‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China

This thesis discusses identity and its formation of 45 Chinese undergraduate students in an international branch campus in China. The qualitative data collected in loosely-structured interviews reveal the complexity of their identity and formation process in their life trajectories in this universit...

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Main Author: Yu, Fang
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65385/
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author Yu, Fang
author_facet Yu, Fang
author_sort Yu, Fang
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis discusses identity and its formation of 45 Chinese undergraduate students in an international branch campus in China. The qualitative data collected in loosely-structured interviews reveal the complexity of their identity and formation process in their life trajectories in this university (TU). Giddens’s idea of anticipation of identity and Archer’s typology of reflexivity are employed as the two major theoretical and analytical devices in this research. These students’ interview accounts demonstrate that they explored and constructed their self/identity in the process of adaptation to TU and a social reproduction of the TU culture. Meanwhile, the TU context – the structure they are involved in – provides certain space for their agential powers (agency) to guide their decision-making and action-taking. This research lets students speak for themselves about ‘who they think they are’ with minimum researcher intervention, rather than fitting them into any pre-designated identity mode/theory such as an Eriksonian stage mode. Accordingly, this research is more open to ‘possibilities’ emerging in my students’ personal development. Additionally, this research supports and expands Archer’s hypothesis of reflexivity by putting it into practice in my empirical investigation and creating particular ‘agency-structure interaction cycles in individual identity formation’ based on it. This research also provides a potential solution to hybridizing habitus and reflexivity in understanding the relationship between agency and structure in this era of late modernity.
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spelling nottingham-653852025-02-28T15:12:10Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65385/ ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China Yu, Fang This thesis discusses identity and its formation of 45 Chinese undergraduate students in an international branch campus in China. The qualitative data collected in loosely-structured interviews reveal the complexity of their identity and formation process in their life trajectories in this university (TU). Giddens’s idea of anticipation of identity and Archer’s typology of reflexivity are employed as the two major theoretical and analytical devices in this research. These students’ interview accounts demonstrate that they explored and constructed their self/identity in the process of adaptation to TU and a social reproduction of the TU culture. Meanwhile, the TU context – the structure they are involved in – provides certain space for their agential powers (agency) to guide their decision-making and action-taking. This research lets students speak for themselves about ‘who they think they are’ with minimum researcher intervention, rather than fitting them into any pre-designated identity mode/theory such as an Eriksonian stage mode. Accordingly, this research is more open to ‘possibilities’ emerging in my students’ personal development. Additionally, this research supports and expands Archer’s hypothesis of reflexivity by putting it into practice in my empirical investigation and creating particular ‘agency-structure interaction cycles in individual identity formation’ based on it. This research also provides a potential solution to hybridizing habitus and reflexivity in understanding the relationship between agency and structure in this era of late modernity. 2021-07 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65385/1/YUFang%202020.pdf Yu, Fang (2021) ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. identity formation international branch campus Chinese college students typology of reflexivity
spellingShingle identity formation
international branch campus
Chinese college students
typology of reflexivity
Yu, Fang
‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China
title ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China
title_full ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China
title_fullStr ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China
title_full_unstemmed ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China
title_short ‘I think I am…’ – a qualitative study of Chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in China
title_sort ‘i think i am…’ – a qualitative study of chinese students’ identity formation process in an international branch campus in china
topic identity formation
international branch campus
Chinese college students
typology of reflexivity
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65385/