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Communicating Across Cultures – Bridging and Integrating. Bridging and integrating are, respectively, the second and third stages of the Map-Bridge-Integrate (MBI) model. There are three skills important to effective communication in a cross-cultural setting: engaging, decentering, and recentering. The three skills help improve all communication anywhere. An important theme is that mindful global leadership requires taking account of the context of the interaction. In interactions within a single culture, people generally operate with the same set of background assumptions often without people even being aware that they are doing so. The more culturally diverse the setting, the more difficult it is to recognize the assumptions, and the more explicit they should be. Although there are many ways that cross-cultural interaction can go wrong, they tend to fall into two basic patterns: destroying and equalizing. Much cross-cultural communication happens over email, chat, phone, video call, or other technology. Virtual communication is addressed.
Using Mathematica and the Wolfram Language to engage with the calculus of functions of a single variable. Includes limits, continuity, differentiation, integration, sequences, and series.
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