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The Model to Practice Dialogues™

Student Courses

The MTPD fosters awareness about national identity, as a cohesive whole, provides contexts and the impact these have on one’s role in the society. For example, the functioning of marginalized communities. We are educating students, addressing cultural differences, making clear that we share universal rights and dignity no matter where we are from, by emphasizing that one cannot explain away injustices by cultural relativism.

Intercultural Communication MTPD™ Honours Student Course

Who?

Any student from any faculty within the University of Amsterdam.

Why?

Intercultural Communication Model to Practice Dialogue was designed so that students, using a backward design model, can better understand their own cultural position while enabling them to navigate and understand their social and professional environment while leveraging their classroom theory to their own contextual experiences.

How?

Cultural is deeply personal. No theoretical model adequately captures personal narrative. This course explores the students perspective which allows for identification of cultural patterns. Students engage in a guided discovery that illustrates their personal narratives and creates space for their own interpretation using controlled language with the intention of preventing emotive, cognitive or cultural bias as it superimposes the individual.

What?

The course is designed to maximise experiential learning, and the first assignment (grade weight 15%) is a personal narrative which explores students own cultural background. In assignment 2 (grade weight 15%), students interview each other and compare and contrast their personal narrative which guides them toward identifying the cultural diversity within the classroom while applying Hofstede’s Value Dimensions. Assignment 3 (grade weight 40%) applies student learning to a professional organisation where students interview stakeholders using Hofstede in a model-to-practice dialogue. The last assignment is a collective portfolio of all assignments to include reflection (grade weight 30%). The duration of the course is ten weeks.

As part of the course, students visit the International Criminal Court in The Hague to learn more about the importance and value of Intercultural Communication.

Objectives

The objectives for this course are:

Takaways

After this course, it is our hope that you:

In addition to participating in the COIL with AUAS, Kozminski and Auckland University students will receive a diploma, along with a letter of recommendation for future internships, job interviews, or further education.

Meet the students