Exploring expectations, experiences and long-term plans of Chinese international students studying in the joint Sino-Russian degree

Sablina, S., Soong, H., & Pechurina, A. (2018). Exploring expectations, experiences and long-term plans of Chinese international students studying in the joint Sino-Russian degree. Higher Education, 76(6), 973-988. doi:10.1007/s10734-018-0256-z

Hannah Soong

Dr Hannah Soong, University of South Australia

Essentially, the paper contributes to a relatively unexplored area on the growing Sino-Russian educational partnerships and the increasing desire of Chinese local students to search for a less exam-oriented education overseas. Using in-depth interviews as the main method of data collection, the paper investigates a group of Chinese students’ experiences and perceptions of their educational experiences during the course of their joint Chinese-Russian educational programme (from 2013-2014) which involves residing in both countries. This paper also offers an example of an innovative methodological approach to researching international students’ experiences: one that is not limited to context of Sino-Foreign university partnerships. The paper has shown that Chinese students value the experiences and opportunities that their international education can provide them. Over time, not only have the Chinese student participants developed confidence to compete in both regional and international labour markets, they have also maintained a heightened ‘robust’ sense of self-identity and a deeper understanding of and respect for one another with local student communities.

 

Author Bio

Dr Hannah Soong is a senior lecturer at the University of South Australia. Her research interests lie in the sociological study of the transnational mobility through education. Her key research disciplines include migration and identity studies, social imagination, teacher education and the intersubjectivity of self and society in postmodernity. By using socio-anthropological lenses in her doctoral work, Hannah has developed a conceptual framework to deepen one’s understanding on the meaning of mobility of students who are on the verge of migration through education processes. She is author of ‘Transnational Students and Mobility: Lived Experiences of Migration‘.

content

 

Call for Participants: Workplace Inclusion Experience of Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnic (BAME) Millennial Professionals

Research project title:  Workplace Inclusion Experience of Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnic (BAME) Millennial Professionals.


We are looking for graduates who were born between 1981 and 1996, identified themselves with one or more BAME groups, and have at least two years of full-time work experience in the UK. Participants will be asked to share their perception and experience of workplace inclusion in an individual interview. This research is carried out by Minjie Cai from the University of Greenwich and Manjari Prashar from Global Readiness Training/Cranfield University. All responses to the interview questions will be kept confidentially with assurance of anonymity. Please contact Dr Minjie Cai should you wish to take part in the research interview or have someone to recommend for this project.
Researcher Contact
Dr. Minjie Cai (Principal Investigator)
Lecturer in Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour
Department of Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour
University of Greenwich
Email: m.cai@greenwich.ac.uk
Telephone: +44(0)2083317880

Negotiating Intercultural Spaces and Teacher Identity in an Internationalised School in Shanghai

Poole, A. (2019). Negotiating Intercultural Spaces and Teacher Identity in an Internationalised School in Shanghai. Intercultural Communication Education, 2 (2), 59-70. https://doi.org/10.29140/ice.v2n2.128

Adam Poole

Dr Adam Poole, University of Nottingham Ningbo, China

Abstract

There is now a general acceptance that schools need to prepare students for the realities of a globalised world, which necessitates developing intercultural competence. Such an educational mandate is felt particularly keenly in internationalised schools, where the work of teaching and learning involves the negotiation of diverse cultural assumptions, practices, and identities on a daily basis. Whilst schools are in a position where they need to formulate some kind of understanding of what intercultural competence means and how it is expected to be developed with educational content and pedagogical practices, the notion of intercultural competence is perpetually contested. Critical scholars have critiqued the tendency for theorising on intercultural competence to adhere to “solid” notions of culture and assume that there is an end to the intercultural process at which point an individual will become interculturally competent. This paper, however, argues that it is important to understand the ways in which solid notions of culture surface in the lived experiences of teachers working in intercultural contexts. The paper draws on findings from a qualitative case study of international teachers’ cross-cultural experiences in an international school in Shanghai, China to highlight the ways in which individuals draw on notions of solid culture as a resource for claiming an identity position in relation to dominant cultural practices in the local context.

