Cross-Cultural Training Programs
By (Author) Darlene E. York
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd August 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
Adult education, continuous learning
Cultural studies
Social and ethical issues
370.19342
Hardback
208
Drawing from a diverse literature that underscores America's growing racial hostility and violence, York defines and explores the claims of cross-cultural training as an aid to increasing personal satisfaction and professional productivity in culturally diverse work environments. York claims that soaring failure rates among cross-cultural workers, particularly teachers, business personnel, and missionaries, are the result of inadequate, poorly administered, or inappropriate cross-cultural training. Examining more than 500 studies of cross-cultural training programs in more than a dozen occupations, York compares training given to Peace Corps and diplomatic corps members, teachers, doctors, and others who work in culturally diverse environments. In an analysis of these programs, she determines whether differences in policies, goals, selection procedures, lengths of training time, age or race of trainees, training location, or other factors contribute to long-term effectiveness of the programs.
DARLENE ELEANOR YORK is a Visiting Professor of Education at Emory University in Atlanta. She has taught education courses at the University of Georgia and Agnes Scott College.