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Journal ArticleDOI

Factors influencing the higher education of international students from Confucian East Asia

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TLDR
For example, this paper found that successful entry to a university is not only an important achievement for the future career of the student, but also a victory for the family, and failure to do so is often seen as shameful for the student and may result in psychological problems or suicide.
Abstract
Higher education, especially that leading to a degree from a high-prestige university, is strongly related to social status and employment opportunities in East Asian countries. This is a consequence of both traditional Confucian attitudes to education and the social and economic changes accompanying industrialisation. Since the number of places available at high-prestige universities is limited, competition is intense. Successful entry to such a university is not only an important achievement for the future career of the student, but also a victory for the family. In contrast, failure to do so is often seen as shameful for the family, sometimes resulting in psychological problems or suicide. This background affects the international education of East Asian students, who often have a high level of family support, with correspondingly high expectations of their success. Motives for international study vary, from avoidance of the hyper-competitive domestic system, pursuit of an overseas degree as an ‘easy option’ of moderate prestige, to an expectation of more up-to-date teaching and content. Understanding this background can be a first step for Australian or other Western educators to better meet the needs of East Asian international students and to attract students from East Asia in the long term.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Regional Pathways: Transnational Imaginaries, Infrastructures and Implications of Student Mobility within Asia:

TL;DR: In this paper, a critical analysis of the narratives of South Korean international students attending universities in the Asian region is presented, drawing in particular on a transnational approach to developing countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chinese Students and Higher Education Destinations: Findings from a Choice Experiment.

TL;DR: In this paper, a discrete choice experiment method is employed to identify the key factors underlying students' international education choices, and the results have policy implications for Australia, as one of the key higher education destination countries, in relation to recently changed student visa systems and the potential effects of planned government budget cuts to higher education on educational quality and reputation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does higher education foster critical and creative learners? An exploration of two universities in South Korea and the USA

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe two studies that explore students' beliefs about critical and creative learning at two universities, and consider the implications of those beliefs in comparison to the universities' stated education goals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Examination of students’ selection criteria for international education

TL;DR: In this article, Motivations for study abroad in tourism and hospitality were examined as to the influence of a variety of personal criteria in the individual decision process of adult learners to select a host country and host institution of study.
Book Chapter

Converging Paths or Ships Passing in the Night? An 'English' Critique of Japanese school Reform

Andy Green
TL;DR: In the traditional typologies of comparative education, Japanese and English (and Welsh) education may be seen as polar opposites as discussed by the authors, and Japanese schooling has traditionally been centralized, uniform and relatively inflexible in its structures and procedures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Internationalization of Higher Education: Motivations and Realities

TL;DR: The motivation for internationalization include commercial advantage, knowledge and language acquisition, enhancing the curriculum with international content, and many others as discussed by the authors, which is the context of economic and academic trends that are part of the reality of the 21st century.

To Rank Or To Be Ranked: The Impact of Global Rankings in Higher Education

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the need to secure clean university rankings, transparent, free of self-interest, and methodologically coherent, that create incentives to broad-based improvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

To Rank or to be Ranked: The Impact of Global Rankings in Higher Education

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the clean university rankings, which are transparent, free of self-interest, and methodologically coherent, that create incentives to broad-based improvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Higher Education in East Asia and Singapore: Rise of the Confucian Model.

TL;DR: This paper reviewed Asia-Pacific higher education and university research, focusing principally on the Confucian education nations Japan, Korea, China, Hong Kong China, Taiwan, Singapore and Vietnam.
Journal Article

Language Difficulties of International Students in Australia: The Effects of Prior Learning Experience.

TL;DR: This paper reported on data gathered in interviews with students from five Asian nations, which suggest that these learning difficulties are grounded in weaknesses in students' prior learning experiences and in beliefs about language learning instilled during schooling.
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