Communication in a Cross-Cultural Context, 7.5 credits
Communication in a Cross-Cultural Context, 7.5 högskolepoäng
Course Code: | JCCG19 |
Confirmed: | Mar 24, 2025 |
Valid From: | Sep 01, 2025 |
Education Cycle: | First-cycle level |
Disciplinary domain: | Social sciences |
Subject group: | Business Administration |
Specialised in: | G1N First cycle, has only upper-secondary level entry requirements |
Main field of study: | Business Administration |
On completion of the course the student will be able to:
1. account for relevant concepts, models, and theories related to communication in a cross-cultural context
2. account for basic academic research on intercultural communication
3. describe challenges of communicating in an intercultural world
4. craft academic papers and reports, using appropriate layout and referencing style
5. formulate a relevant question related to intercultural communication in business and discuss it by applying relevant theory
6. conduct oral presentation in front of peers
7. work effectively in a cross-cultural team
8. reflect on the role of your own intercultural competence in intercultural interactions
9. reflect on the role of cross-cultural communication for supporting inclusion and ethical practices in businesses
Drawing on perspectives and theories from business administration and communication, the course ”Communication in a cross-cultural context” provides a broad understanding of communication in intercultural settings. The course provides students basics concepts and theories and introduces them to the practice of oral, written and non-verbal communication in the context of international management studies. To enable participants to be effective as business students and subsequently as business practitioners, the course also provides basic skills in understanding and producing academic texts and oral presentation. Finally, to develop each participant's ability to function effectively in a cross-cultural environment, the course offers this kind of practice.
Relevant aspects in the course include:
The course includes lectures, seminars, group work, and oral as well as written examination. Compulsory and active participation required on the sessions.
Language of instruction is in English.
General entry requirements and Mathematics 3b or 3c, Civics 1b or 1a1+1a2 with required grades E (or the equivalent). Proof of English proficency is required.
There are individual quizzes during the course, all should be passed (get minimum amounts of required points) to get a passing grade (G).
The intended learning outcomes are mainly assessed as follows:
Individual quizzes (ILOs: 1, 2) representing 1 credit
Group assignment (ILOs: 4, 5, 6, 7) representing 3 credits
Individual written exam (ILOs: 1-5, 8-9) representing 3,5 credits
All parts of the compulsory examination in the course must receive a passing grade before a final grade can be set. Grades are set in accordance with JIBS grading policy
Name of the Test | Value | Grading |
---|---|---|
Individual quizzes | 1 credit | G/U |
Group assignment | 3 credits | A/B/C/D/E/FX/F |
Individual written exam | 3.5 credits | A/B/C/D/E/FX/F |
It is the responsibility of the examiner to ensure that each course is evaluated. At the outset of the course, the programme evaluators in the course must be contacted. In the middle of the course, the examiner should meet the programme evaluators to identify strengths/weaknesses in the first half of the course. At the end of the course, the examiner should remind students to fill in the survey. The examiner should also call a meeting with the programme evaluators to debrief the course, based on course evaluation data and comments. The next time the course runs, students should be informed of any measures taken to improve the course based on the previous course evaluations. At the end of each study period, JIBS’ Director of Quality and Accreditation crafts a “Course Evaluation Quarter Report”, presenting the quantitative results from course evaluation surveys. The Associate Dean of Education, The Associate Deans of Faculty, Programme Directors, and JSA President and Quality receive the report.
Academic integrity
JIBS students are expected to maintain a strong academic integrity. This implies to behave within the boundaries of academic rules and expectations relating to all types of teaching and examination.
Copying someone else’s work is a particularly serious offence and can lead to disciplinary action. When you copy someone else’s work, you are plagiarising. You must not copy sections of work (such as paragraphs, diagrams, tables and words) from any other person, including another student or any other author. Cutting and pasting is a clear example of plagiarism. There is a workshop and online resources to assist you in not plagiarising called the Interactive Anti-Plagiarism Guide.
Other forms of breaking academic integrity include (but are not limited to) adding your name to a project you did not work on (or allowing someone to add their name), cheating on an examination, helping other students to cheat and submitting other students work as your own, and using non-allowed electronic equipment during an examination. All of these make you liable to disciplinary action.
Liu, S., Volcic, Z., and Gallois, C. (2023).* Introducing Intercultural Communication:*Global Cultures and Contexts.
4th ed., London. Sage Pub.
A list of articles will be supplied at the course introduction.