Dear Diary… Exploring Social Sciences Diary Method Research: Gender and Sexuality Focus

Date: Friday, 10th May 2019

Time: 11:30 (11:00 – 11:30 for registration) to 15:30 with refreshments and a networking lunch provided

Venue: R0.03 Ramphal Building, University of Warwick, UK

This one-day event, supported by the British Sociological Association, focuses on the use of diary research in sociologically-oriented social sciences research.

This event aims to raise the profile of diary research in sociology and the social sciences more broadly, with an emphasis on gender and sexuality research – there is no expectation that participants would be familiar with or using diary research, and the event is particularly envisaged as appealing to doctoral students who have not yet established their methodology.

This event will include an overview of diary method, and will also showcase a variety of types of diary research which have been used in different empirical settings. The event invites discussion of the potential – and the challenges – of diary method for social sciences research. All of the speakers have used diaries to research sociological concerns, including sexuality, gender and care.

Programme

•   Introducing Solicited Diaries as Method

 Professor Christine Milligan, Lancaster University

•   “I’m not saying that keeping the sex diary ruined my life but…” Private diaries: collecting fragments of sexual life

Dr Laura Harvey, University of Brighton

•   “I’m not really sure why I took that!” Exploring the everyday and the unexpected through photo-elicitation

Dr Michael Keenan, Nottingham Trent University

•   Capturing the minutiae of care: using diary method to research the conference experiences of academics with caring responsibilities

 Dr Emily F. Henderson, University of Warwick

•   Interactive session of providing and analyzing diary data

Chaired by Xuemeng Cao, Krystal Douglas, Sarah Staniforth, University of Warwick 

Further details and information on how to register can be found online at

https://www.britsoc.co.uk/events/key-bsa-events/bsa-postgraduate-regional-event-dear-diary-exploring-social-sciences-diary-method-research-gender-and-sexuality-focus/

Refreshments and lunch will be provided (dietary requirements can be catered for).

We would be grateful if you could disseminate this event within your department.

If you have any questions about this event, please contact:

Xuemeng Cao Xuemeng.Cao@warwick.ac.uk  

Call for Contributors – International Students in China (Chinese Edition)

This special issue focuses on international students in China. It contributes a critical Chinese perspective to the existing literature on international student experiences.

Authors are invited to submit full manuscripts written in simplified Chinese with abstracts in both Chinese and English (150-200 words) to two editors via Journal Submission Portal. Please submit Microsoft word documents.

作者请于截稿日期前将中文稿件全文及中英文摘要(150-200字)通过杂志投稿系统发至两者中文特刊主编。投稿只接受word文档。

国际学生杂志“中国留学生”特刊诚挚征稿

中国现在是继美国、英国之后的世界第三大留学目的地国家。与美英等世界传统留学目的地国家留学生的学习经历已经引起学术界广泛研究兴趣相比,学术界对来华留学生学习经历的研究还比较缺乏。

应ESCI期刊《国际学生杂志》(Journal of International Students)主编邀请,我们编辑出版该期刊的中文版特刊。该特刊将聚焦来华留学生,可以为现有国际留学生学习经历研究文献提供重要的中国视角。特刊现诚挚邀稿,稿件可以是针对我国不同地区、不同层次高校就读的来华留学生政策、实践和学习经历的实证研究论文、理论探讨和批判性反思文章。我们期望投稿人能够用批判的视角探索和讨论与来华留学生教育相关的问题。

该特刊文章将涵盖来华留学生教育领域以下的主题:

  • 国家政策和高校实践;
  • 课程国际化;
  • 学术动机、期望和满意度;
  • 教学法、师生互动和学习参与;
  • 社会接触、跨文化挑战和适应;
  • 身份认同:刻板印象和他者化;
  • 对外汉语教学与习得;
  • 其他相关问题。

稿件截止日期:2019630

作者请于截稿日期前将中文稿件全文及中英文摘要(150-200字)通过杂志投稿系统发至两者中文特刊主编。投稿只接受word文档。

如何通过杂志投稿系统投稿:

1在杂志投稿系统建立一个个人帐号,并使用用户名和密码登录。登录网址为:

http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions

2)当您投稿时,从下拉菜单中选择 “Special Issue – International Students in China”

投稿稿件可以是研究论文(4,000-5,000字),或者反思性的文章(1,500-2,000字)。对两类稿件类型的详细说明,请参阅《国际学生期刊(Journal of International Student)》的 “稿件类型”(Manuscript Types)要求(http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions)。

