Adjustment to Chinese Culture and Mental Health Issues among Foreign Students on Chinese University Campuses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Collaborative Ethnographic Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Cultural Identity and International Students
1.2. General Context of International Students’ Cultural Adjustment and Mental Health during the Pandemic
1.3. Theoretical Perspectives on Cultural Identity
1.4. Chinese Culture and International Students
1.5. Adjustment to Chinese Culture and International Students’ Mental Health
1.6. Cross-Cultural Adaptation of Culture by Foreign Students
- Q1:
- What difficulties do international undergraduate students in China face with respect to their adjustment to Chinese culture and mental health?
- Q2:
- What are the feelings, perceptions, and attitudes of international undergraduate students in China regarding their adjustment to Chinese culture and mental health issues?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Collaborative Autoethnography Approach
2.2. Research Procedures and Processes
2.3. Ethical Considerations
2.4. Descriptive Data Analysis of the Participants
3. Results
3.1. Internal Difficulties of International Undergraduate Students with Respect to Adjustment to Chinese Culture and Mental Health
From my own experience, I always feel like I am suffering from cultural autism. I think the cross-cultural adaptability of international students is important. I am more likely to have weak cross-cultural adaptability due to my [home culture’s] cultural distance [from Chinese culture], introversion, lack of Chinese language proficiency, and weak cultural integration ability. As a result, I am unable to integrate into study, daily life, or the community in China, and I even tend to have psychological and mental problems, such as depression, anxiety, and so on, which further hinder my adjustment to Chinese culture.(WYX)
During the COVID-19 pandemic, we had to take online courses and had no opportunities to meet other students. We felt lonely and felt the need to communicate with teachers, parents, and friends. From my observations, in terms of school management, universities should consider diplomatic and political factors and give special management and “differential treatment” to international students in life and study to foster their adjustment to Chinese culture and improve the quality of education. In recent years, the Ministry of Education has also vigorously advocated “convergence management,” but some schools still engage in formalism and other deviations in the process of implementation. In terms of course content, for cultural courses, Chinese culture has not been clearly written into the course syllabus, and traditional culture has been overemphasized, while modern innovative achievements have been ignored.(ZXL)
3.2. The External Difficulties of International Undergraduate Students: Professional Courses and Campus Environment
I found that the campus environment of the school still has its own characteristics—it is excellent at reflecting aspects of Chinese culture, but its reflection of multiple cultures is not obvious. In addition, the communication channels between international students and local Chinese students are insufficient, so international students seldom interact with Chinese students, which is not conducive to narrowing cultural distance and increasing adjustment to Chinese culture.(JYF)
In my opinion, one of the most important strategic significances of the education of international students in China is that they can help tell Chinese stories and spread Chinese images through the important medium of international students in China. Therefore, there are many scholars specializing in the study of the significance of Chinese culture for international students in the communication of national images and of measures to improve their understanding of Chinese culture. In the context of telling Chinese stories well on the international stage, the analysis suggests that regarding the important communication channels and realization paths for international students to tell Chinese stories well as “others,” it is necessary to pay attention to the education of international students in Chinese culture, enhance their adjustment to Chinese culture, and fully accumulate their Chinese story content and mirror materials so as to better speak through the voice and convey the voice through the tube.(ZCY)
