This experience sanctioned me to grasp one component of diversity, while exposing to me to diverse cultural beliefs throughout the world. Not only did this experience permit me to become aware of diversity, but it also aided in my understanding of the meaning and drive behind cultural behaviors, values, and beliefs. Along with this high school course, I experienced some exposure to diversity through my daily life and family. Both my stepmother and fiancé preserve a Latino culture, which exposed me to dissimilarities between the White and Latino cultures. The major difference I perceived rested in familial ties and strength. Compared to my family, my step mom and fiancés families heavily relied on one another, with communication and interaction transpiring daily. Along with family strength, an apparent difference emerges in skin color and language. With my exposure to diversity mainly residing in a high school course and my daily life, as I have not traveled outside of the country, I do not retain the expertise to accurately define diversity and its influences. What I can state remains that, in the United States, we tend to embrace the principle that the norm encompasses white skin, an English language, Christian beliefs, and a heterosexual monogamy. I may be a part of the majority culture – in terms of my skin color, language, religious beliefs, and sexual orientation – but I am not more worthy or more influential than any other individual. Diversity must subsist embraced, not concealed and
This experience sanctioned me to grasp one component of diversity, while exposing to me to diverse cultural beliefs throughout the world. Not only did this experience permit me to become aware of diversity, but it also aided in my understanding of the meaning and drive behind cultural behaviors, values, and beliefs. Along with this high school course, I experienced some exposure to diversity through my daily life and family. Both my stepmother and fiancé preserve a Latino culture, which exposed me to dissimilarities between the White and Latino cultures. The major difference I perceived rested in familial ties and strength. Compared to my family, my step mom and fiancés families heavily relied on one another, with communication and interaction transpiring daily. Along with family strength, an apparent difference emerges in skin color and language. With my exposure to diversity mainly residing in a high school course and my daily life, as I have not traveled outside of the country, I do not retain the expertise to accurately define diversity and its influences. What I can state remains that, in the United States, we tend to embrace the principle that the norm encompasses white skin, an English language, Christian beliefs, and a heterosexual monogamy. I may be a part of the majority culture – in terms of my skin color, language, religious beliefs, and sexual orientation – but I am not more worthy or more influential than any other individual. Diversity must subsist embraced, not concealed and