A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University

A phenomenological method was used to analyze ten international doctoral students’ description of their lived experiences at a United States (U.S.) university. The analysis was based on the theoretical premise of how students acculturate to their new educational settings. Three broad overlapping the...

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Main Author: Throy A. Campbell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of International Students 2015-07-01
Series:Journal of International Students
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/422
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spelling doaj-4c734e0ed2ad429b8a7316eef98d8e452020-11-24T23:12:19ZengJournal of International StudentsJournal of International Students2162-31042166-37502015-07-0153285299422A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. UniversityThroy A. Campbell0University of Texas at Arlington, United StatesA phenomenological method was used to analyze ten international doctoral students’ description of their lived experiences at a United States (U.S.) university. The analysis was based on the theoretical premise of how students acculturate to their new educational settings. Three broad overlapping themes emerged: (1) participants’ past experiences that influenced their desire to study in the U.S.; (2) participants’ interactions within academic and non-academic settings; and (3) the role of family relationships during their studies within the U.S. The study revealed that the students: were optimistic about the societal opportunities from studying in the U.S., were appreciative of their interaction with instructors, had inadequate relationship with supervising professors, participated in limited social activity outside of academic settings, and made adjustment to family relationships.http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/422international doctoral studentsacculturationhigher educationunited states
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Throy A. Campbell
spellingShingle Throy A. Campbell
A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University
Journal of International Students
international doctoral students
acculturation
higher education
united states
author_facet Throy A. Campbell
author_sort Throy A. Campbell
title A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University
title_short A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University
title_full A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University
title_fullStr A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University
title_full_unstemmed A Phenomenological Study on International Doctoral Students’ Acculturation Experiences at a U.S. University
title_sort phenomenological study on international doctoral students’ acculturation experiences at a u.s. university
publisher Journal of International Students
series Journal of International Students
issn 2162-3104
2166-3750
publishDate 2015-07-01
description A phenomenological method was used to analyze ten international doctoral students’ description of their lived experiences at a United States (U.S.) university. The analysis was based on the theoretical premise of how students acculturate to their new educational settings. Three broad overlapping themes emerged: (1) participants’ past experiences that influenced their desire to study in the U.S.; (2) participants’ interactions within academic and non-academic settings; and (3) the role of family relationships during their studies within the U.S. The study revealed that the students: were optimistic about the societal opportunities from studying in the U.S., were appreciative of their interaction with instructors, had inadequate relationship with supervising professors, participated in limited social activity outside of academic settings, and made adjustment to family relationships.
topic international doctoral students
acculturation
higher education
united states
url http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/422
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