The Academic Identity Development of International Doctoral Students

An Exploration from a Sociocultural Perspective

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v13i4.5120

Keywords:

academic identity, international doctoral student, Denmark, Vietnam, sociocultural theory

Abstract

This qualitative study examines the factors that facilitate or inhibit the academic identity development of four Vietnamese doctoral students in Denmark. Using the combination of Genetic method and Activity theory, the paper provides insights into the participants’ experiences of becoming and being an academic, which is context-dependent and personal. The findings suggest that the sense of being academics was strengthened when doctoral students were empowered by their supervisors, and other members of the academic community validated their membership. The students also enacted their agency to move beyond the student role and establish a confirmed academic identity, though there were situations when their agency did not lead to desirable outcomes. The study is one among a few that incorporated the personal life history of doctoral students to examine their academic identity development, arguing for its inclusion to have a comprehensive picture of students’ learning and the process of becoming an academic.

Author Biography

  • Anh Phan, University of Kent

    ANH NGOC QUYNH PHAN has completed her PhD project at The University of Auckland, New Zealand, and is a Lecturer in Higher Education at the Centre for the Study of Higher Education of the University of Kent. Her major research interests focus inter alia on transnationalism, migration, mobility, diaspora, identity, doctoral education, teacher education, and researcher development. She has published on many prestigious journals, including Journal of Gender Studies, Journal of Diaspora Studies, Studies in Continuing Education, Journal of International Students, among others.

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Published

2022-12-20

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Research Articles (English)

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How to Cite

The Academic Identity Development of International Doctoral Students: An Exploration from a Sociocultural Perspective. (2022). Journal of International Students, 13(4), 1-21. https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v13i4.5120