Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
947161 International Journal of Intercultural Relations 2013 23 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A Modified Chen & Starosta Intercultural Sensitivity Scale was developed and tested.•The scale assessed both IS toward other cultures in general and also for a specific culture.•Interaction attentiveness seems to play the most influential role in subjects’ IS.

An experimental 2 (channel) × 2 (gender) × 3 (time) mixed factorial design (N = 159) was applied to test and compare how individual dimensions of intercultural sensitivity might be affected by two channels: a virtual environment (i.e., Second Life®) versus a Web environment. Using a modified version of Chen and Starosta's Intercultural Sensitivity Scale (ISS), the study sought to identify which of the five ISS dimensions played the most influential role in intercultural sensitivity outcomes: interaction enjoyment, interaction engagement, interaction confidence, interaction attentiveness, or respect for cultural differences. Results showed that one's willingness and effort toward understanding an intercultural interaction – interaction attentiveness – played the greatest and most statistically significant role in intercultural sensitivity outcomes, and that this effect was greatest within the virtual environment channel. Gender effects were also found, in which men experienced greater enjoyment but women expressed more attentiveness.

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