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Cultural identity is a part of a person's identity, or their self-conception and self-perception, and is related to nationality, ethnicity, religion, social class, generation, locality, gender, or any kind of social group that has its own distinct culture. In this way, cultural identity is both characteristic of the individual but also of the culturally identical group of members sharing the same cultural identity or upbringing. Cultural identity is an unfixed process that is continually evolving within the discourses of social, cultural, and historical experiences. Some people undergo more cultural identity changes as opposed to others, those who change less often have a clear cultural identity. This means that they have a dynamic yet stable integration of their culture.
There are three pieces that make up a person's cultural identity: cultural knowledge, category label, and social connections. Cultural knowledge refers to a person's connection to their identity through understanding their culture's core characteristics. Category label refers to a person's connection to their identity through indirect membership of said culture. Social connections refers to a person's connection to their identity through their social relationships. Cultural identity is developed through a series of steps. First, a person comes to understand a culture through being immersed in those values, beliefs, and practices. Second, the person then identifies as a member of that culture dependent on their rank within that community. Third, they develop relationships such as immediate family, close friends, coworkers, and neighbors.
Culture is a term that is highly complex and often contested with academics recording about 160 variations in meaning. Underpinning the notion of culture is that it is dynamic and changes over time and in different contexts resulting in many people today identifying with one or more cultures and many different ways.
It is a defining feature of a person's identity, contributing to how they see themselves and the groups with which they identify. A person's understanding of their own and other's identities develops from birth and is shaped by the values and attitudes prevalent at home and in the surrounding community.
Description
Various modern cultural studies and social theories have investigated cultural identity and understanding. In recent decades, a new form of identification has emerged that breaks down the understanding of the individual as a coherent whole subject into a collection of various cultural identifiers. These cultural identifiers may be the result of various conditions including: location, sex, race, history, nationality, language, sexuality, religious beliefs, ethnicity, aesthetics, and food. As one author writes:
When talking about identity, we generally define this word as the series of physical features that differentiate a person. Thus at birth, our parents declare us and give us a name with which they will identify us based on whether we are a boy or a girl. Identity is not only a right that declares the name, sex, time, and place that one is born; the word identity goes beyond what we define it. Identity is a function of elements that portrays one in a dynamic way, in constant evolution, throughout the stages of life identity develops based on personal experiences, tastes, and choices of a sexual and religious nature, as well as the social environment, these being some of the main parameters that influence and transform the day to day and allow us to discover a new part of ourselves.
Categorizations about identity, even when codified and hardened into clear typologies by processes of colonization, state formation, or general modernizing processes, are always full of tensions and contradictions. Sometimes these contradictions are destructive, but they can also be creative and positive
The divisions between cultures can be very fine in some parts of the world, especially in rapidly changing cities where the population is ethnically diverse and social unity is based primarily on locational contiguity.
As a "historical reservoir," culture is an important factor in shaping identity. Since one of the main characteristics of a culture is its "historical reservoir," many if not all groups entertain revisions, either consciously or unconsciously, in their historical record in order to either bolster the strength of their cultural identity or to forge one which gives them precedent for actual reform or change. Some critics of cultural identity argue that the preservation of cultural identity, being based upon difference, is a divisive force in society and that cosmopolitanism gives individuals a greater sense of shared citizenship. When considering practical association in international society, states may share an inherent part of their 'make up' that gives common ground and an alternative means of identifying with each other. Nations provide the framework for cultural identities called external cultural reality, which influences the unique internal cultural realities of the individuals within the nation.
There is a relationship between cultural identity and new media.
Rather than necessarily representing an individual's interaction within a certain group, cultural identity may be defined by the social network of people imitating and following the social norms as presented by the media. Accordingly, instead of learning behavior and knowledge from cultural/religious groups, individuals may be learning these social norms from the media to build on their cultural identity.
A range of cultural complexities structures the way individuals operate with the cultural realities in their lives. Nation is a large factor of the cultural complexity, as it constructs the foundation for an individual's identity, but it may contrast with one's cultural reality. Cultural identities are influenced by several different factors such as ones religion, ancestry, skin color, language, class, education, profession, skill, family and political attitudes. These factors contribute to the development of one's identity.
History
The history of cultural identity develops out of the observations of a number of social scientists. A history of cultural identity is important because it outlines the understanding of how our identities provide a way to see ourselves in relation to the world in which we live. "Cultural identities...are the natural, and most fundamental, constitutive elements of individual and collective identity."
Franz Boas is an important figure in the creation of the idea of cultural identity. Boas is known for challenging ideas about culture. Boas promoted the importance of viewing a culture from within its own perspective and understanding, not from the outsider's view point. This was a somewhat radical perspective at the time. Additionally, Myron Lustig is credited with contributing the concept of cultural identity theory.
A number of contemporary theorists continue to contribute to the concept of cultural identity. For instance, contemporary work completed by Stuart Hall is considered essential to understand cultural identity. According to Hall, identity is defined by at least two specific actions, which are similarity and difference. Specifically, in settings of slavery and colonization, identity provides a connection to the past as well as disintegration from a shared origination.