投稿稿件应包括中英文标题、中英文摘要(150-200字)和中英文关键字(3-5字),文内引用、页码、小节标题、表格、图和参考文献。稿件正文页边距2.54厘米(1英寸)、双倍行距、5号宋体字。投稿稿件正文不包含作者的任何可识别信息,但投稿人应同时提交标题页,并包含作者姓名、单位、联系方式,以及作者简介(50字内)。

 

中文特刊主编

田美(西安交通大学,temmytian@mail.xjtu.edu.cn)

陆根书(西安交通大学,gslu@mail.xjtu.edu.cn

2019-04-02

———————————————————————————————–

Guest Editors:

Dr. Mei Tian, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China

Dr. Genshu Lu, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China

Currently, China is ranked the third most popular destination for international students, following the United States and the United Kingdom. In contrast with the extensive research interest in the experiences of international students in traditional destination countries, there is a general lack of understanding regarding international student experiences in China.

This special issue focuses on international students in China. It contributes a critical Chinese perspective to existing literature on international student experiences. We welcome research articles, theoretical discussions and critical reflections on policies, practices and experiences of international students across geographically and educationally diverse contexts in China. We ask potential authors to adopt a critical, anti-essentialist point of view when exploring and discussing issues related to China and Chinese international student education.

Individual manuscripts may discuss the following topics:

  • National policies and institutional practices;
  • Internationalisation of the curriculum;
  • Academic motivations, expectations and levels of satisfaction;
  • Pedagogy, teacher-student interactions and learning engagement;
  • Social encounters, intercultural challenges and adaptation;
  • Identity: stereotypes and otherisation;
  • Learning and teaching the Chinese language as a foreign language;
  • And other relevant issues.

Submission deadline for full manuscripts: June 30th 2019

Authors are invited to submit full manuscripts written in simplified Chinese with abstracts in both Chinese and English (150-200 words) to two editors via Journal Submission Portal. Please submit Microsoft word documents.

How to submit to Journal Portal:

  • Create an account and login with your name and password http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions
  • Select “Special Issue – International Students in China” from the dropdown menu when you submit the paper for consideration in this special issue (see below).

The manuscript can be a research article (4,000-5,000 words), or an article of reflections (1,500-2,000 words). For further explanation of the two manuscript types, please refer to the “Manuscript Types” requirements of the Journal of International Students (http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions).

Each manuscript should include both Chinese and English abstracts (150-200 words), Chinese and English keywords (3-5 words), in-text citations, pagination, headings, tables, figures, and a reference list. Manuscripts should be double-spaced with 2.54cm (1-inch) margins and use Size 5 Simsun Font. Manuscripts must not include any identifiable information of the manuscripts’ authors. A separate title page must be submitted which contains authors’ names, affiliation and contact information. Please send a short biodata of each author (50 words).

For questions and idea approval, please contact issue co-editors:

Dr. Mei Tian

Xi’an Jiaotong University

Shaanxi,  China

E-mail: temmytian@mail.xjtu.edu.cn

Dr. Genshu Lu

Xi’an Jiaotong University, China

Shaanxi,  China

E-mail: gslu@mail.xjtu.edu.cn

Call for Papers – Special Issue What is an international student represented to be? Critical constructions from across Europe, ethical silences and future opportunities

Guest editors: Dr Aneta Hayes, Dr Sylvie Lomer and Prof Marek Kwiek
The guest editors are delighted to invite paper proposals for a special issue, provisionally titled ‘What is an international student represented to be? Critical constructions from across Europe, ethical silences and future opportunities’. This special issue proposal has been initially accepted by COMPARE: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, and we are now working on the final version of the proposal. We are therefore calling for paper contributions, to be included in the special issue.
There is a wide acknowledgment that the reputational benefit of ‘highly internationalised’ universities (understood mainly, due to the influence of global rankings, as having high numbers of international students) comes at the cost of (mis-) representations of globally mobile learners. In Anglophone countries, international students have been found to be represented as people in educational deficits, economic objects and supplicants of the prestigious education system of the receiving country (e.g. Lomer, 2014; Hayes, 2017, Marginson, 2013). It has also been argued that such representations, evoked due to positions of assumed prestige of the Anglophone countries, have legitimised the logic of intellectual, social and political domination over foreign students in their education systems (e.g. Bilecen, 2013; Tran and Pham, 2015; Yu and Moskal, 2018).
Little is however known about what international students are represented to be in non-Anglophone countries. There is therefore an urgent need to establish what their representations are, especially at a time when more non-Anglophone countries in Europe enter the internationalisation competition (de Wit et al., 2015). We therefore invite paper contributions that will focus on (but are not limited to) the following questions:

