Posts

Subcutures in NZ

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Subcultures in New Zealand Subcultures are groups of people with distinctive behaviors and beliefs within a dominant culture that they are part of. As in the rest of the world, there are a lot of subcultures in New Zealand but in this post, we will show 2 different subcultures. Maori Maori is an indigenous ethnic with a population of 4.5 million people, which means 15% of New Zealand's population. They were the first settlers of New Zealand and they were from Hawaiki island. Haka is their ritual dance and uses tribal tattoos in their face and body to decorate it. Also, they are famous for their cooking method called hangi, in this method, they build ovens with hot stones.    Hipsters This is a group of people commonly under the age of 30, Although they love to have the last technological innovations, they are characterized to adopt a lifestyle and interest associated with Vintage and independent . They use to listen to Jazz and indie music and love musicians like Bob Dylan and Deve

Hofstede model: Colombia vs New Zealand

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  Hofstede model: Colombia vs New Zealand In this post, we will compare Colombia and New Zealand using the Hofstede model. Hofstede's model was created in 1080 by Geert Hofstede and it is used to distinguish differences between national cultures, the dimensions of culture and assess their impact on a business setting. This model proposes six dimensions that define culture: Power Distance, Individualism, Masculinity, Uncertainty avoidance, Long term orientation, and indulgence. After search the value of these categories for both countries we got this: Colombia and New Zealand Colombia New Zealand 1.  POWER DISTANCE (PDI): This dimension indicates how much cultures tolerate inequalities. In this case Colombia's PDI is higher than New Zealand's. That means that Colombia’s culture accepts more inequity and power distance than New Zealand and we can confirm that when we compare the Gini index of both countries (Colombia 50.4% and New Zealand 32.5% in 2018) 2. INDIVIDUALISM: This

Lewis Model

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Lewis Model The Lewis model is an important tool created by Richard Lewis, it classified cultures of different countries in Multi-Active, Reactive and Linear-Active. According to Richard Lewis’s, New Zealand is a linear active culture because it is part of the English-speaking world that is conformed by North America, Britain, Australia, and Northern Europe, including Scandinavia and Germanic countries. As part of this group, New Zealand people are task-oriented and very organized to do plans. They try to do one thing at a time by using a lineal agenda with a lineal action chain. Also, Rationalism and science dominate their thinking more than religion. Talking about relationships, they prefer direct discussion, sticking to facts and figures from reliable sources, talk and listen in equal degrees and have limited body language.

Gender Stereotypes

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  Hi, now we're gonna explore the gender stereotypes world. New Zealand Men are perceived as a pioneer type During the colonial period, men were perceived to be rural, strong, unemotional, democratic, good with animals and machines that shared similarities with the stereotypical American frontiersman and Australian bushman. Nowadays many New Zealand men have these qualities, even though most New Zealanders have lived in urban areas since the late nineteenth. New Zealand women are independent Often, New Zealand women are perceived as more independent than women from other parts of the world. One of the supports of this stereotype is that New Zealand was the first country in the world to allow women to vote and the only one to have all its most important positions of state filed by women simultaneously. 

National Stereotypes

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  National Stereotypes In this post we will talk about Stereotypes in New Zealand.  But… ¿What are Stereotypes? A Stereotype is a belief set about characteristics, behaviors or living way of a country, city or people and these may be positive or negative.     New Zealand has different Stereotypes but today we will talk about 2 stereotypes. New Zealand is not a civilized country If we type in google “New Zealand” the most pictures are about mountains, farms and rural areas so we can think that New Zealand is not a civilized country but this stereotype is false. New Zealand is like any civilized country. It has big cities like Auckland and Wellington but also has farms in small towns with just hundreds of inhabitants. New Zealand is a small country and is isolated from the rest of the world, maybe it is the cause of this stereotype but it has all the comforts that the rest of the world has. There are more sheep than people . This is true, currently there are 6 sheep by person in New Zea

About Me

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  Hi 👋, I'm  Manlio Josue Tejeda Gutierrez , I'm 20 years old, I'm a system engineering student in semester 9 at Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla-Colombia. In my free time I play guitar, program web pages and mobile apps and sometimes I practice Voleibol. I love learn new things and I hate going out of the house when the sun is very hot  🌞🌞. I created this blog as part of my first English class project. I don't konw anything about New Zealand but  I want that we explore together this amazing and interstingadventure called "Knowing New Zealand".