstream, I'm betraying my origins"

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Marginalization

Connected to neither their ethnicity nor their dominant culture

'I'm an individual and don't identify with any group" or "I don't belong anywhere'

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What did Berry conclude about acculturation and encutluration?

Enculturation and Acculturation are not necessarily opposite

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Results of Breakwell, 1978

Those who did not go to games were the most vehement about their loyalty and showed most in-group bias

Why? presumably as they had a greater need to prove themselves as fans

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Theory behind Trainor et al., 2012

enculturation is the result of active learning

Music is integral to all cultures but may be perceived differently; timbre may be considered pleasant or aversive.

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Aim of Trainor et al., 2012

to test the idea that musical enculturation occurs through active learning

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Two conditions of Trainor et al., 2012

6 months of active participatory music class

6 months experience music passively while playing with toys

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Two dependent variables of Trainor et al., 2012

Sensitivity to western tonality: (tonal and atonal) measured by pairing toy with music (longer they played with toy, more music, greater preference)

Social development: active classes would have more socialization (measured by parent questionnaire)

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conclusion of Trainor et al., 2012

Active music involvement promotes musical enculturation in infants

Seen in cultural tonality and social development

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Who contradicted Trainor et al., 2012 theory that encurlturation was an active process?

Odden and Rochat, 2004

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Conclusion of Odden and Rochat, 2004

Different cultures may emphasize different mechanisms of enculturation.

-They found that the Samoan culture utilized observational learning more than participatory learning

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Aim of Kim and Omizo, 2006

examine the relationship between Asian American college students' enculturation and acculturation in relation to the development of identity

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How did Kim and Omizo, 2006 measure enculturation and acculturation?

Psychometric questionnaires

-Enculturation: involvement in Asian American cultural behaviors

-Acculturation: involvement in European American cultural behaviors

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Conclusion of Kim and Omizo, 2006

Enculturation and acculturation both independent but contribute to the development of identity

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How has the definition of acculturation evolved?

Acculturation is the process of psychological and cultural change as a result of contact and interaction between cultures

-Both cultures experience change

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Why dies acculturation research have limitations?

-Reliance on self-report data

-Correlational design

-Acculturation design is biased in one direction: poorer/more traditionalist societies to rich/more liberal countries

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Negative acculturation effect

Healthy migrant effect diminishes over time

Acculturation contributes to unhealthy eating because migrants tend to move into cultures that promote unhealthy eating

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Aim and method of Shah et al., 2015

Aim: study the association between acculturation and obesity

Method: Correlation

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Conclusion of Shah et al., 2015

Acculturation may contribute to unhealthy eating behaviors, resulting in obesity

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Which too researches are considered follow-up research to Shah et al., 2015

Ishizawa and Jones, 2016 (Asian migrants in the US)

Da Costa, Dias and Martins, 2017 (migrants in Portugal)

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According to Ishizawa and Jones, 2016, what protective factors exist for Asian migrants?

-Lived in neighborhood with high migrant density

-Household retained original language

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According to Ishizawa and Jones, 2016, where were protective factors most likely to exist

poor areas

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Implications of Da Costa, Dias and Martins, 2017

Acculturation causes gradual changes in diet and/or lifestyle

More similar to native Portuguese

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Who were the participants in Da Costa, Dias and Martins, 2017?

migrants in Portugal

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Who were the participants in Ishizawa and Jones, 2016?

Asian migrants

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criticisms of research into the effects of acculturation on health

- most research is uni-dimensional

- unclear what actually causes health changes

- Is it the process of acculturation or the culture one is acculturating into?