a) what are national policy and institutional rationales behind ‘more energetic’ recruitment of international students in non-Anglophone European countries?
c) how may these rationales position and represent international students, and
d) what consequences specific representations of international students might have for their social and education inclusion?
Submissions
1. Abstracts of 250 words and full author details (name, position, institutional affiliations, email and telephone number) should be submitted via email to Aneta Hayes (a.m.hayes@keele.ac.uk) by 5 May 2019.
2. Contributors will be notified about the outcome of their submission by 25th May 2019.
For questions, please contact Aneta (a.m.hayes@keele.ac.uk).
We look forward to receiving your contribution.
Best wishes,
Aneta, Sylvie and Marek

CfP: COMPARE What is an international student represented to be? Critical constructions from across Europe, ethical silences and future opportunities

Guest editors: Dr Aneta Hayes, Dr Sylvie Lomer and Prof Marek Kwiek
The guest editors are delighted to invite paper proposals for a special issue, provisionally titled ‘What is an international student represented to be? Critical constructions from across Europe, ethical silences and future opportunities’. This special issue proposal has been initially accepted by COMPARE: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, and we are now working on the final version of the proposal. We are therefore calling for paper contributions, to be included in the special issue.
There is a wide acknowledgment that the reputational benefit of ‘highly internationalised’ universities (understood mainly, due to the influence of global rankings, as having high numbers of international students) comes at the cost of (mis-) representations of globally mobile learners. In Anglophone countries, international students have been found to be represented as people in educational deficits, economic objects and supplicants of the prestigious education system of the receiving country (e.g. Lomer, 2014; Hayes, 2017, Marginson, 2013). It has also been argued that such representations, evoked due to positions of assumed prestige of the Anglophone countries, have legitimised the logic of intellectual, social and political domination over foreign students in their education systems (e.g. Bilecen, 2013; Tran and Pham, 2015; Yu and Moskal, 2018).
Little is however known about what international students are represented to be in non-Anglophone countries. There is therefore an urgent need to establish what their representations are, especially at a time when more non-Anglophone countries in Europe enter the internationalisation competition (de Wit et al., 2015). We therefore invite paper contributions that will focus on (but are not limited to) the following questions:

a) what are national policy and institutional rationales behind ‘more energetic’ recruitment of international students in non-Anglophone European countries?
c) how may these rationales position and represent international students, and
d) what consequences specific representations of international students might have for their social and education inclusion?
Submissions
1. Abstracts of 250 words and full author details (name, position, institutional affiliations, email and telephone number) should be submitted via email to Aneta Hayes (a.m.hayes@keele.ac.uk) by 5 May 2019.
2. Contributors will be notified about the outcome of their submission by 25th May 2019.
For questions, please contact Aneta (a.m.hayes@keele.ac.uk).
We look forward to receiving your contribution.
Best wishes,
Aneta, Sylvie and Marek

Revisiting my journey to a critical sociology of Chinese education through Bourdieu’s bequest

Michael Picture

Dr Guanglun Michael Mu 

The transmission and transformation of dispositions and capitals across generations and geographies is an enigmatic problem. Concomitant with this problem are challenges of disparity and diversity, of distinction and discrimination, of parity and partiality, and of prerogatives and pejoratives. In an educational context, these challenges are indeed real and persistent. To take up the challenges, I often have recourse to Bourdieu’s relational, reflexive sociology to ponder over power, politics, and participation in education and socialisation. To realise the full value of the epistemic tools bequeathed by Bourdieu, I employ ‘field analysis’ and ‘participant objectivation’ to sociologise myself. Over the years, I have studied and worked, transnationally, in different sociocultural and geopolitical contexts of China, Canada, and Australia. My dispositions and positions have changed, but one thing remains constant: I am Chinese by birth. Such a biological fact and a cultural heritage, and sometimes a political stance, consciously or unconsciously, come to shape my academic habitus – a habitus that manoeuvres my scholastic and social engagement with Chinese young people struggling to survive and thrive in transborder or/and transcultural contexts. Diasporic Chinese constitute one group of these young people and floating children and left-behind children constitute another. In this essay, I introduce to the reader my books about these young people. I also take advantage of this introduction to revisit my journey to a critical sociology of Chinese education through Bourdieu’s bequest.

