"It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad

This research investigated how study abroad affected students’ sense of identity and how interactions between study abroad students and other people shaped their understanding of their identity. While abroad, students taking part in a five-week study abroad program started to recognize having an Ame...

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Main Author: Speer, Callie Dominique Karlsson
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2018
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27688
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-276882021-09-28T17:11:16Z "It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad Speer, Callie Dominique Karlsson This research investigated how study abroad affected students’ sense of identity and how interactions between study abroad students and other people shaped their understanding of their identity. While abroad, students taking part in a five-week study abroad program started to recognize having an American self and used behavior and clothing to negotiate their association with this role. The relationships between students and the program leader, other students, friends, and family members were instrumental in the recognition and development of their identity. Students also started creating a study abroad self before departure and used points of discomfort as an opportunity to adjust how they defined this identity. Student responses indicated that study abroad offers them insight into how a sense of identity is related to the context of place and people, as well as an opportunity to negotiate their identity both while abroad and after return. 2018-03-07T21:02:21Z 2018-03-07T21:02:21Z 2015 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27688 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University
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description This research investigated how study abroad affected students’ sense of identity and how interactions between study abroad students and other people shaped their understanding of their identity. While abroad, students taking part in a five-week study abroad program started to recognize having an American self and used behavior and clothing to negotiate their association with this role. The relationships between students and the program leader, other students, friends, and family members were instrumental in the recognition and development of their identity. Students also started creating a study abroad self before departure and used points of discomfort as an opportunity to adjust how they defined this identity. Student responses indicated that study abroad offers them insight into how a sense of identity is related to the context of place and people, as well as an opportunity to negotiate their identity both while abroad and after return.
author Speer, Callie Dominique Karlsson
spellingShingle Speer, Callie Dominique Karlsson
"It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad
author_facet Speer, Callie Dominique Karlsson
author_sort Speer, Callie Dominique Karlsson
title "It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad
title_short "It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad
title_full "It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad
title_fullStr "It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad
title_full_unstemmed "It's More How Other People Perceive You": Social Identity Formation through Study Abroad
title_sort "it's more how other people perceive you": social identity formation through study abroad
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27688
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