Theorists' questions about identity include "whether identity is to be understood as something internal that persists through change or as something ascribed from without that changes according to circumstance." Whatever the case may be, Gleason advocates for "sensitivity to the intrinsic complexities of the subject matter with which it deals, and careful attention to the need for precision and consistency in its application. Cultural identity can also become a marker of difference that requires sensitivity.
Kuper presents concepts on cultural identity within the framework of a power dynamic. He writes, "The privileged lie and mislead, but the oppressed come gradually to appreciate their objective circumstances and formulate a new consciousness that will ultimately liberate them." The consciousness is a facet of their identity. Similarly, identity plays a role in mediating between a human being and the environment in which they exist.
The identity of a person is "a result of socialization and customs" that promotes the maintenance of distinct cultural identities from generation to generation. Additionally, identity can be considered that which forms cultures and results in "dictated appropriate behavior." Put another way, identity may dictate behavior that results in the reification of identity with the individual as a "replicate in miniature of the larger social and cultural entity. Another way to consider cultural identity is that it is "the sum of material wealth and spiritual wealth created by human beings in the practice of social history."
Globalization is connected to influences in economics, politics, and society. Accordingly, globalization has an impact on cultural identity. As societies become even more connected, there are concerns that cultural identities will become homogenized through the increased level of connection and communication. However, there are alternative perspectives on this issue. For instance, Wright theorizes that "The spread of global culture and globalised ideas has led to many movements designed to embrace the uniqueness and diversity of an individual's particular culture."
Cultural arena
It is also noted that an individual's "cultural arena," or place where one lives, impacts the culture that person abides by. The surroundings, environment, and people in these places play a role in how one feels about the culture they wish to adopt. Many immigrants find the need to change their culture in order to fit into the culture of most citizens in the country. This can conflict with an immigrant's current belief in their culture and might pose a problem, as the immigrant feels compelled to choose between the two presenting cultures.
Some might be able to adjust to the various cultures in the world by committing to two or more cultures. It is not required to stick to one culture. Many people socialize and interact with people in one culture in addition to another group of people in another culture. Thus, cultural identity is able to take many forms and can change depending on the cultural area. The impact of the cultural arena has changed with the advent of the Internet, bringing together groups of people with shared cultural interests who before would have been more likely to integrate into their real-world cultural arena. This adaptability is what allows people to feel a part of society and culture wherever they go.
Language
Language allows for people in a group to communicate their values, beliefs, and customs, all of which contribute to creating a cultural identity. It was for a long time believed that if children lose their languages, they lose part or all of their cultural identity. When students who are non-native English speakers, go to classes where they are required to speak only English, they feel that their native language has no value. Some studies found, that this leads to loss of their culture and language altogether and this can lead to either a massive change in cultural identity, or they find themselves struggling to understand who they are. Language also includes the way people speak with peers, family members, authority figures, and strangers, including the tone and familiarity that is included in the language. The learning process can also be affected by cultural identity via the understanding of specific words, and the preference for specific words when learning and using a second language. Since many aspects of a person's cultural identity can be changed, such as citizenship or influence from outside cultures, language is a major component of cultural identity. However, more recent research could show, that language may be not a crucial part of a person's identity or cultural identity.
Education
Cultural identity is often not discussed in the classroom or learning environment where an instructor presides over the class. This often happens when the instructor attempts to discuss cultural identity and the issues that come with it in the classroom and is met with disagreement and cannot make forward progress in the conversation. Moreover, not talking about cultural identity can lead to issues such as prohibiting growth of education, development of a sense of self, and social competency. In these environments there are often many different cultures and problems can occur due to different worldviews that prevent others from being able to think outwardly about their peers' values and differing backgrounds. If students are able to think outwardly, then they can not only better connect with their peers, but also further develop their own worldview. In addition to this, instructors should take into account the needs of different students' backgrounds in order to best relay the material in a way that engages the student.
When students learn that knowledge and truth are relevant to each person, that instructors do not know everything, and that their own personal experiences dictate what they believe they can better contextualize new information using their own experiences as well as taking into account the different cultural experiences of others. This in turn increases the ability to critically think and challenge new information which benefits all students learning in a classroom setting. There are two ways instructors can better elicit this response from their students through active communication of cultural identity. The first is by having students engage in class discussion with their peers. Doing so creates community and allows for students to share their knowledge as well as question their peers and instructors, thereby, learning about each other's cultural identity and creating acceptance of differing worldviews in the classroom. The second way is by using active learning methods such as "forming small groups and analyzing case studies". Through engaging in active learning students learn that their cultural identity is welcomed and accepted.
Cultural identity and immigrant experience
Identity development among immigrant groups has been studied across a multi-dimensional view of acculturation. Acculturation is the phenomenon that results when groups or individuals from different cultures come into continuous contact with one another and adopt certain values and practices that were not originally their own. Acculturation is unique from assimilation. Dina Birman and Edison Trickett (2001) conducted a qualitative study through informal interviews with first-generation Soviet Jewish refugee adolescents looking at the process of acculturation through three different dimensions: language competence, behavioral acculturation, and cultural identity. The results indicated that "acculturation appears to occur in a linear pattern over time for most dimensions of acculturation, with acculturation to the American culture increasing and acculturation to the Russian culture decreasing. However, Russian language competence for the parents did not diminish with length of residence in the country" (Birman & Trickett, 2001).