3.3. International Undergraduate Students’ Implicit Difficulties: Intercultural Competence and Cross-Cultural Adaptation
During my period of learning Chinese, I felt frustrated and found that there are many factors that affect cross-cultural competence and that these factors will also affect cross-cultural adjustment, cultural integration, social adaptation, and so on. These factors include, for example, the relationships among intercultural strategies, ethnic identity, cultural distance, and the sociocultural adaptation of overseas students, and the results show that cultural distance has a certain impact on sociocultural adaptation. It is not easy to live and study in a foreign country, and we need to learn a lot about cultural differences and identities.(HXD)
I found that when international students’ cross-cultural adaptability is weak, our studies, psychology, and living conditions are affected. We feel lost on the Chinese campus and can become very depressed during the learning process. To help international students like me achieve rapid acculturation, higher education institutions should put forward peer-mentoring programs to promote international students’ cross-cultural adjustment.(HML)
I think that universities should provide our international students with support in areas beyond academic studies, such as job-hunting skills and cultural intelligence, to help them find better jobs. At the same time, some students tend to lack cultural confidence when they want to stay in the country where they study to find a job, or when their major requires them to deal with local people, which will have an impact on their self-confidence. In general, cross-cultural competence affects all aspects of international students, and language, cultural identity, and cultural integration ability also affect cross-cultural competence. Therefore, the countries of origin of international students need to pay attention to the cultivation of students’ international and cross-cultural competence to provide pre-departure support for students studying abroad. At the same time, the destination country should also provide corresponding cross-cultural adaptation support after the student starts their life as an international student to better promote their studies, work, and life.(WYX)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No | Name | Major and Nationality | Class | Gender | Institution | No | Name | Major and Nationality | Class | Gender | Institution |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WYY | Chinese/U.S. | 16 | Male | B University | 43 | ZYP | Accounting/U.S. | 6 | Male | B University |
2 | WQQ | Chinese/UK | 16 | Female | B University | 44 | SRR | Accounting/U.S. | 6 | Male | C University |
3 | ZQQ | Chinese/U.S. | 16 | Male | C University | 45 | ZYH | Painting/U.S. | 4 | Male | B University |
4 | LLY | Chinese/U.S. | 16 | Female | B University | 46 | ZCY | Painting/UK | 4 | Female | B University |
5 | WTT | Chinese/UK | 16 | Female | B University | 47 | SJJ | Painting/U.S. | 4 | Female | C University |
6 | CHB | Chinese/U.S. | 16 | Female | B University | 48 | ZJZ | Painting/U.S. | 4 | Male | B University |
7 | XN | Chinese/UK | 16 | Male | C University | 49 | ZYW | Painting/UK | 4 | Male | D University |
8 | YJH | Chinese/U.S. | 16 | Female | B University | 50 | WSR | Painting/UK | 8 | Female | B University |
9 | LQ | Chinese/UK | 16 | Male | B University | 51 | LX | Digital/UK | 1 | Female | D University |
10 | HML | English/UK | 13 | Female | C University | 52 | DJR | Digital/U.S. | 1 | Male | B University |
11 | JYF | English/UK | 13 | Male | D University | 53 | CY | Digital/UK | 1 | Male | A University |
12 | CYY | English/UK | 1 | Female | A University | 54 | PG | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | A University |
13 | ZWY | English/UK | 1 | Male | B University | 55 | QCF | Digital/U.S. | 1 | Male | B University |
14 | WYP | English/UK | 4 | Female | A University | 56 | SJZ | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | B University |
15 | WZX | Math/UK | 2 | Male | B University | 57 | ZH | Digital/U.S. | 1 | Male | E University |
16 | LMJ | Geography/Korean | 1 | Male | A University | 58 | ZWH | Digital/UK | 1 | Female | B University |
17 | XXY | Geography/Korean | 1 | Female | B University | 59 | YLN | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | B University |
18 | SXR | Geography/New Zealand | 1 | Female | E University | 60 | ZXX | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | A University |
