Research Output
Intercultural business education: The role of critical theory and experiential learning
  Workplaces, both locally and globally, are increasingly characterised by complexity, ambiguity, and diversity, but also by individual distinctiveness and local relations. People in the workplace encounter this complexity through technology, and other forms of knowledge and interpersonal relations and exchange; therefore, they require the knowledge and skills to navigate these cultural, linguistic, and other differences both for fostering their professional development and handling pragmatic issues. How then is intercultural communication to be delivered in higher education to support students’ learning and prepare them for the contemporary workplace? To explore and elucidate this question, we provide an overview of some key contemporary theoretical perspectives on and approaches to intercultural business communication. Next, we present some approaches, characterised by experiential learning and critical reflective intercultural action, from our own pedagogic practices that support intercultural learning in the contemporary workplace. We detail two cases where students are respectively guided to reflect on their own intercultural competence in intercultural encounters and on the dynamics of multicultural teamwork. The authors conclude the chapter by discussing implications and directions for future intercultural business communication research and pedagogy.

  • Date:

    28 May 2020

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    Routledge

  • Funders:

    Edinburgh Napier Funded

Citation

Holmes, P., & Zhou, V. X. (2020). Intercultural business education: The role of critical theory and experiential learning. In J. Jackson (Ed.), Routledge Handbook of Language and Intercultural Communication. Abingdon: Routledge

Authors

Monthly Views:

Available Documents