Intercultural Trainer

Intercultural Trainer

entry by Julie M. Marx, Global Family Expert at Expat Valley

A professional who designs and delivers training programs to develop participants’ awareness, knowledge, and skills for effective functioning across cultural difference. Operating at the intersection of education, psychology, and organizational development, intercultural trainers work with individuals, families, and organizations preparing for or adjusting to cross-cultural transitions.

Comparable terms

Cross-cultural trainer (HR/mobility — equivalent; more common in corporate contexts) · Intercultural consultant (broader — may include organizational consulting beyond training) · Cultural coach (coaching — emphasizes one-to-one developmental relationship) · Diversity trainer (HR — overlapping but focused on domestic diversity contexts) · Relocation coach (destination services — narrower; focused on practical relocation)

Why this matters

Intercultural training can reduce preventable culture‑shock problems and relationship breakdowns. When families are included, children and partners feel prepared rather than dragged along. Good training moves beyond stereotypes to development of real skills and awareness.

Cross-references

SIETAR (Professional Bodies); CCT (Cultural Adaptation); IDI (Cultural Adaptation); FIGT (Professional Bodies); Intercultural Coach (Professional Support Roles); Cultural Agility (Cultural Adaptation). CCT is the intervention that intercultural trainers most commonly deliver; the IDI is the assessment instrument most widely used in trainer-facilitated intercultural development programs. FIGT is the cross-sector professional community through which intercultural trainers most commonly connect with the internationally mobile family field. The intercultural coach entry describes the adjacent role — practitioners frequently move between training and coaching depending on client needs and context; cultural agility describes one of the most widely adopted competency frameworks guiding contemporary intercultural training design.

Sources

The DMIS developed by Milton J. Bennett was originally conceived as a framework for intercultural trainers to diagnose participants’ level of intercultural sensitivity and design developmentally appropriate interventions. Bennett, M.J. (1993). Towards ethnorelativism: A developmental model of intercultural sensitivity. In R.M. Paige (Ed.), Education for the Intercultural Experience (2nd ed., pp. 21–71). Intercultural Press.
For professional standards in the field, see: Society for Intercultural Education, Training and Research (SIETAR). Competency Framework for Intercultural Trainers. Available at sietar.org.



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