Cultural Diversity: Looking at Age

Cultural Diversity: Looking at Age

<p> CULTURAL DIVERSITY: LOOKING AT AGE CULTURAL DIVERSITY: LOOKING AT AGE Generation Gaps In Society Today</p><p>Nicole Davis</p><p>Cultural Diversity</p><p>G. McMahon</p><p>Davis |1 Generation Gaps in Society Today CULTURAL DIVERSITY: LOOKING AT AGE</p><p>SOC 210</p><p>5.21.12</p><p>We surveyed Fortune 500 executives across the country and found that 80% of</p><p> them find communication across generations to be a most challenging issue in the</p><p> workplace. In fact, many businesses are paying more attention to the generation</p><p> gap now than ever before, and it all seems to boil down to how different</p><p> generations perceive technology…and use it.</p><p>(Savitz & Weiss)</p><p>In surveying articles within the subject of age, I came across a good majority of them having to do with the correlation between the generation gap today, technology, and conflict in the workforce. This may have to do with a wide array of things; from work ethics to money management, from natural political experience power-hierarchies to the dynamics of respect relationships. Orinta Zvikaitė-Rötting, a Lithuanian youth worker and peace activist, adds:</p><p>An old proverb says that any friendship ends when it comes to money. Is</p><p> the current generation gap between the growing members of seniors and growing</p><p> generations of “double income, no kids” the loss of generational friendship? If</p><p> there is a gap, there is a conflict; and if there is a conflict, it needs resolution.</p><p>(Zvikaitė-Rötting)</p><p>In this same article Zvikaitė-Rötting addresses conflict resolution between generational relationships:</p><p>2 CULTURAL DIVERSITY: LOOKING AT AGE</p><p>Most conflicts of generational communication come from the tension</p><p> between needs and rights that are incompatible. Norms and needs are different</p><p> for each generation and even more so for each person.</p><p>The more well-known examples of the so-called generational conflict are:</p><p> the discussion around generational contract; the question of segregation between</p><p> the generations; and the question of ambivalence in generational relationships.</p><p>(Zvikaitė-Rötting, pg. 61-62, 60)</p><p>What I gather from these statements is the fact that each generation has conflicting norms, needs, and rights, which accounts for most of the intergenerational conflict and tension. Also that there may be some ambivalence in generational relationships; differing generations do not know how to interact with each other. These findings lead us to look closer at the differing condition of our culture:</p><p>The unclear multiple goals of education, planning future politics,</p><p> controlling demographics and interests of each group are the mirrors of the</p><p> generational relationship.</p><p>(Zvikaitė-Rötting)</p><p>Each culture has a differing viewpoint as to how to go about supporting and/or opposing any and all of these issues. To clarify, when I say “each culture”, I am referring to the culture of: different ages, mindsets, countries, religions, you name it!</p><p>In this context we are specifically approaching the cultural differences in generational age gaps.</p><p>Our times are the product of individualism.</p><p>(Zvikaitė-Rötting)</p><p>Davis |3 Generation Gaps in Society Today CULTURAL DIVERSITY: LOOKING AT AGE</p><p>Another indicator of the culture we live in today is prevalence of individualism in our cultural mindset. This may or may not affect mostly the younger generations, due to older generations having pride in their generation’s culture and times, feeling as if a more socially-minded culture is better. Fact is, older generations may not agree or condone individualism, whereas younger generations may see it as the best thing since sliced bread.</p><p>Works Cited</p><p>Savitz, Eric, and Scott Weiss. "Generation Gap: How Technology Has Changed How We</p><p>Talk About Work." Generation Gap: How Technology Has Changed How We </p><p>Talk About Work - Forbes. Forbes, 16 May 2012. Google.com. Web. 21 May </p><p>2012. <http://www.forbes.com/sites/ciocentral/2012/05/16/generation-gap-how-</p><p> technology-has-changed-how-we-talk-about-work/>.</p><p>Zvikaitė-Rötting, Orinta. "Generation Gap: Resolving Conflicts Between Generations." </p><p>PDF Article. N.p., n.d. Google.com. Web. 21 May 2012. </p><p><http://www.koed.hu/medit/orinta.pdf>.</p><p>4</p>

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    4 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us