There has been a lot of talk about what Australians can do to help ‘close the gap’ between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians says Bronwyn Lumby from the Centre For Cultural Competence Australia (CCCA) and this new Centre has started something quite different.
Like many of us, CCCA believes the first step to closing the gap is through education.
Indigenous Research and Development professionals, Bronwyn Lumby and Dr Terri Farrelly, have developed a series of online, accredited, competency-based cultural training courses which help non-Indigenous Australians increase their understanding of Indigenous cultures.
Bronwyn is a descendant of the Nukunnu people from South Australia but lives in the Illawarra in NSW.
She has lectured in Aboriginal Studies and Cultural Diversity and been involved in Indigenous health since 2001. In 2005 Bronwyn and Terri started an Indigenous Research and Development Consultancy – The Echidna Group.
Bronwyn and Terri have worked on the concept of cultural competence and explain the difference between Cultural Awareness and Cultural Competence:
CULTURAL AWARENESS
“Training relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history and culture is often referred to by the term ‘cultural awareness’. However cultural awareness is an outdated concept which has been criticised widely for its many shortcomings, particularly its failure to effect change in behaviour and therefore service delivery.Another major challenge with ‘cultural awareness’ is that participants typically do not have to display the achievement of any competencies. Therefore, cultural awareness programs and sessions that do not have assessments and measurable outcomes cannot be defined as training.
CULTURAL COMPETENCE
‘Cultural Competence’ has been defined as:
…a set of congruent behaviours, attitudes and policies that come together in a system, agency or among professionals and enables that system, agency, or those professionals to work effectively in cross-cultural situations.And the process in which the:
…professional continually strives to achieve ability and availability to effectively work within the cultural context of the client.Operationally defined, cultural competence is:
…the integration and transformation of knowledge about individuals and groups of people into specific standards,
policies, practices, and attitudes used in appropriate cultural settings to increase the quality of services, thereby producing better outcomes.WHY COMPETENCE IS MORE APPROPRIATE
From an organisational perspective Cultural Competence focuses on the attributes of the service provider and service provision and is best viewed as an ongoing process that organisations continue to strive towards.For an individual, Cultural Competence is the ability to identify and challenge one’s own cultural assumptions, values and beliefs. It is about developing empathy and appreciating that there are many different ways of viewing the world, as this is influenced by culture.
Cultural Competence Training has competencies which must be achieved and which are recognised and accredited by a Registered Training Organisation.”
CCCA works with both the private and public sector and recently signed a contract will see 550 employees from the NSW General Practice Network undergo CCCA online training to ensure an effective service, a culturally appropriate workplace, and reduced racism in NSW.
In the next 12 months they will be training around 100,000 professionals, including staff at the Department for Health and Ageing, the Department of Ageing, Disability and Home Care, the Benevolent Society and the GP NSW equivalent in other states.
CCCA’s online training has been acknowledged by General Practice NSW as a prerequisite for face-to-face local community engagement and accredited by:
To see a free demonstration you can visit www.ccca.com.au or if you want to speak to someone you can contact Bronwyn Lumby on 1300 240 944 or email her enquiries@ccca.com.au.
The cost of training for CCCA licence is $495.00 + GST. The online course can be completed in 7 – 10 hours at the student’s convenience.
Sounds like an excellent, modern approach to an old, old problem.
2 Comments
Greetings all,
Thanks to Gail and Pigs Will Fly for sending the information on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultural Competence training.
While it is from a different cultural perspective, you may also wish to peruse the Drew University Shalom Initiative (www.communitiesofshalom.org) facilitation and training that includes cultural competence.
May your holidays and the friends and family that gather during this time be filled with warmth, peace and joy.
Dave
dave.cooper@shalommakers.com
I am all for Cultural Competence for I have experienced and lived in and with various cultures, however I am against Cultural Incompetence such as the Permit system required to travel through or work within vast areas of Aboriginal Lands. To me it is a form of alienation/segregation. It is like a nation within a nation and the Permit System is comparable to obtaining a Passport. I am a precision Botanical Illustrator. My work is done life, as is, on location and it is Nature that dictates where I work quietly for weeks at a time in least disturbed locations, with preferably no human interference to break concentration and disturb animal life (includes microscopic) which is also recorded and illustrated. My only companion is a well trained de-sexed dog.
There is much yet to be discovered, but it is becoming extremely difficult to find least disturbed locations. The Permit system is simply another burden for I may unknowingly enter a permit zone or Park, as I do not travel over the standard roads or marked tracks. I read the Land.
As part of Cultural Competence, having the illustrations also provided with their indiginous names would be of great social benefit, but that creates the Permit problem.
Cheers,
Ecosketch.