Exploring Cultural Communication From the Inside Out is written very well. It is much more accessible than an advanced theoretical treatise. It is not too dense and is written in a plain and straightforward manner ... In every chapter it presentsfor every key conceptvivid and concrete examples, illustrations, real situations, and anecdotes. These make every chapter easy to follow and interesting to read ... I really like the workbook format. I can immediately see how the workbook format makes this book one through which students can be immediately engaged in working on learning about intercultural communication. Students in a distance learning format could use the exercises to talk with friends about the queries and short assignments and this would help them learn. Students in an in-person classroom setting could be set to work immediately in large-group or small-group work sessions ... The eight chapters, taken together, really hang together as a coherent book. The first seven chapters each provide one piece of a puzzle, as it were, and then the puzzle gets completed in the final chapter. The final chapter brings the parts together as one coherent whole. I think the students will experience a sense of fulfilment and wholeness in the end. Very sharp ... Each chapter and the book as a whole draws from a wide variety of studies, theoretical treatments, and schools of thought. It draws consistently from one network of scholars in the communication discipline, but at each point (in each chapter) it draws from other scholars or groups of scholars. So it has a particular emphasis and flavor but it also brings in other important useful networks and groups of people who do research about intercultural communication ... I could happily teach a 5-credit quarter system course or 3-credit semester course using only this book because the book could be used to facilitate and guide a lot of student work individually, and, if wanted, student work in learning groups." Gerry Philipsen, Professor of Communication, University of Washington Originator of speech codes theory
"The workbook is excellent! A joy to read and I really look forward to using it in my future classes. I believe it will help my students learn EC/SCT and the research process more deeply ... [ The workbook] teaches them how to do ethnography of communication (EC)/speech codes theory (SCT) research in a very approachable, easy-to-understand way, for what is very complex research. So often undergrad and grad students are overwhelmed when they read EC and ethnographic work in general. They love the work, but have no idea how to go about it. You can assign a number of very good EC studies to read in class that are fascinating to students, but they have no idea how to get from point A to point B. Research in general can be very challenging, especially for undergrads. The workbook is very student-centered, very hands-on. It's wonderful! I would use it for all levels of undergrad, and would use it for intro grad classes on EC." Michelle Scollo, Associate Professor of Communication, College of Mount Saint Vincent
"Exploring Cultural Communication From the Inside Out very precisely synthesizes EC/SCT work paired with others of its type. There are clear explanations of many of the large concepts we all cover in classes and specific activities to help students move this process along. There is an enormous body of EC/SCT work covered in the book, which is super impressive and very helpful for seeing the big picture." Evelyn Y. Ho, Professor of Communication Studies, Asian Pacific American Studies, and Critical Diversity Studies, Faculty Chair of the Honors College, University of San Francisco