2. Students & Business Sojourners
• more committed than tourists to
new location, but less involved
than immigrants and refugees
• must adapt quickly
3. Process & Predictors of Adaptation
• Systematic research mostly involves students
and business people (some w/diplomats,
volunteers)
• Focuses on ABCs of transition and tries to
establish factors that predict adjustment (social,
individual, etc)
• Best research is longitudinal (expensive &
difficult)
4. Literature on International Students
• Problems of sojourners
• Psychological reactions of sojourners to
encountering a new cultural environment
• Influence of social interaction and
communication on adaptation
• Culture learning process
5. Historical Perspectives
• Foreign policy tool to expand the influence
of the states that established centers of
intellectual excellence
• Moral or missionary purpose to spread the
values of the dominant culture
• Secular goals such as the spread of
democratic values or educational practices
• The promotion of international harmony
6. International programs
• Assist in the reconstruction and economic
development of countries that have been
adversely affected by war or whose
educational infrastructure is rudimentary
• Train scientists, technologists, teachers,
etc. for employment in home countries
7. International programs (cont.)
• Create receptive markets for the
industrialized sponsor countries and
expand their sociopolitical influence
abroad
• Establish positive attitudes toward host
country after students go home to work in
positions of responsibility or government
8. International students and business
people
• Both groups are relatively well-
educated and motivated, yet overseas
students generally originate from less
developed countries and sojourn in the
industrialized world while the opposite
is true of business people.
9. Brain Drain
The economic-development goals of
international programs were infrequently
realized: most students either did not return
home or, if they did, emigrated at the first
opportunity--which had a positive impact on
the economies where graduates settled but
failed to raise the technical expertise of
developing countries
10. Problems faced by returning students
• When graduates did return to their
homelands, the sociopolitical systems
and under-resourced developing
countries did not support the
technological innovations learned
overseas.
11. Researchers & overseas students
Researchers began using overseas
student populations for testing theories
dealing with the nature, determinants
and outcomes of culture contact
12. Part of the export industry
• No longer participating in economic aid or
technical reconstruction, nor targets of political
influence
• Fierce competition among Britain, Canada,
Australia and New Zealand
• Students have become clients/no turning back as
many institutions are dependent on this income
13. Current Research
• Focuses on how to reduce stress and
enhance positive aspects of the sojourn
experience
• How to increase market penetration via
word-of-mouth accounts by satisfied study-
abroad students
• Reflects increasing sophistication of
research strategies and theories,
longitudinal studies
14. Longitudinal Studies
• Try to predict cross-cultural and
educational adaptation by pre-
departure variables
• Monitor changes in the levels of
psychological and sociocultural
adaptation over time
15. Empirical Research
• Interpersonal and intergroup interactions
• Difficulties faced by international students
• Academic issues in the intercultural
classroom
• Variations in psychological, sociocultural
and academic adaptation
• Re-entry experience
16. Influential Perspectives
• Bochner‟s functional model of friendship
networks (from culture learning theory)
• Stress & Coping focuses on quality and
quantity of interpersonal encounters and
social support
• Social identification concentrates on
intergroup perceptions of foreign students
and their hosts and perceived
discrimination
17. Customer Service & Satisfaction
• Feedback about student problems are
important considerations as abroad
students have become major source of
revenue
• Culture learning addresses the description,
explanation and prediction of difficulties
• Stress & Coping identifies stressors that
impair adaptation
18. Academic Performance
• Significant component of cross-cultural
adaptation, distinguishes students from
other types of sojourners
• Research examines the antecedents and
correlates of academic performance
• Developing literature on the intercultural
classroom (definitions and perceptions of
intelligence, student/teacher expectations,
classroom communication)
19. Bochner‟s Model of Friendship Networks
• Bonds with fellow compatriots to rehearse,
express and affirm culture-of-origin values
• Links with host-nationals to facilitate the
academic and professional aims of the students
(relationships more formal than personal)
• Friendships with other non-compatriot foreign
students, largely recreational and supportive
• Reflects culture-learning perspective
20. Despite benefits, host national contact is
least salient of three networks:
• Culture-learning advantages: fewer academic
and social difficulties, increased satisfaction with
host national contact, improved communication
competency and general adaptation to life
overseas
• Emotional benefits: greater sojourn satisfaction,
lower levels of stress, fewer psychological
adjustment problems, more positive mood
21. Social Support Hypothesis
• Derives mainly from Stress & Coping literature
• Emphasizes the quality and quantity of support
rather than the actual support network
• Both host and co-nationals can contribute to
satisfaction and the enhancement of
psychological well-being
• Greater support alleviates homesickness and
buffers the relationship between stress &
depression
• Poor social support accounts for a large
proportion of depressive symptoms
22. Intergroup perceptions & relations
• Positive results seen in equal status,
voluntary and cooperative interactions (see
Bond‟s 1986 study, pg. 151, Ward)