In a similar study, Phinney, Horencyzk, Liebkind, and Vedder (2001) focused on a model, which concentrates on the interaction between immigrant characteristics and the responses of the majority society to understand the psychological effects of immigration. The researchers concluded that most studies find that being bicultural, the combination of a strong ethnic and a strong national identity, yields the best adaptation in the new country of residence. An article by LaFromboise, L. K. Colemna, and Gerton, reviews the literature on the impact of being bicultural. It showed that it is possible to have the ability to obtain competence within two cultures without losing one's sense of identity or having to identity with one culture over the other. (LaFromboise Et Al. 1993) The importance of ethnic and national identity in the educational adaptation of immigrants indicates that a bicultural orientation is advantageous for school performance (Portes & Rumbaut, 1990). Educators can assume their positions of power in beneficially impactful ways for immigrant students, by providing them with access to their native cultural support groups, language classes, after-school activities, and clubs in order to help them feel more connected to both native and national cultures. It is clear that the new country of residence can impact immigrants' identity development across multiple dimensions. Biculturalism can allow for a healthy adaptation to life and school. With many new immigrant youth, a school district in Alberta, Canada, has gone as far as to partner with various agencies and professionals in an effort to aid the cultural adjustment of new Filipino immigrant youths. In the study cited, a combination of family workshops and teacher professional development aimed to improve the language learning and emotional development of these youths and families.
School Transitions
How great is "Achievement Loss Associated with the Transition to Middle School and High School"? John W. Alspaugh's research is in the September/October 1998 Journal of Educational Research (vol. 92, no. 1), 2026. Comparing three groups of 16 school districts, the loss was greater where the transition was from sixth grade than from a K-8 system. It was also greater when students from multiple elementary schools merged into a single middle school. Students from both K-8 and middle schools lost achievement in transition to high school, though this was greater for middle school students, and high school dropout rates were higher for districts with grades 6-8 middle schools than for those with K-8 elementary schools.
The Jean S. Phinney Three-Stage Model of Ethnic Identity Development is a widely accepted view of the formation of cultural identity. In this model cultural Identity is often developed through a three-stage process: unexamined cultural identity, cultural identity search, and cultural identity achievement.
Unexamined cultural identity: "a stage where one's cultural characteristics are taken for granted, and consequently there is little interest in exploring cultural issues." This for example is the stage one is in throughout their childhood when one doesn't distinguish between cultural characteristics of their household and others. Usually, a person in this stage accepts the ideas they find on culture from their parents, the media, community, and others.
An example of thought in this stage: "I don't have a culture I'm just an American." "My parents tell me about where they lived, but what do I care? I've never lived there."
Cultural identity search: "is the process of exploration and questioning about one's culture in order to learn more about it and to understand the implications of membership in that culture." During this stage a person will begin to question why they hold their beliefs and compare it to the beliefs of other cultures. For some this stage may arise from a turning point in their life or from a growing awareness of other cultures. This stage is characterized by growing awareness in social and political forums and a desire to learn more about culture. This can be expressed by asking family members questions about heritage, visiting museums, reading of relevant cultural sources, enrolling in school courses, or attendance at cultural events. This stage might have an emotional component as well.
An example of thought in this stage: "I want to know what we do and how our culture is different from others." "There are a lot of non-Japanese people around me, and it gets pretty confusing to try and decide who I am."
Cultural identity achievement: "is characterized by a clear, confident acceptance of oneself and an internalization of one's cultural identity." In this stage people often allow the acceptance of their cultural identity play a role in their future choices such as how to raise children, how to deal with stereotypes and any discrimination and approach negative perceptions. This usually leads to an increase in self-confidence and positive psychological adjustment
The role of the Rana Anees
There is a set of phenomena that occur in conjunction between virtual culture – understood as the modes and norms of behavior associated with the internet and the online world – and youth culture. While we can speak of a duality between the virtual (online) and real sphere (face-to-face relations), for youth, this frontier is implicit and permeable. On occasions – to the annoyance of parents and teachers – these spheres are even superposed, meaning that young people may be in the real world without ceasing to be connected.
In the present techno-cultural context, the relationship between the real world and the virtual world cannot be understood as a link between two independent and separate worlds, possibly coinciding at a point, but as a Moebius strip where there exists no inside and outside and where it is impossible to identify limits between both. For new generations, to an ever-greater extent, digital life merges with their home life as yet another element of nature. In this naturalizing of digital life, the learning processes from that environment are frequently mentioned not just since they are explicitly asked but because the subject of the internet comes up spontaneously among those polled. The ideas of active learning, of googling 'when you don't know', of recourse to tutorials for learning a program or a game, or the expression 'I learnt English better and in a more entertaining way by playing' are examples often cited as to why the internet is the place most frequented by the young people polled.
The internet is becoming an extension of the expressive dimension of the youth condition. There, youth talk about their lives and concerns, design the content that they make available to others and assess others' reactions to it in the form of optimized and electronically mediated social approval. Many of today's youth go through processes of affirmation procedures and is often the case for how youth today grow dependent on peer approval. When connected, youth speak of their daily routines and lives. With each post, image or video they upload, they have the possibility of asking themselves who they are and to try out profiles differing from those they assume in the 'real' world. The connections they feel in more recent times have become much less interactive through personal means compared to past generations. The influx of new technology and access has created new fields of research on effects on teens and young adults. They thus negotiate their identity and create senses of belonging, putting the acceptance and censure of others to the test, an essential mark of the process of identity construction.
