Motivation and experiences of studying creative arts therapy among Chinese doctoral students in South Korea

Authors

  • Ya Nan Mo Shanxi University of Finance and Economics, Taiyuan, China
  • Kyung Soon Ko Jeonju University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v14i4.6814

Keywords:

Creative Arts Therapy, International Chinese Students, Doctoral Study, Study Abroad, South Korea

Abstract

Chinese students accounted for 40.4% of international students in South Korea in 2022. Universities in China require doctoral degrees to teach art. Creative arts therapy has increasingly gained attention. This study investigated the experiences of six Chinese students in a study abroad program for creative arts therapy in South Korea. We gathered data from visual artworks and interviews. The analysis yielded six themes: No doctoral degree, no job position for art educators in university, China; Expectations for the development of CAT in China; Despite majoring in art, CAT is a new discipline; Study abroad while unprepared in terms of language ability; Wanting to escape due to academic pressure; Motivation to continue studying abroad. Findings revealed that psychological and emotional support programs would help international students across different nationalities and cultures. Students’ study abroad experience and how it contributes to their lives beyond obtaining a degree requires further consideration.

Author Biographies

  • Ya Nan Mo, Shanxi University of Finance and Economics, Taiyuan, China

    YA NAN MO, is a faculty member at Shanxi University of Finance and Economics in China. She holds a Ph.D. in Art Therapy from Jeonju University, South Korea. Upon relocating to China, she has dedicated herself to implementing art therapy within the university setting.

  • Kyung Soon Ko, Jeonju University

    KYUNG SOON KO, Ph.D., LCPC, NCC, GL-CMA, BC-DMT, is an assistant professor in the Department of Creative Art Therapy at Jeonju University in Korea. She holds a Ph.D. in Expressive Arts Therapies from Lesley University. Her research interests focus on developing culturally sensitive approaches to teaching and practicing dance/movement therapy, aiming to indigenize these practices within diverse cultural perspectives.

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Published

2024-07-20

Issue

Section

Research Articles (English)

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How to Cite

Motivation and experiences of studying creative arts therapy among Chinese doctoral students in South Korea. (2024). Journal of International Students, 14(4), 1029-1048. https://doi.org/10.32674/jis.v14i4.6814