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BA 4216 Cross-cultural Studies in Organizations Introduction and Culture Course syllabus available at http://old.ba.metu.edu.tr/user/ctopal Instructor: Çağrı Topal 1 Why take this course Culture as shaping managerial and organizational practices  Cultural diversity based on differences in education, occupation, hometown, social class, and gender  2 Objective Developing a critical understanding of the implications of different national cultures for business and management practice in domestic and international markets  Improving teamwork and presentation skills  3 Outcomes Understanding the global context of crosscultural management, influence of different cultural and religious characteristics on management, role of cross-cultural communication in business, leadership, motivation, negotiation, conflict management, and human resource management across cultures, ethical issues in cross-cultural settings, and ethnocentric business practices  Improving teamwork and presentation skills  4 Readings Mixed readings from relevant textbooks  Textbooks on cross-cultural management available from the library  Long cases from Martin J. Gannon, “Understanding Global Cultures”, 3rd and 4th editions  Short cases to be distributed in class  5 Assessment-1 Midterm 1  Midterm 2  Case quizzes  Case presentation and report  Group participation  Individual participation  Total  20% 20% 30% 15% 10% 10% 105% 6 Assessment-2: IMPORTANT Grades and notes are final and not subject to change.  No individual request for additional study for raising a grade will be accepted.  No non-academic criteria such as that you are working outside, that this is your last semester, and that this is your only course will be considered in grading.  7 Lecture and participation Key points and examples by the instructor  Discussion in the groups of two or three or four students  General class discussion  Students’ questions and critiques  Do not write the name of an absent student on the group/case participation sheet and lose all participation points  8 Midterms Two conceptual exams (November 4 and 25)  Closed-book and closed-notes  Multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank, true-false, short- and long-answer questions  Make-up exam only if applied within one week after the exam with documentation  No make-up for group or individual participation studies in the class  No final exam and thus no resit exam  9 Case presentation Ten cases  Quiz for each case  Each presented by a group of three or four students  35-40 minutes for the presentation and 15-20 minutes for the discussion  10 Case report Report only on the case presented-3 pages  Typed in appropriate format (see the syllabus)  Not the analysis of the case  Explanation of the group preparation process  Group grade  One point penalty for each day of late submission  Form your groups and select a case  11 Civility Be in class on time  Turn your cellular phones off  Turn your laptops off  Avoid engaging in side conversations  Use an impersonal professional language  See the instructor if you need special arrangements  12 Grading Percentage  90-100  85-89  80-84  75-79  70-74  65-69  60-64  50-59  49 and below  Course Grade AA BA BB CB CC DC DD FD FF Coefficient 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 13 Code of ethics and regulations  Make yourself familiar with the university’s code of ethics and regulations 14 Questions Questions  Concerns  15 Culture  Kluckhohn (1962): ‘culture consists of patterned ways of thinking, feeling and reacting, acquired and transmitted mainly by symbols, constituting the distinctive achievement of human groups, including their embodiments in artefacts; the essential core of culture consists of traditional (i.e., historically derived and selected) ideas and especially their attached values’ 16 Culture  Triandis (1972): the subjective perception of the human-made part of the environment including the categorization of social stimuli, associations, beliefs, attitudes, roles, and values that individuals share 17 Culture  Hofstede (1980): culture consists of shared mental programs that control individuals’ response to their environment • Human nature: Universal characteristics • Groups: Culture • Individuals: Personality 18 Culture Group phenomenon  Shared  Learned  Enduring  Powerful influence on behaviour  Systematic and organized  Largely invisible  Normal  19 Culture natural and correct vs. unnatural and incorrect  universal validity  in-group vs. out-group  20 Culture It’s like water surrounding the fish  Culture does not necessarily result in the same behaviour in all individual members but signals the same meaning every time  Similar values might exist in different cultures with different priorities  21