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A Youth Leader's Guide to Building Cultural Competence [PDF]
Introduction
As a youth group leader, teacher or other youth-serving professional,
you know the challenges that young people face in today's world. Many
of those challenges center around choices and consequences related to
sexual activity. Working with teens on sexuality issues, including prevention
of HIV/AIDS, can be demanding and intensely rewarding on both personal
and professional levels.
This resource is designed to help you meet one of the most difficult
challenges of sexuality education in general, and of HIV/AIDS education
in particular: working with teens and families who come from backgrounds
that are different from your own and from each other's. Those differences
can be related to any number of factors, including race or ethnicity,
socioeconomic class, religion, gender and sexual orientation.
As rates of sexual activity, teen births and sexually transmitted disease
(including HIV) infection among teenagers increase, researchers and program
leaders continue to search for effective strategies and materials that
will reach young people with affirming messages about sexuality and with
clear messages about the risks of sexual activity, particularly of unprotected
sexual intercourse.
In addition, the increasing racial and cultural diversity of the United
States and the growing recognition of gay, lesbian and bisexual youth
make it apparent that educational strategies based on the experience
and perspective of the majority European-American heterosexual culture
often fail to engage youth of color and youth who are gay, lesbian or
bisexual.
Largely as a result of concern about African-American and Latino/Latina
youth, much interest has centered on "culturally appropriate," "culturally
relevant" or "culturally specific" approaches to prevention
education. Debate continues about what constitutes such programs. Course
content, instructor background/skills, teaching strategies and location
have all been discussed as critical factors, however, no clear conclusions
have emerged from the limited research base.1 There
is a strong indication that youth of color benefit from staff who are
caring and sensitive as well as from adults who are racially and culturally
similar to themselves and that youth development programs should strive
to hire staff who possess all these qualities.2
In the last few years, there has been an explosion of interest in addressing
the needs of lesbian, gay and bisexual teenagers. There are
more than 200 support groups and agencies nationwide dedicated
to this population
and several national groups, including the Child Welfare
League and the National Education Association have endorsed
guidelines for working with
these young people. Too often, however, their very existence
is denied by program planners and leaders. As a result, young
gay, lesbian and
bisexual people are not acknowledged, much less nurtured.
In many cases, adults think—or even know—that some members of
their groups are gay, lesbian or bisexual but lack information
about and comfort with issues
related to homosexuality. In other cases, leaders who themselves
are gay, lesbian or bisexual, may feel profoundly torn between
providing support to these young people and protecting their
own jobs and reputations.
Anti-gay prejudice (homophobia) and the persistence of the
myth that homosexuals "recruit" young people create environments
in which it is not safe for gay adults to reach out to young
gay people. The result,
in any case, is a continuation of the isolation and shame
that many gay, lesbian and bisexual teens feel.
The HIV/AIDS epidemic has highlighted the critical need for understanding
cultural differences because HIV/AIDS prevention education
demands frank discussion of sexuality—a sensitive subject
in many communities and for many people. Understanding cultural
beliefs about a range of
sexual
issues is critical to providing effective HIV/AIDS prevention
education.
This resource is designed with the belief that until we explore our
own values and beliefs and understand them as rooted in our own cultures,
we will draw inaccurate and judgmental conclusions about others based
on our own limited perspectives.
As someone who works with young people, you should engage in a self-reflective
learning process that will increase your abilities to effectively interact
with a variety of young people. You might be working with teens who belong
to a different racial or ethnic group, have a different sexual orientation,
belong to a different religion or come from another socioeconomic class,
but the challenging and rewarding process of learning about yourself
and others is the same.
The Four Steps
This resource proposes a four-step model of building cultural
competence for working effectively and respectfully with youth
from a variety of backgrounds. The four steps are:
- learning about culture and important cultural components;
- learning about your own culture through a process of
self-assessment that includes examining your culture's
assumptions and values and your perspectives on them;
- learning about the individual young people in your program;
and
- learning as much as possible about important aspects
of their cultural backgrounds with a focus on sexuality-related
issues.
This resource is a guide to working on all four steps.
Chapter One provides descriptions
of various cultural components such as family relationships, religion
and health beliefs. After each description, questions will prompt you
to think more about each component. Chapter
Two suggests a process of self-assessment designed to help
you start examining your own cultural background, values and assumptions. Chapter
Three provides tips for learning about the individual young
people you work with and for continuing the process of learning about
their cultural backgrounds. Chapter Four outlines
some of the reasons that HIV/AIDS prevention messages might meet with
resistance by some members of African-American and Latino/Latina communities. Chapter
Five offers tips for working with African-American and Latino/Latina
youth, as well as for working with gay, lesbian and bisexual youth of
all races and ethnicities. Chapter Six suggests
tips for providing effective multicultural education.
What is Cultural
Competence?
The term "cultural competence" has been used by a variety
of people in recent years. It moves beyond the concepts of "cultural
awareness" (knowledge about a particular group primarily gained
through reading or studies) and "cultural sensitivity" (knowledge
as well as some level of experience with a group other than one's own).
Instead, cultural competence focuses on the fact that some level of skill development
must occur. Being culturally competent is "more than being sensitive
to ethnic differences, more than not being a bigot and more than the
warm, fuzzy feeling of feeling of loving and caring for your neighbor."3
Gaining cultural competence is a long-term, developmental process that
requires more than reading this resource, attending a workshop or being
a member of one so-called "minority" group. It is an exciting,
engaging, lifelong process of expanding horizons, thinking critically
about issues of power and oppression and acting appropriately. Culturally
competent individuals have a mixture of beliefs/attitudes, knowledge
and skills that help them establish trust and communicate with others.
Beliefs/Attitudes
The culturally competent individual
is:
- aware of and sensitive to her/his own cultural heritage
and respects and values different heritages;
- aware of her/his own values and biases and how they may
affect perception of other cultures;
- comfortable with differences that exist between her/his
culture and other cultures' values and beliefs; and
- sensitive to circumstances (personal biases, ethnic identity,
political influence, etc.) that may require seeking
assistance from a member of a different culture when interacting with
another member of that culture.
Knowledge
The culturally competent individual must:
- have a good understanding of the power structure in society
and how non-dominant groups are treated;
- acquire specific knowledge and information about the
particular group(s) she/he is working with; and
- be aware of institutional barriers that prevent members
of disadvantaged groups from using organizational
and societal resources.
Skills
The culturally competent individual can:
- generate a wide variety of verbal and nonverbal responses
when dealing with difference;
- send and receive both verbal and nonverbal messages (body
language) accurately and appropriately; and
- exercise intervene appropriately and advocate on behalf
of people from different cultures.4
General Description
A general description of cultural competence includes:
"The personal recognition and acceptance that all
types of cultures have a profound influence on our
lives;
- The personal awareness that oppression is pervasive in
the United States, it is part of U.S. history and
as much as we may want to escape that fact, it colors relationships;
- The acceptance that there are cultural differences and
we need to learn to respect what we may not always
understand;
- Having the humility to accept that we do not know everything
about other cultures, never will [and] therefore
we need to ascertain what it is we need to know about the specific
groups with whom we are working;
- A
willingness to pursue that information in all the
ways available to us;
When we are unable to do the above, having the courage to identify and
confront our personal resistance, anger and especially our fears."5
Source/Citation:
Messina SA. A
Youth Leader's Guide to Building Cultural Competence. Washington,
DC: Advocates for Youth, 1994.
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