Adding an International Student’s Voice to the Pandemic Discourse as Thinkers, not Subjects

Reflections on Power, Stillness and Humanness

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v11i1.2564

Keywords:

COVID-19 Pandemic, ethics, international education, international students, knowledge study abroad

Abstract

As of this writing, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on international higher education is continuously being documented, drawing enough, if not too much, attention towards international students. However, the voices of international students remain muted such that much of what has been said about their experience do not directly come from them but from those who claim to speak on their behalf. In this essay, I attempt to add an international student voice to the pandemic discourse by shifting attention to international students not as subjects but as thinkers and co-producers of knowledge in their own right, in hope of also contributing to the broader conversation about ethics and responsibility surrounding international education and international student mobility research and practice. I do so by sharing my own reflections on the crisis and its critical relation to power, stillness and humanness.

Author Biography

  • Sarah Jane D. Lipura, University of Auckland, New Zealand / Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines

    Sarah Jane D. Lipura is a final year doctoral student at the University of Auckland and a faculty member (on leave) of Ateneo de Manila University. Her major research interests lie in the areas of international student mobility, migration and Korean Studies.

References

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Published

2021-02-23

Issue

Section

Cross-Border Narratives

How to Cite

Adding an International Student’s Voice to the Pandemic Discourse as Thinkers, not Subjects: Reflections on Power, Stillness and Humanness. (2021). Journal of International Students, 11(1), 251-256. https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v11i1.2564