|
Title |
Author/yr |
Abstract |
Location/
subject |
method |
findings |
|
|
A study on the international students’ perception
and norms in Taiwan. |
Chou, C. P., Roberts, A., & Ching, G. S. (2012) |
This
article details a quantitative study conducted during the 2009–2010 academic
year in Taiwan. In scope it details an empirical study exploring the
dispositions of international students in terms of their academic and social
spheres. The use of quantitative method provided clarity and extended
critical interpretations of the issues and dilemmas surrounding the
international student experience in Taiwan. |
TW/ 648
degree seeking international students from 23 countries. |
Quantitative:
survey |
issues
and dilemmas surrounding the international student experience in Taiwan |
|
|
The relationship between international students’ and
cross-cultural adaptation and dominant language in Taiwan |
Huang, H., & Chang, Y. (2011) |
This
study focused on the issue of cross-cultural adaptation. This study analyzed
the relationship between international students’ cross-cultural adaptation
and the dominant language as Chinese of Taiwan, and put emphasis on the
relationship between the linguistic competence acquired from studying abroad
and the level of cross-cultural adaptation, as well as how they affect each
other. |
Tainan,
TW / international
students of three universities |
questionnaire |
international
students’ cross-cultural adaptation concerning the dimension of “studying and
researching” was closely related to their Chinese proficiency, and that the
level Chinese ability would affect the amount of cross-cultural adaptation |
|
|
A
case study on the international students' social adaptability in Taiwan: A
qualitative study |
Lewis, A., Ching, G. S., & Su, Y. N. (2013) |
the
current presentation shall showcase the findings of a case study accomplished
at a social science university in Taiwan during the 2009 school year. The
main purpose of this study is to explore the critical factors that influence
the international students’ social adaptations. This qualitative study uses
both individual and focus group interviews to strengthen the data gathering
procedures. A total of 30 international students from 15 countries were
invited and interviewed. Data analysis includes constant comparison of
gathered facts and generating meaning from the transcribed information. |
TW/ TW/ A
total of 30 international students from 15 countries |
individual
and focus group interviews |
Results
show that international students’ social adaptabilities (social adaptive skills)
can have a direct influence on how they establish their social networks. Some
major factors include the availability of cross-cultural opportunities such
as foods in night markets, numerous scenic places to visits, and coupled with
easy access to mass transportation. The international students’ social
adaptability is further reinforced by the friendly and receptive nature of
Taiwan individuals towards cultural diversity. Lastly, this study also relays
some recommendations international students mentioned that will be able to
better enhance their study experience. |
|
|
Negotiating language choice in multilingual lab
meetings: Voices from domestic and international students in Taiwan |
Lin, S. (2022) |
This
article examines language practice in international higher education (HE) in
non-Anglophone countries, with a focus on language choice and negotiation in
engineering and science lab meetings among culturally and linguistically
diverse students and professors. Analyses of 53 indepth interviews with
students and professors in a research university in Taiwan show that the
professors addressed the linguistic diversity among domestic and
international students by imposing an English policy or having an open policy
for the lab meetings. The study suggests that multilingual multimodal
academic communication in international HE is natural but not all language
choices are equally inclusive and conducive to learning for all members. This
study has provided a comprehensive picture and nuanced analyses of language
choice in multilingual lab meetings. Future research with discourse data
would enrich the present findings to further explicate optimal
translanguaging practices in international HE. |
a
research university in TW/ 41
Taiwanese graduate students (T1-T41), 41 international graduate students
(I1-I41) from 22 countries, and 11 professors |
53
indepth interviews with students and professors |
Whatever
the policy is, the language choice was subject to constant negotiations among
all lab members, leading to dynamic flows and configurations of
translanguaging. The language choice and negotiation is embedded in the local-global
tensions in that local students’ language preference is the local language
Chinese, while international students’ language preference is the global
lingua franca English. |
|
|
The development of international student recruitment
policies in Taiwan: A 60-year trajectory |
Ma, A.-h. S. (2014) |
This
article examines the development of Taiwan’s international student
recruitment policies from 1950 to 2011, exemplifying the case in a
non-Western, non-English speaking context. While Taiwan’s case is distinctive
with the dominance of noneconomic factors in shaping the state policy
orientation and agendas, the strong role of the state and the Confucian model
of higher education constitute a valid example of developments in the
internationalization of higher education in East Asia. The analysis further
shows that the intertwining forces of localization, nationalization, and
globalization influenced the policy development throughout three stages of
the trajectory. These findings demonstrate
the transformationalist viewpoint of globalization and support the “glonacal
agency approach” proposed by Rhoades and Marginson (2002) claiming that
local, national, and global domains are simultaneously significant in
understanding globalization and higher education. |
TW/ NA |
Meta-analysis
on texts |
|
|
|
The mediating role of international student
satisfaction in the influence of higher education service quality on
institutional reputation in Taiwan |
Moslehpour, M., Chau, K. Y., Zheng, J., Hanjani, A.
