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The National Institutes of Health (NIH) (n.d.) defines cultural humility as “a lifelong process of self-reflection and self-critique whereby the individual not only learns about another’s culture, but one starts with an examination of her/his own beliefs and cultural identities.”
Culture is “the shared values, traditions, arts, history, folklore, and institutions of a group of people that are unified by race, ethnicity, nationality, language, religious beliefs, spirituality, socioeconomic status, social class, sexual orientation, politics, gender identity, age, or any other cohesive group variable” (Singh, 1998).
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The notion that we don't know everything; and that competence, though an important thing it is secondary to humility because humility is the fertile soil from which competence grows.