This document summarizes a conference on mindfulness and intercultural learning. It begins with an introduction to mindfulness as paying attention purposefully and non-judgmentally to the present moment. Benefits discussed include increased self-awareness, managing stereotypes, and handling stress. Intercultural scholars note parallels with developing empathy and considering multiple perspectives. Practicing mindfulness can enhance students' learning and educators' teaching by improving focus, resilience, and openness. The document encourages applying mindfulness through awareness of the senses, emotions, stillness, ambiguity, vision, and judgments.
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Mindful Learning for a Changing World - Presentation
1. MINDFUL LEARNING
FOR A CHANGING WORLD
CIEE 2015 CONFERENCE
Berlin, Germany
Tara Harvey, PhD
CIEE, Academic Director, Intercultural Learning
Catherine Menyhart, MEd
CIEE, Manager, Training & Development
Tina Kirk, MBA
Higher Education Professional
3. Small Group Discussion
• Introduce yourselves briefly.
• What do you know or have you heard about mindfulness?
What does it mean to you?
• Why do you think mindfulness is becoming increasingly
popular/mainstream these days?
• Based on your own experience and the article we’ve read, what
relationships do you see between mindfulness and intercultural
learning?
• How might mindfulness benefit your students?
• How might mindfulness benefit you?
3
4. What is Mindfulness?
• About being fully present
• Opposite of mindlessness
• Involves paying attention to
our internal and external
environments, and the
relationship between the two
• Meditation a means for
practicing, although not
synonymous
• Secular, or can be tied to a
spiritual practice
4
Mindfulness means
paying attention in a
particular way:
on purpose, in the
present moment, and
nonjudgmentally.
– Jon Kabat-Zinn
6. “The growing mainstream acceptance of meditation and
mindfulness continues to amaze me. In just a few years, what was
once a fringe movement has become an accepted line of research
for academics and scientists, a valid treatment for soldiers and sick
patients, and a reliable performance enhancer for groups such as
the Boston Red Sox and the U.S. Marines. And it’s just getting
started.”
– David Gelles
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7. Mindfulness and Intercultural Communication
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Mindfulness means being aware of our own and others’
behavior in the situation, and paying focused attention to the
process of communication taking place between us and
dissimilar others.
– Stella Ting-Toomey
Stella Ting-Toomey (1999):
• Mindless vs. Mindful Stereotyping
• Mindful Intercultural Communication Model
So how do we become more mindful?
PRACTICE. PRACTICE. PRACTICE.
8. 8
Mindfulness means paying attention
in a particular way:
on purpose, in the present moment,
and nonjudgmentally.
– Jon Kabat-Zinn
9. Relationship/Parallels with Intercultural Teaching & Learning
• Self-awareness is key
• Involve bringing judgments into
awareness
• Importance of affective, as well as
behavioral learning
• Both related to Emotional
Intelligence (EQ)
• Facilitator’s own
practice/development is
fundamental
9
With mindfulness,
we relate to each
other and ourselves
differently.
- David Gelles
10. Benefits of Mindfulness for Intercultural Teaching & Learning
For Students:
• Enhance self-awareness
• Help curtail automatic responses
and self-regulate
• Cultivate compassion and empathy
• Open awareness to multiple
perspectives and responses
• Think creatively
• Better handle uncertain and fast-
changing conditions
• Enhance resiliency
• Increase somatic awareness
Additionally, for Educators:
• Enhance awareness of self and
learners; meta-level awareness
• Improves focus
• Help handle stress and challenging
situations
• Increase comfort/confidence to
hold the silence, let the right
response emerge
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11. Personal Leadership
A methodology designed to serve anyone who is living and/or
working across cultural differences or in situations of uncertainty
and transition.
Mindfulness
About becoming more aware of our habits and
default cultural programming when faced with
difference.
Creativity
About being curious and creative in how we
interpret things, and making a conscious choice
about how to respond in the given situation.
12. Personal Leadership Practices
Attending to
Physical Sensation
Attending to
Emotion
Cultivating
Stillness
Engaging
Ambiguity
Aligning with
Vision
Attending to
Judgment