N., & Hoang, M. (2020) |
This
study investigates the effects of Taiwan’s higher education service quality
on international student satisfaction and institutional reputation. We
collected data from 197 international students studying at 33 national and
private universities in Taiwan to test the study’s proposed model. This study
uses a quantitative approach to examine the proposed hypotheses, and causal
research design is used to elucidate the cause-and-effect relationship
between constructs. This study’s findings could help higher education
institutions in Taiwan assess and improve their service quality, which would
help them attract |
TW/ 197
international students studying at 33 national and private universities in
Taiwan |
Quantitative questionnaires |
The
non-academic aspect of service quality is the most influential variable in
student satisfaction, and student satisfaction strongly affects institutional
reputation. Student satisfaction mediates the relationship between the
academic and non-academic aspects of service quality and institutional
reputation. international students |
|
|
Exploring cultural differences in classroom
expectations of students from the United States and Taiwan |
Niehoff, B. P., Turnley, W. H., Yen, H. J. R., &
Sheu, C. (2001) |
Little
is known about students’ expectations of classroom practices, much less any
cross-cultural differences in those expectations. This study gathered survey
data from U.S. and Taiwanese students concerning their expectations of both
students’ and teachers’ obligations in the classroom. The results showed
differences between the two cultures. We discuss our findings as they relate
to how to improve learning in the multicultural classroom through a better
understanding of cross-cultural differences in classroom expectations. |
US,
TW |
survey |
|
|
|
Contemporary trends in East Asian higher education:
Dispositions of international students in a Taiwan university |
Roberts, A., Chou, P., & Ching, G. (2010) |
This
article details a mixed methods study conducted during the 2007–2008 academic
year at the National Chengchi University (NCCU) in Taipei Taiwan. It
contributes to discourse examining the opportunities and challenges of
international student enrollments in institutions of higher learning around
the globe. In scope it details an empirical study exploring the dispositions
of NCCU international students in terms of their academic and social spheres.
Trends in Taiwan reflect traditional East Asian patterns; substantial numbers
of university students from Taiwan studied in the United States and Britain
while very few incoming international students chose the island nation as a
host destination. In recent years the influx of international students to
Taiwan has increased significantly, rising from 6,380 in 2001 to 21,005 in
2007 (Ko, http://www.taipeitimes.
com/News/taiwan/archives/2008/02/12/2003400913, 2008). The use of both
quantitative and qualitative methods provided clarity and extended critical
interpretations of the issues and dilemmas surrounding the international
student experience in Taiwan. |
TW/ 88
participants from 17 countries, enrolled in the NCCU Mandarin Studies Program |
The
qualitative data set included five videotaped and voice recorded focus group
interviews, the daily upkeep of a focus group field log, and biweekly
researcher debriefing sessions. The quantitative data set consisted of a
structured survey questionnaire |
Results
indicate that the capability of the NCCU as a host institution to sustain and
attract increasing numbers of incoming international students is linked to
factors such as the unique opportunity to study traditional as opposed to
simplified Chinese characters, the availability and accessibility of Taiwan
government sponsored scholarships, and the high standard of the NCCU Mandarin
Studies program. Implications suggest that universities committed to
internationalization are called to address the realities—both positive and
negative—of operating as globally competitive institutions. As such,
attracting the right kind of international students at the NCCU and
determining standards for their contribution to campus life are more
important goals than the total number of international students. |
|
|
Barriers to adjustment: needs of international
students within a semi-urban campus community |
Poyrazli, S. and K. M. Grahame (2007) |
Following
an ecological framework, the primary purpose of this study was to exam- ine
the adjustment needs of international students within their academic and
social communities.
