Journal of International Students
Volume 8, Issue 2, 2018, Pages 861-883

“It’s kinda weird”: Hybrid identities in the international undergraduate community (Article)

Adewale T. , D’Amico M.M. , Salas S.
  • a Louisville Education Center, Campbellsville UniversityKY, United States
  • b Higher Education Concentration, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, United States
  • c Department of Middle, Secondary, and K-12 Education, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, United States

Abstract

With benefits international students bring to campus, universities have adopted aggressive recruitment practices and increased institutional support for their retention and positive college engagement (Hegarty, 2014). Due to globalization, increasing numbers of international students enter college with multiple cultural/national affiliations (Gomes, Berry, Alzougool, & Chang, 2014). Yet, little is known about these complex identities and how they shape students’ experiences in U.S. higher education. Using Schlossberg’s Transition Theory, the article leverages interview data to theorize hybrid national/cultural identities of five “international” undergraduate students at a private university on the Eastern seaboard. Although the institution used passport information to categorize student nationality, participants chose to self-identify less categorically. Our discussion recommends dialogue around international students’ identity constructs to thoughtfully affirm hybridity. © Journal of International Students.

Author Keywords

International students Hybridity Multiplicity globalization identities

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85047881421&doi=10.5281%2fzenodo.1250387&partnerID=40&md5=7a2f861b072e0848c70d9195b4ebee28

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1250387
ISSN: 21623104
Original Language: English