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Mobility, education and employment amongst South Asian international students in the UK

Dwarka Nayak
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TLDR
This article investigated the experiences of South Asian international students at the nexus of mobility, education, and employment in the UK and used a qualitative led, mixed method approach in addressing this gap.
Abstract
This study investigates the experiences of South Asian international students at the nexus of mobility, education, and employment in the UK. The study adopts Bourdieu’s theoretical lens to explore how individual students understand, seek, and achieve advantages through participation in education, the labour market, and wider society. Despite the significant numbers of South Asian international students in the UK, we know little about their specific experiences. This study used a qualitative led, mixed method approach in addressing this gap and researched the experiences of students from South Asia enrolled at nine post-1992 universities in London. After an initial, exploratory online survey of 148 students, 51 in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with students on campus. The survey and interviews highlight the diversity of backgrounds and experiences of South Asian students and their varied trajectories. The analysis uses a four-part typology to make sense of this diversity: Highflyers, Realists, Credentialists, and Strugglers possess, develop, and mobilise varied combinations of economic, social, and cultural capital. The research highlights how student mobility is a family project dependent on the resources and emotional investment of relatives. Much of the literature emphasises the challenges faced by international students, but despite the reality of these difficulties and their varied prospects, most participants in this study are broadly satisfied with their decision to come to the UK and confident that it will provide them with a competitive edge in their future career. Students’ optimism is rooted in their experiences beyond the classroom. In particular, many are inspired by the adventure of moving abroad and the opportunities for personal development and the freedom it affords. The resulting narratives of self are seen as important, valuable assets when students return home and embark on careers.

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International Higher Education and the Mobility of UK Students. End-of-award report to the British Academy

TL;DR: In the context of increasing academic interest in the internationalization of education and the international mobility of university students, this paper drew on findings of a recent research project examining students from the UK as they seek higher education overseas before entering the labour market.
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International students negotiating higher education: critical perspectives

TL;DR: In this paper, international students negotiating higher education: critical perspectives, edited by Silvia Sovic and Margo Blythman, Abingdon, 2013, 243 pp., £90 (hardback), ISBN 978-0-415-61469-6; £2...
Dissertation

Studying Abroad: The expectations and perceived difficulties of two samples of Korean students at UK universities

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TL;DR: The authors investigate how cultural factors affect Korean students' academic progress and social adaptation, and to what extent misconceptions or stereotypes about Asian learners can be justified, in the context of British higher education.
References
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