How perceived rights and duties influence identity positions in an international TESOL graduate program

IF 1.3 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH TESOL Journal Pub Date : 2024-03-05 DOI:10.1002/tesj.814
Michael Rabbidge, Yania Rugama Gomez
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Abstract

The continued push to internationalize Korean higher education means that international and Korean students are enrolling in courses that are undergoing dynamic changes that neither group may be prepared for. This research investigated how the experiences of international students and Korean students who attended the same TESOL graduate school assigned identity positions to each other and their professors during such courses. Using positioning theory allowed this qualitative study to illustrate how participants assigned perceived rights and duties to act, know, or believe in accordance with who they believed they, and other people were, on their program. Violations of these perceived rights and duties resulted in assigning negative identity positions that previously were limited in description to vague “tensions” which impacted international student performance. Findings explain how cultural differences connected to language, participation, hierarchy, and friendships were keenly felt by all participants, and the perceived rights and duties that were violated due to these differences reinforced the marginalized identity position some international students felt.
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在国际 TESOL 研究生项目中,权利和义务如何影响身份定位
韩国高等教育国际化的持续推进,意味着留学生和韩国学生所学习的课程正在经历着动态的变化,而这两个群体可能都没有做好准备。本研究调查了就读于同一所 TESOL 研究生院的留学生和韩国学生在此类课程中如何为彼此及其教授分配身份定位的经历。运用定位理论,本定性研究可以说明参与者是如何根据他们认为自己和其他人在课程中的身份,分配所感知的权利和义务,以采取行动、了解情况或相信他人。对这些权利和义务的侵犯导致了消极的身份定位,而这种定位以前仅限于描述模糊的 "紧张关系",这影响了留学生的学习成绩。研究结果解释了所有参与者是如何敏锐地感受到与语言、参与、等级制度和友谊有关的文化差异的,以及由于这些差异而被侵犯的权利和义务,强化了一些留学生被边缘化的身份地位。
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来源期刊
TESOL Journal
TESOL Journal EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: TESOL Journal (TJ) is a refereed, practitioner-oriented electronic journal based on current theory and research in the field of TESOL. TJ is a forum for second and foreign language educators at all levels to engage in the ways that research and theorizing can inform, shape, and ground teaching practices and perspectives. Articles enable an active and vibrant professional dialogue about research- and theory-based practices as well as practice-oriented theorizing and research.
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