Humility as a Predictor of Intercultural Competence

  • Paine D
  • Jankowski P
  • Sandage S
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Abstract

The present study tested two models of the association between humility, differentiation-of-self (DoS), and intercultural competence among graduate trainees in the helping professions. The sample consisted of 75 graduate students from a Protestant-affiliated university in the United States. Results indicated that DoS mediated the positive association between humility and intercultural competence. Results therefore supported a definition of intercultural competence as the ability to effectively navigate interpersonal difference. Implications are considered for training in intercultural competence within couple and family therapy.

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Paine, D. R., Jankowski, P. J., & Sandage, S. J. (2016). Humility as a Predictor of Intercultural Competence. The Family Journal, 24(1), 15–22. https://doi.org/10.1177/1066480715615667

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