Building Rapport Between International Graduate Students And Their Faculty Advisors: Cross-Cultural Mentoring Relationships At The University Of Guelph

Faiza Omar, James P. Mahone, Jane Ngobia,John Fitzsimons

CANADIAN JOURNAL FOR THE SCHOLARSHIP OF TEACHING AND LEARNING(2016)

Cited 2|Views1
No score
Abstract
Mentoring graduate students is very challenging, even when both the student and faculty have similar cultural values. Many international students have a different culture from that of Canadian. Their challenge is adapting to their new environment, and for their faculty advisors to understand and work well with them. This research explored the relationships, experience, and challenges of international graduate students and their faculty advisors at the University of Guelph, through focus group discussions, semi-structured face-to-face interviews and online surveys. Language barriers and financial difficulties were among the major challenges international students face adapting to their academic and social environment and working with their faculty advisors. We found that building good student-advisor relationship requires understanding graduate student and advisor formal responsibilities and expectations.
More
Translated text
Key words
graduate school, faculty advisor /international student relationship, academic and social transitions, language barriers, financial challenges
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined