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Understanding the symbolic capital of intercultural interactions: a case study of international students in Australia
Intercultural interaction plays an important role in contributing to international students’ learning and wellbeing in the host country. While research on international students’ intercultural interactions reveals multifaceted aspects of personal and social factors, there is a tendency to consider language barrier and cultural differences as individual factors that constrain their interactions with the institutional community. Drawing on 105 interviews with international students in Australian vocational education and training and dual sector institutions, this paper examines international students’ intercultural interactions in host institutions and the factors that act as enablers or inhibitors for intercultural interactions. It highlights the social and structural conditions in creating symbolic capital of elitist Anglo-Australian culture and English language, and social differentiation. This paper offers insights into understanding the legitimacy of such elitism, in hope that future conceptualisation, research and practices of intercultural interactions may locate international students within their cultural diversity.
History
Journal
International studies in sociology of educationVolume
25Issue
3Pagination
204 - 224Publisher
RoutledgeLocation
Abingdon, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0962-0214eISSN
1747-5066Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleCopyright notice
2015, Taylor & FrancisUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
Bourdieuengagement between international and domestic studentsinstitutional factorsintercultural interactioninternational studentssocial differentiationsymbolic capitalSocial SciencesSociologyCOMMUNICATION COMPETENCEVOCATIONAL-EDUCATIONADJUSTMENTPERCEPTIONSADAPTATIONMIGRATIONCONTACTROUTESHOMESociology