Lessons From Abroad: Teaching Cultural and Global Leadership in the U.S. Classroom
Author(s) -
Jeffrey J. Zimmerman
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of leadership education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1552-9045
DOI - 10.12806/v14/i4/a2
Subject(s) - global leadership , pedagogy , sociology , political science , mathematics education , psychology , public relations
This paper provides an insightful perspective to the common problem facing many global leadership educators across the U.S.: helping students understand “global leadership” while they sit in U.S. classrooms. The instructor of an undergraduate leadership course addressed this problem by recreating for U.S. students in local “cultural groups” a “culture shock” similar to that experienced by expatriates in foreign cultures. The culture shock experience is important for cross-cultural leadership development because culture shock produces challenges of uncertainty, anxiety and stress similar to those challenges needed to be overcome by an effective crosscultural leader. The author discusses course structure and design (i.e. experiential-reflection project utilizing participant observation to write multi-stage report) along with student feedback, illustrating that teaching global, cross-cultural leadership can start in one’s backyard.
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