Background

This paper is designed as the final installment in a series of papers that have focused on various aspects of teachers’ experiences in internationalised schools (the reader can check out another paper for discussion of the differences between international and internationalised schools, and characteristics of what I have come to call Chinese Internationalised Schools.) In my previous work, I explored teachers’ experiences of precarity and constructions of cross-cultural identities in internationalised schools in Shanghai. As part of this project, I developed a framework for analysing international teachers’ identities, by appropriating the concept of teacher professional identity, which has been understood as being comprised of professional and personal experiences. In order to capture the ‘international’ dimension of international schools as transnational spaces of education, I added a third modality, cross-cultural experiences, which was informed by the notion of intercultural competence. However, in writing this current paper, I have come to question my assumptions about intercultural competence, particularly the idea that an individual can master a certain set of skills and dispositions after which he or she will be able to negotiate any intercultural encounter. This process of questioning led me to the concept of critical interculturality, which is defined as ‘a never-ending process of ideological struggle against solid identities, unfair power differentials, discrimination and hurtful (and often disguised) discourses of (banal) nationalism, ethnocentrism, racism and various forms of -ism. Critical interculturality is also about the now and then of interaction, beyond generalisations of contexts and interlocutors (Dervin, 2017, p. 2).

The paper develops my previous work by drawing together the concept of teacher professional identity construction with critical interculturality. In contrast to most studies on international schools which tend to focus on expatriate educators, this paper also draws upon data from a local teacher, Daisy who taught the IBDP (International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme) English. Previously, I had focused on Daisy’s identity development (see ‘I am an Internationalising Teacher’) in isolation, but this paper places her voice alongside other expatriate teaching staff. For me, Daisy has become a significant figure in my research. She is representative of numerous Daisies in internationalised schools who are often not recognised as international educators, due to contracts that label them as ‘local-hires. Even though the paper set out to focus on the expatriate experience, it is her voice that is the most significant.

The paper found that Daisy was the most interculturally competent of all the participants despite being the youngest and least experienced. This was attributed to her familiarity with Chinese and English culture and her linguistic ability in both languages. As she was habituated to the local context, she could utilise her solid identity as a foundation on which to develop new hybrid identities that incorporated aspects of both Chinese and western education. The paper proposes that schools should utilise teachers like Daisy as cultural mediators. Exploring cultural differences with a cultural mediator enacts the very processes of being intercultural, such as being interactive and reflexive. There are also a number of other advantages of utilising mediators like Daisy for facilitating the development of interculturality. Cultural mediators add an affective dimension to the intercultural process, which is often missing from your average workshop and training sessions on interculturality, which tend to be rushed and often abstract in nature. Because mediators like Daisy are able to decentre and combine different cultural perspectives, they also model and scaffold the intercultural process for monocultural teachers, who may approach intercultural interactions from the perspective of solid frames of reference.

Implications

Despite being cast as the antagonist, solid identities and ethnocentrism still have a part to play in the development of critical interculturality. For example, the findings suggest that at the level of lived experience, culture is both solid and fluid. Hybridity is not just related to fluid identities, but also the co-existence and interpenetration of fluid and solid identities. Daisy, for example, positioned her teacher identity in relation to a former identity as a ‘teacher-centred educator’. Moreover, this former identity could be described as the bedrock on which Daisy constructed her present identity as an ‘internationalising teacher’ and an emerging identity as a ‘real international teacher.’ On the one hand, culture and cultural identity is not something that exists independently of individuals but is embodied and instantiated by individuals through interaction (culture as process) and is therefore hybrid in nature. On the other hand, culture is utilised solidly as a frame of reference by individuals and is therefore perceived to be solid in nature (culture as product). It is also necessary to caution against the polarisation of liquid and solid identities by viewing liquid as positive and therefore desirable and solid as negative and therefore undesirable. Solid identities are not inherently ‘wrong’ or counterproductive. Rather, they are necessary for developing intercultural identities. Furthermore, solid identities also play a psychological role in bolstering professional identities that are perceived to be under threat and developing greater resilience and a positive sense of self in terms of self-efficacy.

The paper also problematises the notion of critical interculturality as ‘a never-ending process’ by arguing that it minimises the importance of the relevance of cultural knowledge and cultural identities in the here and now. It has to be asked to what extent individuals can be critically intercultural without bringing these ‘solid’ frames into play. Given the salience of solid notions of culture and related cultural identities, it is important to understand how solid notions of culture and identity become intertwined in intercultural encounters. As the paper argues, solid notions of culture take on particular significance for teachers of different national backgrounds who might see themselves as representing particular educational cultures and use claims around culture and identity to advance their own pedagogical agenda or to resist change.