“These groups co-exist happily in the same
geographical space… Clearly, it is possible to
have intergroup harmony despite the presence of
broad and clear stereotypes about one‟s ingroup
and relevant out-group.” -Bond
23. Intergroup relations (cont.)
• Not all contact studies have produced
positive results (see Sodowsky and Plake‟s
1992 study of foregin students in an
American university—pg 152, Ward).
• In Stroebe et al‟s 1988 study of American
undergraduates in France, student
exchanges led to the sharpening of
negative stereotypes.
24. Negative Perceptions
Perceptions of prejudice and discrimination
are not uncommon and are stronger in
sojourns than immigrants.
• Increase when culture distance is greater
• Produce negative outcomes such as
increased stress, identity conflict and
adjustment problems
25. Problems of International Students
• Insufficient linguistic and cultural skills,
prejudice/discrimination,
homesickness/loneliness
• Pressures associated with the role of „foreign
ambassador‟ in their interactions with hosts
• Conflicts related to personal development in early
adulthood
• Stressors associated with transition to a new
school or university
26. Problems reported by American
undergraduates in Europe:
• Housing
• Money
• Coursework
• Language
Ten most commonly experienced problems of
living and learning abroad as reported by 439
students from the U.S., U.K., France, Germany
and Sweden (see Table 7.2, pg 155, Ward)
27. The Intercultural Classroom
Apart from language deficiency, which is perceived
as the most significant source of academic
problems, other factors that may affect academic
success and satisfaction include:
• Individual differences in learning styles and
academic achievement
• Cultural variable factors such as importance of
intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
• Level of field dependence and independence
• Learning styles (cooperative or competitive)
• Perceptions of intelligence
28. Classroom communication/interaction
• I-C: Individualist students are more likely to want to stand
out in class, ask questions, give answers and engage in
debate (often seen as competitive/rude); collectivist
students are more strongly motivated to fit in and are less
verbal and unwilling to draw attention to themselves (may
be seen as withdrawn/uninterested)
• PD: Collectivism is strongly related to power distance, and
students from high PD cultures are less likely to question
and/or debate, which is seen as an inappropriate
challenge to the teacher (loss of face), more strongly
motivated to show respect and maintain formal
relationships.
29. American vs. Chinese perspective
• Americans regard teachers as facilitators who promote
learner autonomy. The educational system is adaptive
and accommodates the learner who is the center of the
educational process.
• Chinese see the teacher as a transmitter of knowledge, a
role model and the focus of educational practice. If
students are unsuccessful academically, it is largely
perceived as a matter of motivation, effort and ability, not
the fault of the teacher. Emphasis on learning without
questioning, which is often seen as disruptive and
disrespectful.
• (see Pratt‟s 1991 study, pg 158, Ward)
30. Re-entry
• Asian students report being more concerned
about peer & professional contacts than family
relations
• American returnees reported positive changes in
parental relations, but mixed outcomes with
friends (both positive and negative attributed to
overseas experience)
• Returnees present more psychological symptoms
than peers who remained at home
• American returnees report being generally less
satisfied with lives at home than abroad
31. Common re-entry problems
• Communicating with friends
• Dealing with stereotypes
• Uncertainty over cultural identity
• Social withdrawal
• Decreased relationship satisfaction
• Psychological problems associated with re-entry
include physical distress, anxiety, apathy,
loneliness and feelings of loss (Uehara, 1986)
(see pg 164, Ward, Problems of student returnees adapted
from Gaw, 2000)
32. Additional factors affecting re-entry
• Demographic: age may play a role in predicting
successful re-adaptation, especially during critical years
of identity development (9-15 years of age)
• Gender: differences have been reported with women
expressing more life satisfaction after returning than men
• Cultural factors: re-entry into a „tight‟ society has been
reported as more difficult than returning to „loose‟
countries
-returning Japanese students are noticed for looking
physically different, having different interpersonal styles
and behaving with different manners, which may not fit the
requirements for being a „proper Japanese.‟