Youth ask themselves about what they think of themselves, how they see themselves personally and, especially, how others see them. On the basis of these questions, youth make decisions which, through a long process of trial and error, shape their identity. This experimentation is also a form through which they can think about their insertion, membership and sociability in the 'real' world.
From other perspectives, the question arises on what impact the internet has had on youth through accessing this sort of 'identity laboratory' and what role it plays in the shaping of youth identity. On the one hand, the internet enables young people to explore and perform various roles and personifications while on the other, the virtual forums – some of them highly attractive, vivid and absorbing (e.g. video games or virtual games of personification) – could present a risk to the construction of a stable and viable personal identity.
See also
- Collective identity
- Conflict theories
- Cultural diversity
- Cultural identity theory
- Diaspora politics
- Globalization
- Human rights education
- Intercultural competence
- Multiculturalism
- Nationalism
- Need for affiliation
- Pan-nationalism
- Pluralism
- Progressive politics
- Self-concept
- Self-determination
- Self-discovery
- Social identity
- Social identity theory
- Transculturation
Sources
This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0 (license statement/permission). Text taken from Youth and changing realities: rethinking secondary education in Latin America, 44-45, López, Néstor; Opertti, Renato; Vargas Tamez, Carlos, UNESCO. UNESCO.
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Further reading
- Anderson, Benedict (1983). Imagined Communities. London: Verso.
- Balibar, Renée & Laporte, Dominique (1974). Le français national: Politique et pratique de la langue nationale sous la Révolution. Paris: Hachette.
- Bourdieu, Pierre (1980). "L'identité et la représentation". Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales. 35: 63–70. doi:10.3406/arss.1980.2100.
- (full-text IDENTITIES: how Governed, Who Pays? Archived 2023-04-04 at the Wayback Machine)
- de Certeau, Michel; Julia, Dominique; & Revel, Jacques (1975). Une politique de la langue: La Révolution française et les patois. Paris: Gallimard.
- Evangelista, M. (2003). "Culture, Identity, and Conflict: The Influence of Gender," in Conflict and Reconstruction in Multiethnic Societies, Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press [2]
- Fishman, Joshua A. (1973). Language and Nationalism: Two Integrative Essays. Rowley, MA: Newbury House.
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- Gellner, Ernest (1983). Nations and Nationalism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
- Gordon, David C. (1978). The French Language and National Identity (1930–1975). The Hague: Mouton.
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This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Cultural identity is a part of a person s identity or their self conception and self perception and is related to nationality ethnicity religion social class generation locality gender or any kind of social group that has its own distinct culture In this way cultural identity is both characteristic of the individual but also of the culturally identical group of members sharing the same cultural identity or upbringing Cultural identity is an unfixed process that is continually evolving within the discourses of social cultural and historical experiences Some people undergo more cultural identity changes as opposed to others those who change less often have a clear cultural identity This means that they have a dynamic yet stable integration of their culture Cultural identity can be expressed through certain styles of clothing or other aesthetic markers There are three pieces that make up a person s cultural identity cultural knowledge category label and social connections Cultural knowledge refers to a person s connection to their identity through understanding their culture s core characteristics Category label refers to a person s connection to their identity through indirect membership of said culture Social connections refers to a person s connection to their identity through their social relationships Cultural identity is developed through a series of steps First a person comes to understand a culture through being immersed in those values beliefs and practices Second the person then identifies as a member of that culture dependent on their rank within that community Third they develop relationships such as immediate family close friends coworkers and neighbors Culture is a term that is highly complex and often contested with academics recording about 160 variations in meaning Underpinning the notion of culture is that it is dynamic and changes over time and in different contexts resulting in many people today identifying with one or more cultures and many different ways It is a defining feature of a person s identity contributing to how they see themselves and the groups with which they identify A person s understanding of their own and other s identities develops from birth and is shaped by the values and attitudes prevalent at home and in the surrounding community DescriptionChild with flag and a firearm Various modern cultural studies and social theories have investigated cultural identity and understanding In recent decades a new form of identification has emerged that breaks down the understanding of the individual as a coherent whole subject into a collection of various cultural identifiers These cultural identifiers may be the result of various conditions including location sex race history nationality language sexuality religious beliefs ethnicity aesthetics and food As one author writes When talking about identity we generally define this word as the series of physical features that differentiate a person Thus at birth our parents declare us and give us a name with which they will identify us based on whether we are a boy or a girl Identity is not only a right that declares the name sex time and place that one is born the word identity goes beyond what we define it Identity is a function of elements that portrays one in a dynamic way in constant evolution throughout the stages of life identity develops based on personal experiences tastes and choices of a sexual and religious nature as well as the social environment these being some of the main parameters that influence and transform the day to day and allow us to discover a new part of ourselves Categorizations about identity even when codified and hardened into clear typologies by processes of colonization state formation or general modernizing processes are always full of tensions and contradictions Sometimes these contradictions are destructive but they can also be creative and positive The divisions between cultures can be very fine in some parts of the world especially