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November 26, 2014
The holiday of Thanksgiving actually has its roots in a cross cultural event. The event that many Americans often refer to as the "First Thanksgiving" was celebrated by the Pilgrims after their first harvest in the New World in 1621.
The feast lasted three days, and it was attended by 90 Native Americans and 53 Pilgrims. Later, Abraham Lincoln would declare Thanksgiving to be a national holiday resulting in it becoming a part of the American experience. Several other places around the world observe similar celebrations.
One of the interesting things about Thanksgiving is that it unites religious and non-religious people together under an idea - we should be thankful. The cultural trappings of Thanksgiving, such as Turkey, stuffing, watching football, and pumpkin pie are all seen as secondary to the tradition of gathering together and being thankful. Nevertheless, many cultures in America have taken elements of the Thankgiving tradition and blended it with their own. To see what we mean, check out our Pinterest page here where we have pinned some cool Thanksgiving recipes with a little different spin.
Visit CultureReady's profile on Pinterest.
For further reading:
Winslow, Edward (1622), Mourt's Relation, p. 133, retrieved 2013-11-20, "many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest king Massasoyt, with some ninetie men, whom for three dayes we entertained and feasted"
"Primary Sources for "The First Thanksgiving" at Plymouth". Pilgrim Hall Museum. Retrieved 2009-11-26. "The 53 Pilgrims at the First Thanksgiving"
November 21, 2014
War themed video games are common, and the general consensus is that these types of games actually desensitize youth to the empathy required in real world conflict situations. However, Alelo is lookinng at ways to use gaming technologies to do the opposite, to prepare military members for other cultures and actually prevent culture shock.
Alelo's VRP MIL (Virtual Role Players for Military Training Environments) provides an immersion experience to provide troops with a culturally and linguistically challenging scenarios. The games allow players to practice communications, including non-verbal cues, before deploying to places like Afghanistan.
Andreas Gruendel, a former soldier in the U.S. military, now leads the VRP MIL division. Since leaving active duty, Gruendel has worked extensively on virtual military training scenarios. Prior to joining Alelo, he was the Senior Military Analyst on the Future Immersive Training Environment (FITE), which was used to train ground troops being deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq.
PCMag visited Alelo at its Los Angeles headquarters (it also has offices in Virginia, Washington D.C., and London) for a look at VRP MIL in action and to learn how it came about. Here's the full article.
Have you played these games or something similar? Send us your feedback on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter.
November 6, 2014
The Department of Defense provides immersive programs to make ensure military forces and civilian employees are ready to work within and alongside other cultures.
“Iso-immersion” is an abbreviated, government-wide, term used to describe foreign language training conducted in total isolation from the English language and/or native culture. This is a life-like role playing scenario, sometimes lasting several days which may include costumes, buildings and rooms made to look like a foreign environment, foreign language speakers and problems to solve during the immersion experience. These can be terrific tools to uncover various blind spots in cultural awareness as we prepare for missions overseas, and they also offer a memorable crucible for language training programs. Here are three examples of iso-immersion programs currently being used:
Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center (DLIFLC) Field Training Exercises (FTX)
An FTX event, as conducted at the DLIFLC, is a one to three-day language training event, conducted outside the classroom, exclusively in the target language, which simulates real life situations and offers students multiple opportunities to apply their language skills while also experiencing target culture. FTX events are conducted at DLIFLC’s Immersion Center on Ft. Ord, California. FTXs are intended to enhance the students’ learning experience by providing them with the opportunities to use the language in a closer to real life situations than they are likely to do in the regular classroom. In a course of an FTX, the students engage in simulations such as hiring interpreters to help American troops in the field, resolving a traffic accident, choosing a location for a study abroad, or developing fund raising strategies for non-profit organizations in a target country, to name only a few. The decision making and consensus building needed for the successful completion of such tasks require students to interact and negotiate meaning, thus processing target language on a deeper level. FTXs are an integral part of the Basic Program curriculum in Arabic, Korean, Chinese, Persian/Farsi, Russian and Spanish. At full implementation, each graduating class goes through three FTXs during the course of their study: a 1-day, a 2-day and a 3-day event in Semester I, II and III respectively. Over 2,000 students go through the FTX training each year.
