Abstract
In recent years, as a response to the internationalization of higher education worldwide, China has begun to enroll international students to study at the tertiary level on an increasingly large scale. While the majority of the programs and courses are open to international students via Chinese as Chinese-medium instruction (CMI), there are also an increasing number of programs and courses delivered through English-medium instruction (EMI). In order to understand higher education multilingual contexts, this qualitative study examines how local students and faculty members make sense of their engagement with international students in three Chinese universities. In the study, we conducted in-depth interviews with 11 academics who worked with international students as project supervisors and 25 Chinese university students regarding their experiences of working with international students. The findings that emerged from the thematic analysis revealed that international students’ learning engagement was profoundly mediated by language barriers, cultural assumptions and the academic conventions in host institutions. The study revealed that Chinese academics are concerned about international students’ learning attitudes, their academic progress and a lack of participation due to their language ability. Local Chinese students also reported a lack of satisfaction in working with international students. Some of the local students felt that some international students may have been enabled to enroll in the academic programs as a result of national and university policies, which has led to a ‘dumbing down’ of the curriculum offered in English. The findings indicate that more needs to be done to promote mutual exchanges and better understanding among international students, Chinese faculty members and local students.
Highlights
The globalization of higher education has triggered a large number of students undertaking academic studies abroad
The data from this study showed that Chinese supervisors and local students reported a variety of complex views related to working with international students in Chinese higher education institutions
Emerging from the data analysis, the Chinese teachers and local students in the study reported that they experienced language barriers, different cultural assumptions in student-teacher interactions, and different interpretations of academic conventions as major challenges when working with international students
Summary
The globalization of higher education has triggered a large number of students undertaking academic studies abroad This growth in the number of international students has driven a proliferation of studies exploring their learning and sociocultural experiences, including language learning [1], sociocultural adaptation [2,3], motivation for academic studies [4] and academic or living satisfaction [5]. Figures show that in 2018, 25,618 full-time international doctoral students and 59,444 Master’s students studied in China—figures which used to be minimal in Chinese higher education institutions These particular international students engage with local students and faculty members, and the increase in their numbers underscores the need to explore how they work with local students and faculty members during their terms of study. The large influx of international students, a sharp increase in the number of degree-seeking international students, has increased the linguistic, cultural and academic diversity in Chinese higher education institutions
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.