in rapidly changing cities where the population is ethnically diverse and social unity is based primarily on locational contiguity As a historical reservoir culture is an important factor in shaping identity Since one of the main characteristics of a culture is its historical reservoir many if not all groups entertain revisions either consciously or unconsciously in their historical record in order to either bolster the strength of their cultural identity or to forge one which gives them precedent for actual reform or change Some critics of cultural identity argue that the preservation of cultural identity being based upon difference is a divisive force in society and that cosmopolitanism gives individuals a greater sense of shared citizenship When considering practical association in international society states may share an inherent part of their make up that gives common ground and an alternative means of identifying with each other Nations provide the framework for cultural identities called external cultural reality which influences the unique internal cultural realities of the individuals within the nation There is a relationship between cultural identity and new media Rather than necessarily representing an individual s interaction within a certain group cultural identity may be defined by the social network of people imitating and following the social norms as presented by the media Accordingly instead of learning behavior and knowledge from cultural religious groups individuals may be learning these social norms from the media to build on their cultural identity A range of cultural complexities structures the way individuals operate with the cultural realities in their lives Nation is a large factor of the cultural complexity as it constructs the foundation for an individual s identity but it may contrast with one s cultural reality Cultural identities are influenced by several different factors such as ones religion ancestry skin color language class education profession skill family and political attitudes These factors contribute to the development of one s identity HistoryThe history of cultural identity develops out of the observations of a number of social scientists A history of cultural identity is important because it outlines the understanding of how our identities provide a way to see ourselves in relation to the world in which we live Cultural identities are the natural and most fundamental constitutive elements of individual and collective identity Franz Boas is an important figure in the creation of the idea of cultural identity Boas is known for challenging ideas about culture Boas promoted the importance of viewing a culture from within its own perspective and understanding not from the outsider s view point This was a somewhat radical perspective at the time Additionally Myron Lustig is credited with contributing the concept of cultural identity theory A number of contemporary theorists continue to contribute to the concept of cultural identity For instance contemporary work completed by Stuart Hall is considered essential to understand cultural identity According to Hall identity is defined by at least two specific actions which are similarity and difference Specifically in settings of slavery and colonization identity provides a connection to the past as well as disintegration from a shared origination Theorists questions about identity include whether identity is to be understood as something internal that persists through change or as something ascribed from without that changes according to circumstance Whatever the case may be Gleason advocates for sensitivity to the intrinsic complexities of the subject matter with which it deals and careful attention to the need for precision and consistency in its application Cultural identity can also become a marker of difference that requires sensitivity Kuper presents concepts on cultural identity within the framework of a power dynamic He writes The privileged lie and mislead but the oppressed come gradually to appreciate their objective circumstances and formulate a new consciousness that will ultimately liberate them The consciousness is a facet of their identity Similarly identity plays a role in mediating between a human being and the environment in which they exist The identity of a person is a result of socialization and customs that promotes the maintenance of distinct cultural identities from generation to generation Additionally identity can be considered that which forms cultures and results in dictated appropriate behavior Put another way identity may dictate behavior that results in the reification of identity with the individual as a replicate in miniature of the larger social and cultural entity Another way to consider cultural identity is that it is the sum of material wealth and spiritual wealth created by human beings in the practice of social history Globalization is connected to influences in economics politics and society Accordingly globalization has an impact on cultural identity As societies become even more connected there are concerns that cultural identities will become homogenized through the increased level of connection and communication However there are alternative perspectives on this issue For instance Wright theorizes that The spread of global culture and globalised ideas has led to many movements designed to embrace the uniqueness and diversity of an individual s particular culture Cultural arenaIt is also noted that an individual s cultural arena or place where one lives impacts the culture that person abides by The surroundings environment and people in these places play a role in how one feels about the culture they wish to adopt Many immigrants find the need to change their culture in order to fit into the culture of most citizens in the country This can conflict with an immigrant s current belief in their culture and might pose a problem as the immigrant feels compelled to choose between the two presenting cultures Some might be able to adjust to the various cultures in the world by committing to two or more cultures It is not required to stick to one culture Many people socialize and interact with people in one culture in addition to another group of people in another culture Thus cultural identity is able to take many forms and can change depending on the cultural area The impact of the cultural arena has changed with the advent of the Internet bringing together groups of people with shared cultural interests who before would have been more likely to integrate into their real world cultural arena This adaptability is what allows people to feel a part of society and culture wherever they go LanguageLanguage allows for people in a group to communicate their values beliefs and customs all of which contribute to creating a cultural identity It was for a long time believed that if children lose their languages they lose part or all of their cultural