An Investigation of the Experiences of Working with Multilingual International Students among Local Students and Faculty Members in Chinese Universities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What challenges do local students and faculty members experience when working with international students?
- How well do international students respond to these challenges, according to their perceptions?
1.1. International Student Education at Chinese Higher Education Institutions and Its Pro-Multilingual Approach
1.2. Intercultural Communication and International Students’ Challenges and Coping Strategies
2. Methodology
2.1. Participants
2.2. Semi-Structured Interviews
2.3. Data Analysis
Well, the first reason may be, because they are not very confident about their pronunciation… some of them feel that their oral English is not very good, and don’t know how to express themselves in English well. On the other hand, some foreign students’ oral English is bad as well, especially the students from African countries. Their accents are really hard to understand. So for these Chinese students, they cannot understand what the international students say, and international students can’t understand what they say too. I think this could be one reason for limited interaction between international students and Chinese students.(Student 21)
3. Findings
3.1. Theme 1: Language Barriers
At times I am faced with a situation where we (himself and international students) could not understand each other. It was just like the Chinese idiom ‘a chicken talking to a duck’.(Supervisor 5)
I think I am good at daily communication and academic writing in English. It comes to be very difficult when the level of international students is not good as well. More often than not, we had been talking at cross purposes.(Supervisor 11)
I’ve met some international students from non-English-speaking countries with excellent English communication skills. But in my university, these kinds of students are rare. The majority of international students are from non-English-speaking countries and their English level, I have to say, is not satisfactory.(Supervisor 3)
Effective communication requires both understanding what others say and being understood by others. These international students have to listen and speak in English when interacting with fellow students. This helps them in improving spoken language skills.(Supervisor 2)
At the start of every semester, international students will ask me to assign some English articles and textbooks for them to read. There is no better teacher than a good book. By reading a textbook in English, these international students are interacting with the language. They often say that they feel different after reading a book in English.(Supervisor 8)
At first, I did have great difficulties in understanding international students from Pakistan or India. They had a very good grasp of knowledge and spoke quite fluently, but I did not understand what they said due to their accents.(Student 11)
They (internationals) always approach professors with the excuse of ‘poor language proficiency’. As long as the international students have problems they cannot fully understand, they would go and talk with professors, particularly before examinations. With the professors’ help, they can complete their homework and pass examinations much easier than us.(Student 10)
3.2. Theme 2: Cultural Assumptions of Student-Teacher Interaction
Treating a teacher like a parent and respecting his/her teaching has been a traditional virtue in Chinese culture. International students must figure out that the role of a supervisor needs to be seen as an absolute leader with authority.(Supervisor 8)
My supervisor’s English is not good. I have to spend much more time on tasks such as translating or interpreting for both sides.(Student 19)
He was very lazy and had poor concentration in class. I endured him for about half a year in silence. I can criticize Chinese students severely, but I cannot criticize international students. They are treated differently from Chinese students in all aspects.(Supervisor 10)
Sometimes I don’t agree with Prof. Chen as to his research design. However, he is an experienced supervisor and has supervised many PhD and MA students successfully. I choose to trust Prof. Chen even if I do think it is unrealistic intuitively. He is the driver, I am the passenger, and I only need to sleep in the back seat, though I don’t know whether he is on the right track. I’d rather follow him than challenge him directly. But for these international students, they would refuse without hesitation if they think it is impossible. They don’t like to make a compromise. Compared with them, we take a milder way to deal with the discrepancy with supervisors.(Student 12)
We found a result with no statistically significant difference in our experiment. Our supervisor asked us not to report it and said it was unlikely for a paper with this result to be published. To my surprise, he [the international classmate] insisted that findings with no significant differences should also be reported in our group meeting. He said it was common for researchers to find a non-significant difference, and that results should be reported. To be honest, I admire him for that.(Student 21)
When we bought raw materials for our lab, he reimbursed every penny he spent on raw materials, but he never asked for more than what he actually spent. Our Chinese students would ask the dealer to round up figures and issue an invoice for 100 yuan if we spent 99 yuan. He never did that. His attitude towards money was very impressive. Because of him, we had no choice but only reimbursed for what we spent.(Student 3)
3.3. Theme 3: Academic Socialization
I think they [international students] should know that one of the traditional key principles in Chinese education is to learn to be an upright person and learn how to get along with others. So, there’s no need to stress out about how different you are in this group.(Supervisor 2)
In our lab, this is an unwritten rule: when we do our experiment, we take turns to treat lunch. Today I treat you, and tomorrow you treat me. But in their eyes, it is a matter of principle. They refuse to follow this rule because they think it is deviating from their values.(Student 2)
Songa is good at analyzing data with the software Graphpad Prism. He is very popular in our lab. He helps us analyses our data, and we like to discuss our research with him.(Student 24)
I don’t spend much time with them. When I meet them, we just talk about research. I have no time to chat with them about other things, and I am not good at chatting about non-academic stuff.(Supervisor 1)
4. Discussion
5. Implications and Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Describe your educational background. Have you ever studied or worked in another country before? How is your English?