Twelve years ago, a Chinese Australian young fellow allowed me a unique opportunity to approach his inside world – a secret, subtle microcosmos that has never ever been touched before: “I am Australian but I look Chinese; I look Chinese but I can’t speak Chinese”. His very predicament prompted me to mull over the tensions around language and identity of Chinese diaspora. Such tensions later became the empirical foundations of my first book (Mu, 2016). Working with over 200 Chinese Australian young people, I grappled with the complex entanglement of their habitus of Chineseness and linguistic dispositions within the immediate fields of family, school, community, and workplace. My affective and academic engagement with Chinese diaspora and Pierre Bourdieu urged me to write another book (Mu & Pang, 2019). This work involves hundreds of Chinese Australian and Chinese Canadian young people and comes to grips with their racialised and gendered body, limitations and liberations around their socialisation and education, as well as their resilience process in the face of structural constraints. The book is a valorous attempt, however polemical and rudimentary, to develop a critical sociology of Chinese diaspora. The intention is to spark questions of cultural, racial, and social identification and affiliation, of lineage and identity, of story and memory, and of participation, representation, and socialisation in multicultural societies challenged by complex and difficult issues of diversity, inclusivity, and citizenship.

Parallel to my work on Chinese diaspora in the global, multicultural contexts is my interest in floating children and left behind children in the internal migration context in China. My first book in this regard (Mu & Hu, 2016) reports on the potholes and distractions within the living and schooling of these children. Yet the book shifts from the deficit model and ‘do-gooder’ approach to a transformative and strength-based perspective that recasts vulnerabilities into opportunities. It invites a recognition of the qualities of left-behind children and floating children, and proposes to reshape the taken-for-granted social structures within dominant institutions that often arbitrarily misrecognise the rural dispositions of these children. This ushers in my development of a sociology of resilience to structural constraints and my recent book on a Bourdieusian analysis of the resilience process of floating children and left-behind children (Mu, 2018). Working across policy documents, ethnographic interviews, and a large-scale quantitative dataset, I propose that resilience is a process of socialisation that reshapes a particular social arena (field) where young people are enculturated into a system of dispositions (habitus) and endowed with a set of resources (capital) required for rebounding from adversities and performing well across multiple domains – physical, psychological, social, and educational.

At the end of the essay, I provide a brief introduction to my edited book “Bourdieu and Chinese Education” (Mu, Dooley, & Luke, 2019). In this volume, a group of scholars in China, Australia, Canada, and the USA dialogue with Bourdieu and raise persistent questions not only about issues of equity, competition, and change in Chinese educational policy and practice, but also about the value, venture, and violence in using established Western intellectual frameworks for analysing Chinese education. The book makes a collective call for a ‘reflexive reappropriation’ of Bourdieu’s sociology in the study of Chinese education. Drawing on this collective wisdom, I conclude the essay with a research agenda that may spark debates on:

  • the attractions and contradictions of using Western social scientific models, frameworks, and worldviews for studying Chinese education;
  • the germinating development of contemporary Chinese habituses in response to academic capitalism and edubusiness;
  • the everyday lived experience, resilience, and conundrum of Chinese students, parents, and educational professionals in the ordinary and extraordinary fields of home, school, and community; and,
  • the status and education of non-Han, ethnic minorities in the context of increasingly visible multicultural politics and growing doxic urgency for social cohesion and nation-state building in rising China.

 

References

Mu, G. M. (2016). Learning Chinese as a Heritage Language: An Australian perspective. Bristol: Multilingual Matters.

Mu, G. M. (2018). Building resilience of floating children and left-behind children in China: Power, politics, participation, and education. London: Routledge.

Mu, G. M., Dooley, K., & Luke, A. (Eds.). (2019). Bourdieu and Chinese education: Inequality, competition, and change. New York: Routledge.

Mu, G. M., & Hu, Y. (2016). Living with vulnerabilities and opportunities in a migration context: Floating children and left-behind children in China. Rotterdam: Sense.

Mu, G. M., & Pang, B. (2019). Interpreting the Chinese diaspora: Identity, scialisation, and resilience according to Pierre Bourdieu. London & New York: Routledge.

 

 

 

Author Biography

Guanglun Michael Mu is Senior Research Fellow at Queensland University of Technology. His current project on culture, class, and resilience is funded by the Australian Research Council ($418,489.94). Michael draws on theories from sociology of education (e.g., Bourdieu’s reflexive sociology) as well as mixed methods and quantitative approaches (e.g., meta-analysis, factor analysis, path analysis, process analysis, structural equation modelling, and social network analysis) to probe and prod research problems evolving from three areas: negotiating Chineseness in a diasporic context; building resilience in (im)migration and multicultural contexts; and developing teacher professionalism in an inclusive education context. Michael’s publications include five scholarly books and over 40 scholarly papers.