identity When students who are non native English speakers go to classes where they are required to speak only English they feel that their native language has no value Some studies found that this leads to loss of their culture and language altogether and this can lead to either a massive change in cultural identity or they find themselves struggling to understand who they are Language also includes the way people speak with peers family members authority figures and strangers including the tone and familiarity that is included in the language The learning process can also be affected by cultural identity via the understanding of specific words and the preference for specific words when learning and using a second language Since many aspects of a person s cultural identity can be changed such as citizenship or influence from outside cultures language is a major component of cultural identity However more recent research could show that language may be not a crucial part of a person s identity or cultural identity EducationCultural identity is often not discussed in the classroom or learning environment where an instructor presides over the class This often happens when the instructor attempts to discuss cultural identity and the issues that come with it in the classroom and is met with disagreement and cannot make forward progress in the conversation Moreover not talking about cultural identity can lead to issues such as prohibiting growth of education development of a sense of self and social competency In these environments there are often many different cultures and problems can occur due to different worldviews that prevent others from being able to think outwardly about their peers values and differing backgrounds If students are able to think outwardly then they can not only better connect with their peers but also further develop their own worldview In addition to this instructors should take into account the needs of different students backgrounds in order to best relay the material in a way that engages the student When students learn that knowledge and truth are relevant to each person that instructors do not know everything and that their own personal experiences dictate what they believe they can better contextualize new information using their own experiences as well as taking into account the different cultural experiences of others This in turn increases the ability to critically think and challenge new information which benefits all students learning in a classroom setting There are two ways instructors can better elicit this response from their students through active communication of cultural identity The first is by having students engage in class discussion with their peers Doing so creates community and allows for students to share their knowledge as well as question their peers and instructors thereby learning about each other s cultural identity and creating acceptance of differing worldviews in the classroom The second way is by using active learning methods such as forming small groups and analyzing case studies Through engaging in active learning students learn that their cultural identity is welcomed and accepted Cultural identity and immigrant experienceIdentity development among immigrant groups has been studied across a multi dimensional view of acculturation Acculturation is the phenomenon that results when groups or individuals from different cultures come into continuous contact with one another and adopt certain values and practices that were not originally their own Acculturation is unique from assimilation Dina Birman and Edison Trickett 2001 conducted a qualitative study through informal interviews with first generation Soviet Jewish refugee adolescents looking at the process of acculturation through three different dimensions language competence behavioral acculturation and cultural identity The results indicated that acculturation appears to occur in a linear pattern over time for most dimensions of acculturation with acculturation to the American culture increasing and acculturation to the Russian culture decreasing However Russian language competence for the parents did not diminish with length of residence in the country Birman amp Trickett 2001 In a similar study Phinney Horencyzk Liebkind and Vedder 2001 focused on a model which concentrates on the interaction between immigrant characteristics and the responses of the majority society to understand the psychological effects of immigration The researchers concluded that most studies find that being bicultural the combination of a strong ethnic and a strong national identity yields the best adaptation in the new country of residence An article by LaFromboise L K Colemna and Gerton reviews the literature on the impact of being bicultural It showed that it is possible to have the ability to obtain competence within two cultures without losing one s sense of identity or having to identity with one culture over the other LaFromboise Et Al 1993 The importance of ethnic and national identity in the educational adaptation of immigrants indicates that a bicultural orientation is advantageous for school performance Portes amp Rumbaut 1990 Educators can assume their positions of power in beneficially impactful ways for immigrant students by providing them with access to their native cultural support groups language classes after school activities and clubs in order to help them feel more connected to both native and national cultures It is clear that the new country of residence can impact immigrants identity development across multiple dimensions Biculturalism can allow for a healthy adaptation to life and school With many new immigrant youth a school district in Alberta Canada has gone as far as to partner with various agencies and professionals in an effort to aid the cultural adjustment of new Filipino immigrant youths In the study cited a combination of family workshops and teacher professional development aimed to improve the language learning and emotional development of these youths and families School TransitionsHow great is Achievement Loss Associated with the Transition to Middle School and High School John W Alspaugh s research is in the September October 1998 Journal of Educational Research vol 92 no 1 2026 Comparing three groups of 16 school districts the loss was greater where the transition was from sixth grade than from a K 8 system It was also greater when students from multiple elementary schools merged into a single middle school Students from both K 8 and middle schools lost achievement in transition to high school though this was greater for middle school students and high school dropout rates were higher for districts with grades 6 8 middle schools than for those with K 8 elementary schools The Jean S Phinney Three Stage Model of Ethnic Identity Development is a widely accepted view of the formation of cultural identity In this model cultural Identity is