- Are there international students in your program? Why do you think international students choose to study in China? Why do you think the Chinese government and universities recruit international students?
- When did you begin to supervise international students? How many international students are you supervising at present? For what reason did you decide to supervise them? What contributions can they bring to your program?
- Is there any problem in your supervision of international students? What frustrates you the most in supervising international students? How do you solve these problems?
- Do international students have problems during their study? What are the causes of their problems? How do they tackle these problems?
- Do you have international students in your class or lab? Why do you think these international students choose to study in China? Why do you think the Chinese government and universities recruit international students?
- Do you often interact with international students? Why, or why not? For what reason do you decide to approach them?
- What do you think of international students’ interactions with teachers? Is there any problem? What are the causes of these problems?
- How are international students different from Chinese students in dealing with teachers?
- What do you think of international students’ engagement in their study? What problems do the international students have? How do the international students tackle these problems?
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Name | Gender | Department | Position | English Level | Number of International Students under Supervision at Present | Years of Supervising International Students |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Supervisor 1 | Male | Engineering | Professor | Intermediate | 2 PhD students | 9 |
Supervisor 2 | Female | Humanities | Professor | Intermediate | 1 PhD and 4 MA students | 21 |
Supervisor 3 | Female | Engineering | Professor | Intermediate | 3 PhD students | 6 |
Supervisor 4 | Male | Physics | Professor | Intermediate | 2 PhD and2 MA students | 6 |
Supervisor 5 | Male | Environment | Lecturer | Not good | 5 MA students | 2 |
Supervisor 6 | Male | Agriculture | Senior Lecturer | Intermediate | 4 PhD students | 5 |
Supervisor 7 | Male | Management | Professor | Advanced | 4 PhD and 5 MA students | 11 |
Supervisor 8 | Male | Education | Professor | Intermediate | 3 PhD and 2 MA students | 5 |
Supervisor 9 | Male | Aerodynamics | Lecturer | Intermediate | 4 MA students | 2 |
Supervisor 10 | Female | Economics | Professor | Intermediate | 2 PhD students | 3 |
Supervisor 11 | Male | Agriculture | Senior Lecturer | Intermediate | 3 PhD and 1 MA student | 4 |
Number | Gender | Age | Major | Program | Number | Gender | Age | Major | Program |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Student 1 | Female | 23 | English | MA | Student 14 | Male | 25 | Medical | PhD |
Student 2 | Male | 31 | Electronics | PhD | Student 15 | Male | 26 | Medical | PhD |
Student 3 | Male | 26 | Automation | PhD | Student 16 | Male | 24 | Acupuncture | MA |
Student 4 | Female | 28 | Agriculture | PhD | Student 17 | Female | 23 | Education | MA |
Student 5 | Female | 19 | English | BA | Student 18 | Female | 21 | French | BA |
Student 6 | Male | 21 | Tourism | BA | Student 19 | Male | 24 | Agriculture | MA |
Student 7 | Male | 34 | Medical | PhD | Student 20 | Male | 25 | Literature | PhD |
Student 8 | Male | 26 | IT | PhD | Student 21 | Male | 27 | Construction | PhD |
Student 9 | Female | 20 | Agriculture | BA | Student 22 | Male | 28 | Physics | MA |
Student 10 | Female | 24 | Chinese | MA | Student 23 | Female | 21 | Music | BA |
Student 11 | Male | 20 | Business | BA | Student 24 | Male | 25 | Environment | PhD |
Student 12 | Male | 29 | Civil Engineering | PhD | Student 25 | Female | 26 | IT | MA |
Student 13 | Female | 28 | Animation | MA |
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Han, Y.; Li, W.; Bao, M.; Cao, X. An Investigation of the Experiences of Working with Multilingual International Students among Local Students and Faculty Members in Chinese Universities. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166419
Han Y, Li W, Bao M, Cao X. An Investigation of the Experiences of Working with Multilingual International Students among Local Students and Faculty Members in Chinese Universities. Sustainability. 2020; 12(16):6419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166419
Chicago/Turabian StyleHan, Yawen, Wenxuan Li, Min Bao, and Xinyu Cao. 2020. "An Investigation of the Experiences of Working with Multilingual International Students among Local Students and Faculty Members in Chinese Universities" Sustainability 12, no. 16: 6419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166419
APA StyleHan, Y., Li, W., Bao, M., & Cao, X. (2020). An Investigation of the Experiences of Working with Multilingual International Students among Local Students and Faculty Members in Chinese Universities. Sustainability, 12(16), 6419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166419