Affiliation:
1. The University of Melbourne
2. The University of Queensland
Abstract
Abstract
Many studies have reported language problems faced by international students in cross-cultural study-abroad
settings. The present study investigated Chinese international students’ linguistic insecurity during their study-abroad in
Australia, and the strategies that they deployed to manage this. Based on interviews with ten students from two different
international programs, we found that the students felt anxious and insecure about their language ability in the English-only
environment, which provided limited support for their academic and social survival. Moreover, their other linguistic resources
remained unrecognized in the prevailing discourse of standardized English with its concomitant linguistic and social prejudices.
Realizing that linguistic insecurity was affecting their study, life, and wellbeing, they implemented a series of measures and
strategies to manage their language problems and achieve a sense of linguistic security. The findings can assist international
students in developing an understanding of their language life in study-abroad settings, and education institutions in providing
appropriate support to international students to enhance their linguistic security in the host society.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company