often developed through a three stage process unexamined cultural identity cultural identity search and cultural identity achievement Unexamined cultural identity a stage where one s cultural characteristics are taken for granted and consequently there is little interest in exploring cultural issues This for example is the stage one is in throughout their childhood when one doesn t distinguish between cultural characteristics of their household and others Usually a person in this stage accepts the ideas they find on culture from their parents the media community and others An example of thought in this stage I don t have a culture I m just an American My parents tell me about where they lived but what do I care I ve never lived there Cultural identity search is the process of exploration and questioning about one s culture in order to learn more about it and to understand the implications of membership in that culture During this stage a person will begin to question why they hold their beliefs and compare it to the beliefs of other cultures For some this stage may arise from a turning point in their life or from a growing awareness of other cultures This stage is characterized by growing awareness in social and political forums and a desire to learn more about culture This can be expressed by asking family members questions about heritage visiting museums reading of relevant cultural sources enrolling in school courses or attendance at cultural events This stage might have an emotional component as well An example of thought in this stage I want to know what we do and how our culture is different from others There are a lot of non Japanese people around me and it gets pretty confusing to try and decide who I am Cultural identity achievement is characterized by a clear confident acceptance of oneself and an internalization of one s cultural identity In this stage people often allow the acceptance of their cultural identity play a role in their future choices such as how to raise children how to deal with stereotypes and any discrimination and approach negative perceptions This usually leads to an increase in self confidence and positive psychological adjustmentThe role of the Rana AneesThere is a set of phenomena that occur in conjunction between virtual culture understood as the modes and norms of behavior associated with the internet and the online world and youth culture While we can speak of a duality between the virtual online and real sphere face to face relations for youth this frontier is implicit and permeable On occasions to the annoyance of parents and teachers these spheres are even superposed meaning that young people may be in the real world without ceasing to be connected In the present techno cultural context the relationship between the real world and the virtual world cannot be understood as a link between two independent and separate worlds possibly coinciding at a point but as a Moebius strip where there exists no inside and outside and where it is impossible to identify limits between both For new generations to an ever greater extent digital life merges with their home life as yet another element of nature In this naturalizing of digital life the learning processes from that environment are frequently mentioned not just since they are explicitly asked but because the subject of the internet comes up spontaneously among those polled The ideas of active learning of googling when you don t know of recourse to tutorials for learning a program or a game or the expression I learnt English better and in a more entertaining way by playing are examples often cited as to why the internet is the place most frequented by the young people polled The internet is becoming an extension of the expressive dimension of the youth condition There youth talk about their lives and concerns design the content that they make available to others and assess others reactions to it in the form of optimized and electronically mediated social approval Many of today s youth go through processes of affirmation procedures and is often the case for how youth today grow dependent on peer approval When connected youth speak of their daily routines and lives With each post image or video they upload they have the possibility of asking themselves who they are and to try out profiles differing from those they assume in the real world The connections they feel in more recent times have become much less interactive through personal means compared to past generations The influx of new technology and access has created new fields of research on effects on teens and young adults They thus negotiate their identity and create senses of belonging putting the acceptance and censure of others to the test an essential mark of the process of identity construction Youth ask themselves about what they think of themselves how they see themselves personally and especially how others see them On the basis of these questions youth make decisions which through a long process of trial and error shape their identity This experimentation is also a form through which they can think about their insertion membership and sociability in the real world From other perspectives the question arises on what impact the internet has had on youth through accessing this sort of identity laboratory and what role it plays in the shaping of youth identity On the one hand the internet enables young people to explore and perform various roles and personifications while on the other the virtual forums some of them highly attractive vivid and absorbing e g video games or virtual games of personification could present a risk to the construction of a stable and viable personal identity See alsoCollective identity Conflict theories Cultural diversity Cultural identity theory Diaspora politics Globalization Human rights education Intercultural competence Multiculturalism Nationalism Need for affiliation Pan nationalism Pluralism Progressive politics Self concept Self determination Self discovery Social identity Social identity theory TransculturationSources This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA IGO 3 0 license statement permission Text taken from Youth and changing realities rethinking secondary education in Latin America 44 45 Lopez Nestor Opertti Renato Vargas Tamez Carlos UNESCO UNESCO ReferencesUsborne Esther Sablonniere Roxane December 2014 Understanding My Culture Means Understanding Myself The Function of Cultural Identity Clarity for Personal Identity Clarity and Personal Psychological Well Being Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 44 4 436 doi 10 1111 jtsb 12061 Wan Ching Chew Pony Yuen Ga 2013 09 04 Cultural 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and personal identity formation doi 10 25358 openscience 9151 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help James Paul 2015 Despite the Terrors of Typologies The Importance of Understanding Categories of Difference