19 | LJJ | Geography/New Zealand | 1 | Male | B University | 61 | ZLJ | Digital/U.S. | 1 | Female | B University |
20 | WD | Geography/Korean | 1 | Female | B University | 62 | FJ | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | A University |
21 | SJL | Music/Korean | 4 | Female | F University | 63 | HQQ | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | F University |
22 | ZZQ | Music/U.S. | 4 | Male | B University | 64 | ZHD | Digital/U.S. | 1 | Female | B University |
23 | LWY | Music/Korean | 4 | Female | F University | 65 | ZHX | Digital/Korean | 1 | Female | F University |
24 | LJQ | Music/U.S. | 5 | Male | B University | 66 | ZYY | Digital/U.S. | 1 | Male | B University |
25 | CY | Music/Korean | 5 | Female | B University | 67 | TZY | Digital medium/New Zealand | 1 | Female | F University |
26 | LX | Music/Korean | 5 | Male | F University | 68 | HHL | Digital/U.S. | 2 | Female | B University |
27 | LSF | Music/U.S. | 5 | Female | B University | 69 | SFD | Digital/Korean | 2 | Female | C University |
28 | ZMH | Music/Korean | 5 | Female | B University | 70 | LQX | Digital/Korean | 2 | Female | B University |
29 | WY | Music/Korean | 5 | Female | F University | 71 | LYP | Digital/Japan | 2 | Male | B University |
30 | WWZ | Music/Japan | 6 | Female | A University | 72 | SRR | Digital/Japan | 2 | Female | B University |
31 | DYZ | Music/Japan | 6 | Female | B University | 73 | XWM | Digital/Japan | 2 | Female | B University |
32 | ZYT | Music/Japan | 6 | Female | A University | 74 | HXD | Digital/Canada | 2 | Female | B University |
33 | SZB | Accounting/Japan | 1 | Female | B University | 75 | DMM | Digital/Canada | 2 | Female | B University |
34 | ZYH | Accounting/Canada | 1 | Female | B University | 76 | LXJ | Psychology/Japan | 2 | Female | C University |
35 | ZR | Accounting/Japan | 1 | Female | B University | 77 | ZMH | Psychology/Canada | 2 | Female | B University |
36 | XLY | Accounting/Japan | 1 | Female | A University | 78 | ZGR | Psychology/Canada | 2 | Female | F University |
37 | DYY | Accounting/Canada | 1 | Female | B University | 79 | ZQY | Education/Canada | 4 | Female | B University |
38 | JJJ | Accounting/Canada | 1 | Female | B University | 80 | WXL | Education/New Zealand | 4 | Female | C University |
39 | LJY | Accounting/Canada | 1 | Female | B University | 81 | DHY | Education/New Zealand | 4 | Female | B University |
40 | ZXL | Accounting/New Zealand | 6 | Female | A University | 82 | LYY | Education/New Zealand | 4 | Female | B University |
41 | ZY | Accounting/New Zealand | 6 | Female | B University | ||||||
42 | JYT | Accounting/New Zealand | 6 | Female | F University |
Words | Frequency | Weighted Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|
Cultural autism | 19 | 1.72 |
Cultural adaption | 15 | 1.36 |
Chinese cultural understanding | 14 | 1.27 |
Cross-cultural adaptability | 8 | 0.72 |
International students’ cultural difference | 7 | 0.63 |
Social networks with local students | 5 | 0.45 |
Chinese culture | 3 | 0.27 |
International education | 3 | 0.27 |
Internationalization | 3 | 0.27 |
International students | 3 | 0.27 |
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Li, J.; Xue, E.; He, Y. Adjustment to Chinese Culture and Mental Health Issues among Foreign Students on Chinese University Campuses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Collaborative Ethnographic Study. Behav. Sci. 2023, 13, 526. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13070526
Li J, Xue E, He Y. Adjustment to Chinese Culture and Mental Health Issues among Foreign Students on Chinese University Campuses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Collaborative Ethnographic Study. Behavioral Sciences. 2023; 13(7):526. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13070526
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Jian, Eryong Xue, and Yunshu He. 2023. "Adjustment to Chinese Culture and Mental Health Issues among Foreign Students on Chinese University Campuses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Collaborative Ethnographic Study" Behavioral Sciences 13, no. 7: 526. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13070526
APA StyleLi, J., Xue, E., & He, Y. (2023). Adjustment to Chinese Culture and Mental Health Issues among Foreign Students on Chinese University Campuses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Collaborative Ethnographic Study. Behavioral Sciences, 13(7), 526. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13070526