Oak Grove Training Center
This 160-acre training center, located adjacent to Camp Mackall, NC, includes a cultural training site and a tactical training site. The cultural training site (CTS) replicates regional world settings in authentic detail and supports fully immersive culture-specific scenarios. The OGTC currently supports the following Special Operations Forces training programs:
Special Forces Qualification Course (SFQC). Execute field training support for Special Forces Assessment and Selection, Small Unit Tactics, MOS related field training exercises, and the Culmination Exercise Robin Sage. Special Forces Observer/Controllers, cultural role players, opposing forces, cultural enhancement trainers, and scenario writers are employed to support approximately 58 Special Forces field training exercises annually.
Civil Affairs Qualification Course (CAQC). Perform field training support for the CAQC Culmination Exercise Sluss-Tiller and Coalition Support Team Training.
Military Information Support Operations Qualification Course (MISOQC). Conduct field training support for the MISOQC Culminating Exercise Black Knight, Interagency Planning Exercises (IAPX), and exercises specifically designed to promote adaptable thinking and learning.
Training Management Office (TMO) / Exercise Support Cell (ESC) operations. Provide TMO and ESC support for training conducted at the 1st Special Warfare Training Group (Airborne). The TMO provides synchronization of field training exercise support resources for five of the Training Group’s seven battalions. The ESC provides logistical, communications, and live range support operations at Camp Mackall and Range 37.
The Muscatatuck Urban Training Center
The 1,000 acre site was turned over to the Indiana National Guard in July of 2005 and since has been continually evolving into a full-immersion contemporary urban training environment. Those utilizing MUTC have access to a 180 acre reservoir and urban infrastructure consisting of 68 major buildings including a school, hospital, dormitories, light industrial structures, single family type dwellings, a dining facility and administrative buildings totaling approximately 850,000 square feet of floor space. Additionally the training area includes an extensive underground utility tunnel system and over 9 miles of roads and streets. MUTC is a consortium of governmental, public and private entities that are pooling their unique capabilities in order to provide the most realistic training experience possible. Training that can be tailored to replicate both foreign and domestic scenarios and that can be utilized by various civilian and military organizations. In its first year of operation the facilities at MUTC have been utilized by over 16,000 people from military, government and private agencies and is continually expanding training capabilities for future needs.
Do you know of other great culture training programs? Let us know!
September 12, 2014
Check out the Google Cultural Institute.
This site, created by Google, helps to preserve and promote culture online. The Google Cultural Institute brings together millions of artifacts from multiple partners, with the stories that bring them to life, in a virtual museum.
With a team of dedicated engineers, Google is building tools that make it simple to tell the stories of our diverse cultural heritage and make them accessible worldwide. This site provides a visually rich and interactive online experience for telling cultural stories in new ways. Discover exhibits by expert curators, find artifacts, view photographs, read original manuscripts, watch videos, and more. Google works with organizations from across the globe on a variety of projects; presenting thousands of works of art online through the Art Project, bringing to life the wonders of the world through the World Wonders Project and showcasing the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Here you will find all sorts of interesting information about culture and history:
*News and features announcements
* Tips and tricks about Google Cultural Institute’s exhibits and features
* Spotlights on cultural themes and personalities on the site
* Stories behind historic and cultural events and people
* Hangouts about all sorts of cultural topics
* #CITrivia, a chance for you to show off your knowledge in culture and history
September 11, 2014
How Well Do You Read Other People?
TAKE THE QUIZ TO TEST YOUR EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
August 11, 2014
For a long time the outside world accused Yazidis of being "Devil-worshippers". One of the most persecuted minorities in the Middle East, they face a possible genocide by advancing Islamic extremists. Right now their culture is under attack as they gather atop Mount Sinjar. Here are a few facts about this community to help you understand a little bit more about who they are:
They worship a fallen angel, the Malek Tawwus, or Peacock Angel. Unlike Satan, the Yazidis' angel was supposedly forgiven by God and returned to heaven
Even the mention of the word "Satan" is deeply offensive to them
They have kept their religion alive through "Talkers," men who are taught the entire text of their missing holy book - supposedly stolen by the British in colonial times
They never wear the color blue
They are not allowed to eat lettuce
They do not practise arranged marriage, like other communities in the region. They have a formal system of elopement, where a man must "kidnap" his bride. If the woman is willing, the parents have to accept the match
Most have fled to Australia, Canada and Germany
Iraq is the one place in the Middle East where a large community still exists
In Turkey, they were forced to carry identity cards that listed their religion as "XXX"
The Yazidis say they have survived 72 genocides
For a terrific photographic essay on one of Yazidi communites of northern Iraq in 2006, check out this link for Agence France Presse photographer Safin Hamed's work
Picture: SAFIN HAMED/AFP
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