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What is Cultural Humility

Developing, Delivering, and Sustaining School Counseling Practices Through a Culturally Affirming Lens
The ability to maintain an interpersonal stance that is other-oriented (or open to other) in relation to aspects of cultural identity that are most important to a person.
Published in Chapter:
Creating Access for Students: A Collaborative Effort
Jessie L. Wiser (Austin Peay State University, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-9514-5.ch011
Abstract
The role of social workers within the public education setting is often ambiguous, which makes building relational trust with school counselors difficult. However, their professional values and ethics are closely related, and their jobs often overlap. The ambiguity within the role of school social workers can cause school counselors to feel encroached upon when social workers perform their assigned duties. This discord can limit a school's ability to provide quality access to services for children and their families. Marginalized student populations absorb this most, as they are typically already experiencing a deficiency in services in their community. This chapter will discuss current perspectives and theories used by school social workers, barriers to interdisciplinary collaboration, and solutions to resolve barriers in order to better meet the needs of marginalized populations. Also, this chapter will examine why collaboration is imperative to meet student social and emotional needs and have case studies for districts that have successfully implemented models of collaboration.
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More Results
Contextualizing Bilingualism: Emerging From the Classroom to the Community
Characterized by flexibility and self-reflective actions in which culturally humble individuals acknowledge what they know and do not know; those who have developed cultural humility search for and access resources that may enhance immeasurably the interactions and relationships in which they may find themselves engaged (Tervalon & Murray-García, 1998).
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Creating Diverse, Equitable, and Inclusive Digital Learning Platforms for Young Children
A personal commitment to the lifelong process of self-reflection and critique, which involves questioning one’s own identity, beliefs, and possible inherent biases to understand and learn about other cultures. A willingness to humbly acknowledge what one does not know, to express curiosity about cultures, and to update one’s understanding based on new information.
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Introducing Mindfulness Training and Research Into Policing: Strategies for Successful Implementation
A lifelong process of understanding the experiences of individuals from other cultural backgrounds that is grounded in deep reflection and examination of how one’s beliefs and experiences are shaped by one’s own cultural identities.
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Promoting First-Year College Students' Civic Skills Through Community Participatory Learning Experiences
Cultural humility is the lifelong process of building meaningful, intercultural relationships in ways like self-reflection, discovery, and examination of their own and others’ cultural identities and beliefs.
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Developing Diversity Awareness and Multicultural Competence Across Liberal Arts Campuses
A measure of exploration meant to last a lifetime involving self-assessment, reflection, and critique of other cultural interactions.
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Creating a Beloved Community for Black Male Students: A Unified Approach
Process that promotes an exploration of different cultures while simultaneously exploring personal privilege, bias, and intersecting identities.
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Accessing Empathy and Humility to Become a Better Advisor Across Cultures
The practice of humility in considering one’s own cultural background and that of others; not holding one’s own culture as the “norm.”
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Psychology Applied to Prevention and Detection of Human Trafficking
Recognition of gaps in knowledge about a particular culture, limitations of understanding others’ culture and experiences, and an other-oriented interpersonal stance.
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A Model for the Development of Anti-Racist Culturally Humble Educational Practitioners
A lifelong process of self-reflection; self-critique; and commitment to understanding and respecting different points of view, and engaging with others humbly, authentically, and from a place of learning.
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Cultural Humility as a Path to Equity in Higher Education
A lifelong process of self-reflection; self-critique; and commitment to understanding and respecting different points of view, and engaging with others humbly, authentically, and from a place of learning.
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Multicultural and Educational Challenges in the Context of the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic: Ghana and Kenya
Applying self-analysis to not understand one’s perception of their own culture, but to extend that to understanding the unique identities, challenges and opportunities about another’s culture that might serve as barriers. (Applying cultural humility means that educators and policy makers must become aware of educational disparities, intersectionality of poverty and education and attempt to implement culturally responsive educational platforms that are inclusive and achievable for all students across the many diverse demographics).
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Developing the AAMC Competencies With Pre-Health Professional Students Through the Use of the Intercultural Development Inventory
Capacity for critical self-reflection about assumptions, suspending judgement, and understanding one cannot be fully competent in another person’s culture.
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Human Trafficking
A relationship stance that acknowledges how individuals’ cultural experiences and identity impact their personhood, from the things they think and feel to the decisions they make about things like healthcare.
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Work Stress, Culture, and Leadership: Building a Culture of Health through Mindfulness into Action
Attitude that is characterized by respect for others and a lack of superiority.
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Using Student-Centered Engagement in the Classroom to Develop Cultural Intelligence
The ability to other-oriented (open to) in relation to aspects of cultural identity that are most important to the person. It focuses on self-humility rather than achieving knowledge or awareness.
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Peer Support of Graduate Students of Color Through a Formal Graduate Student Association
An approach to engagement which reflects the complex attitudes and sensitive skills required to meet the needs people whose culture differs from one’s own. The approach empowers people to participate in a two-way, reciprocal relationship, where both people are understood to have something to contribute.
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Advancing College Diversity and Access Through Partnership
Appreciation and valuing of diverse social norms, rituals, and ways of life; recognition of the dominance of certain group norms in our society over others; and lifelong attention to critical examination of one’s assumptions and biases.
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Andragogical Design Considerations for Online Multicultural Education
A measure of exploration meant to last a lifetime involving self-assessment, reflection, and critique of other cultural interactions.
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Displaced, Aging, and Cyborgs' Migration Through Borders and Beyond Borders: Belonging v Set Apart II
Recognizing and respecting cultural differences while maintaining an open and humble attitude.
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