Focus group interviews revealed that students are more in need during their
initial transition after arrival to the U.S. and that they experience a
number of barriers
in their attempts to adjust. Some of these barriers were related to academic life,
health insurance, living on or off campus, social interactions,
transportation, and discrimination.
The implications of these findings are discussed. |
US/ 15
undergraduate and graduate students |
Focus
group interview |
Our major findings indicate that students experience a
number of concerns related to accommodations, communication, transportation, social
inter- action with host nationals, health
insurance, counseling,discrimination, and academic
life. Their interest in succeed academically and socially and the institution's
interest in retaining these students require both
parties to act to bring about the changes
necessary to
accomplish these goals. |
|
|
Needs assessment for exchange students in Taiwan |
Takaya, K. (2016). |
This
research investigates the experience of exchange students from the
Philippines and mainland China and examines their needs while studying in
Taiwan. Qualitative in-depth interviews were conducted with exchange students
from the Philippines and mainland China. The findings suggest that while
exchange students from the Philippines and mainland China both encountered
difficulties during their study in Taiwan, exchange students from the Philippines
were inclined to encounter more difficulties compared to those from mainland
China due to language difficulties. |
TW/ exchange
students from the Philippines and mainland China |
Qualitative
in-depth interviews |
Based
on the findings of this study, suggested support services for future exchange
students in Taiwan are outlined to match the needs of students from both
Chinese and non-Chinese- speaking backgrounds |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Chou, Roberts, & Ching, 2012; Huang & Chang,
2011; Lewis, Ching, & Su, 2013; Lin, 2022; Ma, 2014; Moslehpour, Chau,
Zheng, Hanjani, & Hoang, 2020; Niehoff, Turnley, Yen, & Sheu, 2001;
Poyrazli & Grahame, 2007; Roberts, Chou, & Ching, 2010; Takaya, 2016)
Chou, C. P.,
Roberts, A., & Ching, G. S. (2012). A study on the international students’
perception and norms in Taiwan. International
Journal of Research Studies in Education, 1(2), 71-84.
Huang, H., & Chang, Y. (2011). The relationship between
international students’ and cross-cultural adaptation and dominant language in
Taiwan. International Journal of
Humanities and Social Science, 1(7), 137-145.
Lewis, A., Ching, G. S., & Su, Y. N. (2013). A case study on the
international students' social adaptability in Taiwan: A qualitative study. International Journal of Research Studies in
Psychology, 2(1), 13-24.
Lin, S. (2022). Negotiating language choice in multilingual lab
meetings: Voices from domestic and international students in Taiwan. International Journal of Bilingual Education
and Bilingualism, 25(1), 117-130.
Ma, A.-h. S. (2014). The development of international student
recruitment policies in Taiwan: A 60-year trajectory. Journal of Studies in International Education, 18(2), 120-140.
Moslehpour, M., Chau, K. Y., Zheng, J., Hanjani, A. N., & Hoang,
M. (2020). The mediating role of international student satisfaction in the
influence of higher education service quality on institutional reputation in
Taiwan. International Journal of
Engineering Business Management, 12, 1847979020971955.
Niehoff, B. P., Turnley, W. H., Yen, H. J. R., & Sheu, C.
(2001). Exploring cultural differences in classroom expectations of students
from the United States and Taiwan. Journal
of education for business, 76(5), 289-293.
Poyrazli, S., & Grahame, K. M. (2007). Barriers to adjustment:
Needs of international students within a semi-urban campus community. Journal of instructional Psychology, 34(1),
28.
Roberts, A., Chou, P., & Ching, G. (2010). Contemporary trends
in East Asian higher education: Dispositions of international students in a
Taiwan university. Higher Education, 59(2),
149-166.
Takaya, K. (2016). Needs assessment for exchange students in Taiwan.
Journal of International and Comparative
Education (JICE), 33-45.