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What is Culture Shock

Handbook of Research on Study Abroad Programs and Outbound Mobility
Disorientation and discomfort that an individual may experience when entering an unfamiliar cultural environment.
Published in Chapter:
Encountering Unfamiliar Educational Practices Abroad: Opportunities or Obstacles?
B Jane Jackson (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-0169-5.ch006
Abstract
As internationalization efforts intensify across the globe, the number of students who are studying outside their home country for part of their tertiary education has increased significantly. The vast majority of students from East Asian nations (Hong Kong SAR, Japan, Korea, Macau SAR, Mainland China, and Taiwan) study in a second language while abroad, with English the most common medium-of-instruction. As institutions of Higher Education (HE) in other regions compete for students from this part of the world, increasingly, questions are being raised about what students gain from outbound mobility programs. Scholars have drawn attention to the need for systematic empirical research that critically examines the experiences of student sojourners in order to determine the most effective ways to support and enhance their learning (e.g., linguistic, cognitive, social, academic, (inter)cultural, and professional).
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More Results
An Examination of International School Onboarding Programs: Pre-Arrival, Arrival, and Transition Phases
Culture shock is precipitated by the anxiety that results from losing all our familiar signs and symbols of social intercourse” ( Oberg, 1960 , p. 142).
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International Healthcare Experiences: Caring While Learning and Learning While Caring
An uncomfortable feeling experienced by travelers to new countries whose culture, customs, and landscape are totally foreign from their own that usually passes after a few days. If left unchecked, severe culture shock may turn into depression. Upon returning home from an intense immersion, some travelers also suffer reverse culture shock as they feel no one can understand or relate to what they have just experienced.
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International Students in Higher Education Classrooms: Diversity, Challenges, and Promising Practices for Educational Institutions
Involves positive and negative feelings provoked when students live in a country with different social values and norms.
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