Doesn't it feel good to be part of a group?
It's part of human nature! You want to feel a sense of belonging so you can have a happy and successful life.
While we all want to belong to a group, we also want others to value our unique personalities and cultural backgrounds. This is especially important in a multicultural society, where many different ethnic groups live together.
The melting pot 🍲 and salad bowl 🥗 are two different ways that multicultural societies take their shape.
The Melting Pot
To understand the melting pot, think of a sports team.
Team members have a sense of belonging and working toward a shared goal, even though they may have very different personalities, preferences, and family backgrounds.
This works great, as long as everyone agrees about the team's strategy, and is able to play. If you don't assimilate — you don't agree with the strategy, or decide not to play — then you may be excluded or have to work harder to introduce new ideas.
Melting Pot Example: Italian-Americans
Millions of Italians immigrated to America from 1880 to 1924 .
At first, these families lived in small ethnic communities but, over the generations, Italians faced pressure to assimilate into the American lifestyle by adopting mainstream American traditions and views.
Over time, it wasn't just the Italians who were influenced by America: America was also influenced by Italians! Pizza, Americana music, and films like "The Godfather" all draw from Italian culture. The two cultures — Italian and American — "melted" together.
Quiz
How are newcomers expected to assimilate into a melting pot culture?
The Salad Bowl
To understand the salad bowl culture, think about dancing.
Unlike a sports game, there aren't many rules about how different people dance to the same song. What you choose is a unique expression of who you are.
In a salad bowl culture, people will bust out their own unique identity while also celebrating and learning about the cultures others bring to the table.
Salad Bowl Example: Canada
In Canadian classrooms, students might teach each other words and traditions from their culture of origin, rather than being expected to assimilate to one standard way of speaking or celebrating.
The Melting Pot Vs. The Salad Bowl
Melting Pot
More pressure to assimilate
Expectations for belonging are stricter
New cultures influence the mainstream culture over time
Salad Bowl
Less pressure to assimilate
Expectations for belonging are more relaxed
New cultures have an immediate influence on the mainstream culture
While it's helpful to compare these two approaches, both the salad bowl and the melting pot can exist at the same time in the same society.
Quiz
Americans regularly celebrate non-mainstream holidays together depending on their culture of origin (e.g., Mexican-Americans celebrating Day of the Dead). Is this an example of the salad bowl or the melting pot?
Take Action
What does it take to find a group where you belong? Or to help someone else feel a sense of belonging?
Observe the culture in your hometown or classroom.
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