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2023 Journal Impact Factor - 0.7
2023 CiteScore - 1.4
ISSN 2083-6473
ISSN 2083-6481 (electronic version)
Editor-in-Chief
Associate Editor
Prof. Tomasz Neumann
Published by
TransNav, Faculty of Navigation
Gdynia Maritime University
3, John Paul II Avenue
81-345 Gdynia, POLAND
e-mail transnav@umg.edu.pl
A Door Opener: Teaching Cross Cultural Competence to Seafarers
1 Constanta Maritime University, Constanța, Romania
2 Vestfold University College, Tonsberg, Norway
2 Vestfold University College, Tonsberg, Norway
ABSTRACT: The importance of developing cultural competence in maritime professionals is increasingly being recognized. Seafarers seek knowledge to help them cope with the growing diversity of their employers, leaders and colleagues. However, even though requirements designed to address cultural competence are incorporated into maritime school curricula, the institutional culture of maritime education systematically tends to foster static and essentialist conceptions of ?culture? as applied to seafarers. Many questions emerge when we try to teach in a way that brings alive the humanity of mariners. These questions are waiting for their answers, so in our paper we shall try to find and explain some approaches and ways of teaching and research as the goal is to provide maritime professionals with practical wisdom in comprehending what is the seafarers? life on board ship.
KEYWORDS: Maritime Education and Training (MET), Seafarers Training, Cultural Competence, Cross Cultural Communication, Students Approaches to Learning, Students Awareness and Sensitivity, Cultural Diversity, Education to Cultural Development
REFERENCES
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UNESCO (1992): International Conference on Edu- cation, 43rd Session, The Contribution of Education to Cultural Development, p.5, §10.
UNESCO (2001): Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity (Culture is “the whole complex of distinctive spiritual, material, intellectual and emotional features that characterize a society or social group. It includes not only the arts and letters, but also modes of life, the fundamental rights of the human being, value systems, traditions and beliefs”)
UNESCO (2003): Education in a Multilingual World, UNESCO Education Position Paper (It discusses the use of mother tongue (or first language), as language of instruction for initial instruction and literacy, the importance of bilingual or multilingual education (i.e. the use of more than one language of instruction), and language teaching with a strong cultural component).
Citation note:
Chirea-Ungureanu C., Rosenhave P.-E.: A Door Opener: Teaching Cross Cultural Competence to Seafarers. TransNav, the International Journal on Marine Navigation and Safety of Sea Transportation, Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 527-532, 2012