Articles

Cultural Detective®, Personal Leadership™, and
the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity:

A first proposal of what can happen
when three intercultural methodologies play together.

Dianne Hofner Saphiere, Barbara F. Schaetti, and Heather Robinson

 

A successful trainer, coach, or facilitator in an intercultural context accounts for at least three dynamics simultaneously:

  1. the external realities of cultural difference: the values, beliefs, and personal cultural sense that show up in the given interaction,
  2. the internal realities of each person’s self-reflexivity: the extent to which the people involved are able to show up in the present moment with mindfulness and creativity, and
  3. the cognitive capacity each person has for dealing with difference.

Successful trainers, coaches, and facilitators must be ready to account for these dynamics both within themselves and within their participants, and they must be ready to help everyone involved (themselves as well as participants) take their next steps in learning to engage these dynamics with increasing skill.

This is a complex, some might say juicy, mandate!

We propose in this short paper that this mandate can be successfully accomplished through the interweaving of three powerful intercultural tools: Cultural Detective® (CD), Personal Leadership™ (PL), and the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity (DMIS). The first two are state-of-the-art processes for building skills. Most serendipitously, they complement one another in a way that, when used together, allows each to bring out the best in the other; the combination encourages best practice of both tools. The third is a developmental scale along which progress can be tracked. Thus, the DMIS gauges development of intercultural sensitivity, while Cultural Detective and Personal Leadership help us develop intercultural competence. The graphic below illustrates how the three tools interface.

When considering the graphic, it is important to note that Cultural Detective and Personal Leadership are both holistic processes and that the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity is a linear one. Combining linear and holistic approaches can be tricky. There is a tendency, at times perhaps even a necessity, to “break apart” distinct elements of the holistic models so as to correlate them with specific stages of the linear. Indeed, that is what we are presenting in the graphic below. In practice, however, such a “breaking apart” of the core elements of CD and PL must be taken lightly. The graphic is not intended to imply that someone at a specific stage of the DMIS would engage only the correlated elements of the CD and PL processes. Rather, those correlated elements are the “flash points” or points of growth and challenge for the practitioner, and potentially provide a point of entry into the models for people at the respective DMIS stage. As holistic methods, however, and regardless of practitioners’ DMIS stage, Cultural Detective and Personal Leadership are always used in their entirety.

Let us now look at the graphic and deconstruct what we intend for it to communicate.

Delineating the graphic’s core elements

The “double helix” is comprised of two vertical strands, one representing the methodology of Cultural Detective and the other representing the methodology of Personal Leadership. Both these methodologies have a long history of supporting their practitioners in improving intercultural competence.

As the vertical strands of the double helix wind around one another, openings are created. The first five stages of the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity are sequentially represented in the five openings, from least sensitive (Denial) at the bottom of the graphic to most sensitive (Adaptation) at the top. Preliminary results from research currently underway suggest that individual practice of either the CD or PL methodologies facilitates a person’s development of intercultural sensitivity. We posit here, as demonstrated by the weaving together of the two vertical strands, that an integrated practice of the CD and PL methodologies can exponentially increase that development.

Let’s look again at the graphic. Each opening created by the interweaving vertical strands of CD and PL practice contains a “moebius strip,” on each of which is written two phrases. The phrase beginning top left in each opening is sequenced from the CD methodology; the phrase beginning bottom left in each opening is sequenced from PL. The phrases on each moebius strip represent the complementary aspects of the two methodologies: where they meet in their respective foci, and where they serve to reinforce one another in best practice. They also represent the kind of challenge/support required by someone at the given DMIS stage to advance towards the next. The CD and PL practices reinforce one another in a holistic way, building and growing practitioners’ competence along the developmental model of the DMIS.

What is perhaps most exciting about the moebius strips in the graphic is that they identify the ways in which the various stages of the CD and PL methodologies come together to offer the necessary combination of challenge and support at the different stages of the DMIS – the alchemical edge necessary for transformation. As we have said, practicing both methods together brings out the best practice of each.

Those in Defense, for example, are challenged to not just get angry but to actually articulate the differences they are experiencing. The CD and PL worksheets support practitioners in this by including the call to description in their respective processes. It is clear from the worksheets that everyone needs to be able to describe rather than ascribe, and thus to move into curiosity.

Similarly, people in Minimization are challenged by being asked to consider their own cultural programming. The CD and PL worksheets (and the CD Values Lenses) support practitioners in self-discovery by asking them to identify and articulate their values, expectations, and assumptions – and so to begin to see that not everyone holds the same. Similar conditions of challenge/support are also provided through the CD and PL methodologies at each of the other stages of the DMIS.

This is not to say that someone in Defense is only responsible for using the early stages of the methodologies, nor that someone in Acceptance is encouraged to jump straight to defining Cultural Bridges and Discerning Right Action. As we specified at the beginning of this paper, for the methodologies to actually augment intercultural competence, they must be used in their entireties.

The conditions of challenge/support, however, highlight where various participants will find their generative edge. Facilitators will be able to assess at what stages of the methodologies to place process emphasis, where to anticipate participant uncertainty and resistance, where to anticipate that participants will come alive in the learning process and be drawn into new awareness. Users at all developmental stages will resonate and learn from both methodologies, yet will find support and challenge in different places and in different ways.

Why both CD and PL?

How do CD and PL work together to create this opportunity for exponential development along the DMIS? Why not choose a single methodology rather than weave the two together?

Let’s consider a reality confronting the two methodologies: each method has been known to be misused, or at least used in such a way that practitioners miss the full potential it offers them.

In both instances, the true transformative potential of each methodology is lost. This is perhaps especially true for new practitioners in the earlier stages of the DMIS. When the two methodologies are woven together, however, used as integrated strands to a larger whole, each calls forth the best practice in the other.

That, at least, is our supposition. What do you think?

Next Steps: Join us to Deepen the Exploration!

We periodically offer a multiweek course constructed around four synchronous facilitated online learning events (synchronous FOLEs), individual reading and reflection, and virtual partner work. The course is designed specifically for people interested in further exploring how the MashUp of CD and PL can support users’ development of intercultural sensitivity. The series is entitled, Developmental Intercultural Competence: Cultural Detective, Personal Leadership, and the DMIS



© 2010 and 2011 Dianne Hofner Saphiere, Barbara F. Schaetti, and Heather Robinson.