and Identity Interventions International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 17 2 174 195 doi 10 1080 1369801x 2014 993332 S2CID 142378403 Pratt Nicola 2005 Identity Culture and Democratization The Case of Egypt PDF New Political Science 27 1 69 86 doi 10 1080 07393140500030832 S2CID 55401396 Shindler Michael June 9 2014 A Discussion On The Purpose of Cultural Identity The Apollonian Revolt Archived from the original on 19 April 2015 Retrieved 10 April 2015 The Limits of Nationalism by Chaim Gans ISBN 978 0 521 00467 1 C Brown 2001 Understanding International Relations Hampshire Palgrave Terrence N Tice The Education Digest vol 64 issue 9 May 1999 p 43 Singh C L 2010 New media and cultural identity China Media 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identity Ampersand 10 2023 100123 https doi org 10 1016 j amper 2023 100123 Altugan Arzu Sosyal May 2015 The Relationship Between Cultural Identity and Learning Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences 186 1159 1162 doi 10 1016 j sbspro 2015 04 161 ISSN 1877 0428 Ortiz Anna M 2000 Expressing Cultural Identity in the Learning Community Opportunities and Challenges New Directions for Teaching and Learning 2000 82 67 79 doi 10 1002 tl 8207 ISSN 0271 0633 Migration distress and cultural identity academic oup com Retrieved 2024 02 05 Tweedie Gregory Dressler Anja Schmidt Cora Leah 12 November 2018 Supporting Reconnecting Immigrant Families with English Language Learners in Rural Schools An Exploratory Study of Filipino Arrivals to Alberta Retrieved 17 November 2018 Tweedie Gregory Dressler Anja Schmidt Cora Leah 12 November 2018 Supporting Reconnecting Immigrant Families with English Language Learners in Rural Schools An Exploratory Study of Filipino Arrivals to Alberta Retrieved 17 November 2018 Terrence N Tice 1999 Cultural Identity Prakken Publications Inc pp 43 44 ProQuest 218180019 http www niusileadscape org docs FINAL PRODUCTS NIUSI toolkit cd 4 20 20Implementing 20Change OnPoints OP cultural identity pdf bare URL PDF Lopez Nestor Opertti Renato Vargas Tamez Carlos 2017 Youth and changing realities Rethinking secondary education in Latin America PDF UNESCO pp 44 45 ISBN 978 92 31 00204 5 SITEAL IIPE UNESCO y OEI 2014 Politicas TIC en los Sistemas Educativos de America Latina Informe sobre tendencias sociales y educativas en America Latina Buenos Aires IIEP UNESCO Regional Office in Buenos Aires Morduchowicz R Marcon A Sylvestre A Ballestrini F 2010 Los adolescentes y las redes sociales Turkle S 1995 Life on the screen Identity in the age of the Internet New York Simon amp Schuster Wallace P 1999 The psychology of the Internet Cambridge Cambridge University Press Zegers B Larrain M E 2011 El impacto de la Internet en la definicion de la identidad juvenil una revision Psykhe 11 1 Archived from the original on 2020 10 30 Retrieved 2018 09 07 SourcesGad Barzilai Communities and Law Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities University of Michigan Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 472 03079 8 Tan S h 2005 Challenging citizenship group membership and cultural identity in a global age Aldershot Hants England Ashgate ISBN 0 7546 4367 0 Bunschoten R Binet H amp Hoshino T 2001 Urban flotsam stirring the city Chora Rotterdam 010 Publishers ISBN 90 6450 387 7 Mandelbaum M 2000 The new European diasporas national minorities and conflict in Eastern Europe New York Council on Foreign Relations Press Houtman G 1999 Mental culture in Burmese crisis politics Aung San Suu Kyi and the National League for Democracy Tokyo Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa Tokyo University of Foreign Studies library cornell edu ISBN 4 87297 748 3 Sagasti F R amp Alcalde G 1999 Development cooperation in a fractured global order an arduous transition Ottawa International Development Research Centre ISBN 0 88936 889 9 Crahan M E amp Vourvoulias Bush A 1997 The city and the world New York s global future New York Council on Foreign relations ISBN 0 87609 208 3 Hall S amp Du Gay P 1996 Questions of cultural identity London Sage ISBN 0 8039 7883 9 Cable V 1994 The world s new fissures identities in crisis London Demos ISBN 1 898309 35 3 Berkson I B 1920 Theories of Americanization a critical study with special reference to the Jewish group New York City Teachers College Columbia University Mora Necha 2008 Further readingLibrary resources about Cultural identity Resources in your library Anderson Benedict 1983 Imagined Communities London Verso Balibar Renee amp Laporte Dominique 1974 Le francais national Politique et pratique de la langue nationale sous la Revolution Paris Hachette Bourdieu Pierre 1980 L identite et la representation Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales 35 63 70 doi 10 3406 arss 1980 2100 full text IDENTITIES how Governed Who Pays Archived 2023 04 04 at the Wayback Machine de Certeau Michel Julia Dominique amp Revel Jacques 1975 Une politique de la langue La Revolution francaise et les patois Paris Gallimard Evangelista M 2003 Culture Identity and Conflict The Influence of Gender in Conflict and Reconstruction in Multiethnic Societies Washington D C The National Academies Press 2 Fishman Joshua A 1973 Language and Nationalism Two Integrative Essays Rowley MA Newbury House Guney U 2010 We see our people suffering the war the mass media and the reproduction of Muslim identity among youth Media War amp Conflict 3 2 1 14 doi 10 1177 1750635210360081 S2CID 144184123 Gellner Ernest 1983 Nations and Nationalism Oxford Basil Blackwell Gordon David C 1978 The French Language and National Identity 1930 1975 The Hague Mouton James Paul 2015 Despite the Terrors of Typologies The Importance of Understanding Categories of Difference and Identity Interventions International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 17 2 174 195 doi 10 1080 1369801x 2014 993332 S2CID 142378403 Milstein T amp Castro Sotomayor J 2020 Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity London UK Routledge https doi org 10 4324 9781351068840 Robyns Clem 1995 Defending the national identity In Andreas Poltermann Ed Literaturkanon Medienereignis Kultureller Text Berlin Erich Schmidt Verlag ISBN 3 503 03727 6 Robyns Clem 1994 Translation and discursive identity Poetics Today 15 3 405 428 doi 10 2307 1773316 JSTOR 1773316 Sparrow Lise M 2014 Beyond multicultural man Complexities of identity In Molefi Kete Asante Yoshitaka Miike amp Jing Yin Eds The global intercultural communication reader 2nd ed pp 393 414 New York NY Routledge Stewart Edward C amp Bennet Milton J 1991 American cultural patterns A cross cultural perspective Rev ed Yarmouth ME Intercultural Press Woolf Stuart Europe and the Nation State EUI Working Papers in History 91 11 Florence European University Institute Yin Jing 2018 Beyond Postmodernism A Non Western Perspective on Identity Journal of Multicultural Discourses 13 3 193 219 doi 10 1080 17447143 2018 1497640 S2CID 149705264