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‘You cannot talk with all of the strangers in a pub’: a longitudinal case study of international postgraduate students’ social ties at a British university

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Abstract

The formation of social ties is a major factor in the international student experience (Ramsay et al. in High Educ 54(2):247–265, 2007), influencing student wellbeing and adjustment to the new academic and sociocultural environment (Ward et al. in The psychology of culture shock. Routledge, Hove, 2001). Although a significant body of research in the international student literature has explored the role of social ties in student adjustment (Maundeni in Race Ethn Educ 4(3):253–276, 2001), there is a lack of studies monitoring student sojourners’ social ties longitudinally. This case study therefore sought to investigate the dynamics and functions of social ties by tracking a group of international students over one academic year. Semi-structured individual interviews were conducted at three time stages with 20 international postgraduate students at a single UK university. The aim was to replicate and extend the Functional Model of Friendship Networks (Bochner et al. in Int J Psychol 12(4):277–294, 1977) which suggests that student sojourners typically form three distinct social networks: a co-national network, a host national network, and a non-co-national international network. The data shows evidence for a lack of host contact, reveals complexities associated with co-national contact, and points to the dominance of highly supportive ‘international ties’. Further longitudinal research is called for to further inform our understanding of international students’ social contact patterns over time.

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Notes

  1. A sojourn is commonly understood as a temporary stay abroad for a specific purpose such as academic study (Ward et al. 2001).

  2. This article uses inter and cross cultural synonymously throughout, although there is some debate about distinctions between the two (e.g. Gudykunst 2003).

  3. Who is considered an international student may vary for legal or tuition fee purposes (Gürüz 2008). For example in the UK students from the European Union are counted as ‘international’ in the national statistics, but pay the lower ‘home’ tuition fee.

  4. Two interviewees were first language English speakers from the US and thus used their native language in the interviews. However, all other participants had previously fulfilled the host university's English language entrance requirement of IELTS 6.5 or equivalent and were thus considered well-equipped to take part in an interview of this kind.

  5. One interviewee only took part in the second interview wave (February).

  6. The terms British and English were used interchangeably by the students.

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Schartner, A. ‘You cannot talk with all of the strangers in a pub’: a longitudinal case study of international postgraduate students’ social ties at a British university. High Educ 69, 225–241 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-014-9771-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-014-9771-8

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