Outside in the Moana? Chinese International Students’ Experiences of Studying in Pacific Studies at The University of Auckland, New Zealand.

Bangguo Du, Thomson Thomson
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Abstract

Scholarship that explores the experiences of Chinese International Students in New Zealand have identified language barriers, differing rationale in classroom participation and “face” as a concept that mediates their scholastic journey. At the University of Auckland, New Zealand, the majority of Chinese international students take up majors such as finance, computing and engineering. This paper is the first to explore the experiences of Chinese international students majoring in Pacific Studies at a postgraduate level. We make use of data gleaned from critical autoethnographic and talanoa interview methods to explore the uniqueness of this positionality through a thematic talanoa. In doing so we argue their experiences are similar but also differ in important ways from other Chinese international students, in that those in Pacific Studies were also presented with a greater awareness of the need to negotiate their lives between multiple cultural contexts: Mainstream New Zealand society, Pacific Studies – a learning environment that emphasises decolonisation and Indigenous knowledge – while living as Chinese students in a foreign land
在《海洋奇缘》外面?中国留学生在新西兰奥克兰大学学习太平洋研究的经历。
研究中国留学生在新西兰经历的学术研究发现,语言障碍、课堂参与的不同理由以及“面子”是影响他们求学之旅的一个概念。在新西兰奥克兰大学,大多数中国留学生选择了金融、计算机和工程等专业。本文首次探讨了太平洋研究专业的中国留学生在研究生阶段的经历。我们利用批判性的自我民族志和talanoa访谈方法收集的数据,通过主题talanoa来探索这种位置性的独特性。在这样做的过程中,我们认为他们的经历与其他中国国际学生相似,但在重要方面也有所不同,因为太平洋研究的学生也更清楚地意识到需要在多种文化背景之间进行谈判:新西兰主流社会,太平洋研究-一个强调非殖民化和土著知识的学习环境-同时作为中国学生生活在异国他乡
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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