Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults

Personal tutorials are an essential feature of student support in British universities, therefore they are duplicated on British overseas campuses. It appears that Chinese students are reluctant to seek help when they experience personal difficulties that affect their engagement with learning and th...

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Main Authors: Comerio, Giovanna, Walker, James
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65408/
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author Comerio, Giovanna
Walker, James
author_facet Comerio, Giovanna
Walker, James
author_sort Comerio, Giovanna
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Personal tutorials are an essential feature of student support in British universities, therefore they are duplicated on British overseas campuses. It appears that Chinese students are reluctant to seek help when they experience personal difficulties that affect their engagement with learning and their academic performance. Limited literature explores this phenomenon with relevant studies only focusing on Chinese students’ experiences abroad. Furthermore, these studies mainly refer to cultural factors related to traditional Confucianism to explain why these students do not engage with support structures. Drawing on the theory of Emerging Adulthood, this paper analyses the experiences of students on a Chinese branch campus of a British university. A mixed methods research approach was considered the most appropriate means of engaging with the participants; a quantitative study was used in an exploratory fashion to provide unbiased insight into student opinion and experience, and a qualitative content analysis was used to analyse participants’ comments in the open field questions. The findings reveal an alternative portrayal of the “Chinese Personal Tutee”, distant from the traditional Confucian model still predominantly used as an analytical tool in research on Chinese youth. Chinese students on an international campus strategically select their sources of help and prefer to build symmetrical relationships with personal tutors based on personal goals rather than asymmetrical relationships based on ‘care’ provided by adults. Consequently, ‘transnational’ personal tutorial systems pursuing Chinese students’ successful engagement ought to be conceptualised by considering their emerging adulthoods and by respecting their sense of agency.
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spelling nottingham-654082021-06-04T07:17:50Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65408/ Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults Comerio, Giovanna Walker, James Personal tutorials are an essential feature of student support in British universities, therefore they are duplicated on British overseas campuses. It appears that Chinese students are reluctant to seek help when they experience personal difficulties that affect their engagement with learning and their academic performance. Limited literature explores this phenomenon with relevant studies only focusing on Chinese students’ experiences abroad. Furthermore, these studies mainly refer to cultural factors related to traditional Confucianism to explain why these students do not engage with support structures. Drawing on the theory of Emerging Adulthood, this paper analyses the experiences of students on a Chinese branch campus of a British university. A mixed methods research approach was considered the most appropriate means of engaging with the participants; a quantitative study was used in an exploratory fashion to provide unbiased insight into student opinion and experience, and a qualitative content analysis was used to analyse participants’ comments in the open field questions. The findings reveal an alternative portrayal of the “Chinese Personal Tutee”, distant from the traditional Confucian model still predominantly used as an analytical tool in research on Chinese youth. Chinese students on an international campus strategically select their sources of help and prefer to build symmetrical relationships with personal tutors based on personal goals rather than asymmetrical relationships based on ‘care’ provided by adults. Consequently, ‘transnational’ personal tutorial systems pursuing Chinese students’ successful engagement ought to be conceptualised by considering their emerging adulthoods and by respecting their sense of agency. 2021-01-12 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65408/1/Combine.pdf Comerio, Giovanna and Walker, James (2021) Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults. Asia Pacific Education Review . ISSN 1598-1037 China; Emerging Adulthood; Pastoral care; Personal tutorials; Transnational university; Tutor–tutee relationship http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12564-020-09660-y doi:10.1007/s12564-020-09660-y doi:10.1007/s12564-020-09660-y
spellingShingle China; Emerging Adulthood; Pastoral care; Personal tutorials; Transnational university; Tutor–tutee relationship
Comerio, Giovanna
Walker, James
Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
title Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
title_full Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
title_fullStr Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
title_full_unstemmed Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
title_short Chinese students and personal tutorials in a British overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
title_sort chinese students and personal tutorials in a british overseas campus: the strategic choices of emerging adults
topic China; Emerging Adulthood; Pastoral care; Personal tutorials; Transnational university; Tutor–tutee relationship
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65408/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65408/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65408/