Author’s work

Poole, A. (2019). International Education Teachers’ Experiences as a Global Educational Precariat in China. Journal of Research in International Education, 18(1), 60-76. https://doi.org/10.1177/1475240919836489

Poole, A. (2019). ‘I am an internationalising teacher’: A Chinese English teacher’s experiences of becoming an international teacher. International Journal of Comparative Education and Development, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCED-08-2018-0026

Critical interculturality

Dervin, F. (2017). Critical interculturality: Lectures and notes. Newcastle Upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

Author’s short bio: Adam Poole (Ed.D, University of Nottingham, China) is a practitioner-researcher currently based in Shanghai, China. He teaches IBDP (International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme) English A and B at an Chinese Internationalised School in Shanghai, and has recently defended and passed his doctoral thesis, which was undertaken with the University of Nottingham, Ningbo. Adam has published a number of articles on international education and the funds of knowledge/identity approach in international peer-reviewed journals, including Mind, Culture and Activity, Research Journal of International Education, Culture and Psychology and The Asia-Pacific Education Researcher. His research interests include international teachers’ experiences in international schools, teacher professional identity, and developing the funds of identity concept. Adam can be reached at zx17826@nottingham.edu.cn and via his profile page at Research Gate.

 

Participants needed_Understanding Chinese International students’ health experiences

We are looking for any (age/background/degrees) Chinese international students in the UK to do a 45 mins online interview to talk about their health and physical activity experiences as a Chinese international student in the UK.

Interested participants should reply to any one of the following emails

B.Pang@westernsydney.edu.au

 rehealchineseaus@gmail.com

and indicate: ” I agree to participate in this study according to what is outlined in the information sheet and consent form”.

Then the RAs (Sophia Li and Amy Wu) will contact you and follow up with an interview schedule.

PI: Dr Bonnie Pang 
Senior Research Fellow/ Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellow

School of Sport

Leeds Beckett University, Room 222 Cavendish Hall
Headingley Campus, Leeds LS6 3QU

Email: B.H.Pang@leedsbeckett.ac.uk

Master of Research Opportunities: Chinese diaspora research at Western Sydney University

Master of Research opportunities at Western Sydney University

Bonnie Pang

Supervisor: Dr Bonnie Pang (Diversity and inclusion in health, sport, and physical activity)    
School/Institute: School of Science and Health/Institute for Culture and Society

 

For those who are interested in Chinese diaspora research, underpinned by sociocultural theoretical perspectives, ethnographic and arts-based research methods:

(1) Chinese diasporic communities’ active lifestyles, leisure and health-related experiences
The research focuses on Chinese diasporic communities. The purpose of the research is to examine the relationship between health, sport, physical activity with the environment, the body, technology, inequality and identity. Students will have the opportunity to design their own research focus around these topics with Chinese-Australian communities.
(2) Chinese LGBTQ communities’ experiences in sport, music, art and their relation to health
The research focuses on Chinese LGBTQ communities. The aim of the research project is to understand their experiences in community sport, music, and art engagement and the impact on health. Students will have the opportunity to design their own research focus around these topics with Chinese LGBTQ communities locally and globally (e.g. Hong Kong, Australia, UK).

What research skills and soft skills will you learn?

  • Students will learn to apply a range of research skills from an ethnographic research approach with particular emphasis on qualitative methods. This will include: individual interviews and focus group interviews, participatory visual methods, mobile ethnography, and art-based methods.
  • Students will learn to understand and apply social theories and concepts (e.g. Bourdieu, Foucault, feminisms, queer theory etc.) to analyse the research data using qualitative data software (e.g. NVivo).
  • Students will further have the opportunity to collaborate with community partners (e.g. ACON, Hong Kong 2022 Gay Games committee) to organise and/or participate in community sport and music events for LGBTIQ Chinese communities.

What could be the research impact?
The research has the potential to significantly enhance Chinese LGBTQ communities’ sport, music, and art engagement, and to promote active, healthy and inclusive citizens in an increasingly ethnic and culturally diverse socio-cultural environment.

For more details, click here.