Intercultural Competence and Training Needs of University Staff: Insights from Critical Incident Analysis
Version
In Press
Identifiers
10.1177/10283153251414846
Date Issued
2026
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
This paper explores intercultural training needs of university staff through the analysis of intercultural critical incidents that were shared by participants in a survey conducted in four universities in Switzerland. In the survey, participants were prompted to describe intercultural critical incidents, to self-assess their intercultural sensitivity and competence, and to indicate their interest in further development. Using qualitative content analysis, categories of incidents were developed based on the Critical Incident Technique. The findings suggest that participants whose scores indicate a higher level of readiness to engage in intercultural training are better able to perceive nuanced details of intercultural critical incidents and to analyse them from an ethnorelative perspective. The findings further suggest that workshops on relationshipbuilding and empathy in intercultural contexts may offer relevant entry points for training of participants with lower scores.
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
Journal of Studies in International Education
ISSN
1028-3153
Organization
Publisher
Sage Journals
Submitter
Bürki, Jacqueline
Citation apa
Studer, P., Spillmann, N., Mcgury, S., & Bürki, J. (2026). Intercultural Competence and Training Needs of University Staff: Insights from Critical Incident Analysis. Sage Journals. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.12873
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