Potential theoretical frameworks
The resource below is from AdvancedHE Pedagogies of Internationalisation theoretical frameworks. It's meant to give a bird's eye of what there is to choose from. These are various theoretical frameworks that can be used for far more than internationalisation for questions and issues related to, for example, critically reflective professional practice, education policy, education futures and many others.
Thanks to Sara for finding this one! I've slightly modified the formatting to the original source.
Theoretical frameworks are essential for guiding research about international students and framing their experiences away from deficit narratives. We’ve compiled here a list of potential theoretical frameworks for research with international students that researchers might consider, along with suggested readings to get you started with learning about them.
Please note this list is still a work in progress and is not fully comprehensive. We welcome any suggested additions.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
AdvancedHE Pedagogies of Internationalisation.
Theories about international students’ transitions and broader experiences
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Ecological systems theory
The multiple environmental and social systems that impact on an individuals’ experiences
Original: Bronfenbrenner, 1979
Further conceptualisation in higher education: Jones, 2017
Example in practice: Elliot et al., 2016
Multidimensional transition theory
The multilayered academic, social, and emotional transitions that individuals encounter when moving from one space to another
Introduction: Jindal-Snape & Ingram, 2013
Example in practice: Jindal-Snape & Rienties, 2016
Academic resilience theory
Students’ capacity to adapt and develop under uncertainty or adversity
One approach: Holdsworth et al., 2017
Example in practice: Singh, 2021
Rhizomatic transitions
Construction of students’ transitions experiences away from linear pathways towards more fluid, ongoing experiences
Original: Deleuze & Guatarri, 1987
Further conceptualisation in higher education: Gravett, 2019
Example in practice: Balloo et al., 2021
Student engagement model
Model of factors that impact students’ university retention and success
Original: Tinto (1975)
Example in practice: Rienties et al. (2012)
Liminality
Transitional space that may lead to disorientation or ambiguity
Original: Turner, 1969
Example in practice: Parker et al., 2010
Theories about identity development and the self
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Student agency theory
Students’ capacity to make choices within the constraints of their lived realities
One approach: Biesta & Tedder, 2007
Example in practice: Tran & Vu, 2016
Identity theory
The construction of the self through interactions with experiences and culture
One approach: Hall, 1996
Example in practice: Pham & Saltmarsh, 2013
Capability approach
Theory that people achieve well-being through their capabilities to be and do what they value
One approach: Nussbaum, 2011
Second approach: Sen, 1973; Sen, 1995
Example in practice: Fakunle, 2020
Possible selves
Approach to understanding individuals’ imagined ‘like-to-be’ and ‘like-to-avoid’ futures
Original: Markus & Nurius, 1986
Application to higher education: Harrison, 2018; Henderson et al., 2019
Example in practice: Yang & Noels, 2013
Intersectional theory
Framework for understanding how a person’s multiple identities lead to different forms of oppression and discrimination
Original: Crenshaw, 1989
Example in practice: Forbes-Mewett & McColloch, 2015
Critical race theory
Recognition of race as a social construct and that social structures are inherently racist
Starting point: McCoy, 2015
Example in practice: Yao et al. (2018)
Gendered racialisation
The intersecting identities of gender and race
Original: Selod (2018)
Example in practice: Karaman & Christian (2020)
Theories about intercultural friendships / relationships
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Intercultural friendship framework
Framework for understanding how intercultural friendships develop on higher education campuses
Kudo et al., 2019
Intergroup contact theory
Theory that biases and prejudices can be minimized through positive contact with people from different outgroups
Original: Allport, 1954
More modern introduction: Dovidio et al., 2005
Meta-analysis: Pettigrew & Tropp, 2006
Intergroup threat theory
Theory that encounters between individuals from different backgrounds can lead to discomforts or threatening feelings
Original: Stephen & Stephen, 2000
Example in practice: Harrison & Peacock, 2013
Theories about pedagogies with international students
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Critical pedagogies
Application of critical theory to education; philosophy of education that focuses on issues of social justice, power imbalances, and domination
Originals: Freire, 1970; Giroux, 2011
Linked to international students: Khalideen, 2015
Engaged pedagogy
Critical pedagogy approach that values relationships between student / teacher, teacher self-actualisation, humanistic approaches to education
Original: hooks, 1994
Linked to international students: Madge et al., 2009
Academic hospitality
Reflection on academic staff as ‘hosts’ to reciprocally support students as ‘guests’
Original: Bennett, 2000
Further conceptualisation: Ploner, 2018
Bernstein’s pedagogic devices
Theory focusing on the ways pedagogies represent symbolic control over knowledge
Original: Bernstein, 2000
Example in practice: Zeegers & Barron, 2008
Transformative learning
Evaluation of past experience through the acquisition of new knowledge
Original: Mezirow, 1991
Example in practice: Nada et al., 2018; López Murillo, 2021
Theories about international students and the curriculum
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Hidden curriculum
The unwritten lessons learned about normative values, beliefs, ethics, etc. as a result of educational provisions and settings
Starting point: Apple, 1989
Example in practice: Kidman et al., 2017
Internationalisation of the curriculum
Inclusion of international or intercultural elements into the content and delivery of education
Starting point: Leask, 2015
Further theorisation: Clifford & Montgomery, 2017
Example in practice: Vishwanath & Mummery, 2018
Glocalisation
The blending of global and local elements in the curriculum
Starting point: Robertson, 1994
Further theorisation in higher education: Patel & Lynch, 2013
Tourist gaze
Approach to learning about other cultures as a ‘guest’ or ‘tourist’
Starting point: Urry & Larsen, 2011
Example in practice: Vinall & Shin, 2019
Social learning theories
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Communities of practice
A set of people who share a common interest or practice
Original: Wenger, 1998
Example in practice: Montgomery & McDowell, 2008
Figured worlds
Development of the self in relation to the social types in their surrounding world
Original: Holland et al., 2001
Example in practice: Chang et al., 2017
Cultural historical activity theory (CHAT)
Relationship between the mind and action within an individual’s situated social world
Original: Engestrom, 2001
Example in practice: Straker, 2016
Sociological theories
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Bourdieusian theory
Set of thinking tools for investigating power and the way it impacts individuals and societies through structural constraints
Original: Bourdieu, 1979
Helpful guide: Grenfell, 2013
Example in practice: Xu, 2017
Foucauldian theory
Set of thinking tools for investigating power relationships in society, including how they influence language or practice
Original: Foucault, 1977; Foucault, 1972
Helpful guide: Ball, 2013
Example in practice: Koehne, 2006
Gramscian theory
Theory of cultural hegemony – how the state and high economic class use institutions to maintain power
Original: Gramsci, 1971
Helpful guide: Mayo, 2015
Example in practice: Kim, 2011
Decolonial / postcolonial theories
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Orientalism
Negative portrayals and ‘othering’ of ‘the East’ by ‘the West’ which serve to maintain colonial power and assumed superiority
Original: Edward Said, 1978
Helpful guide: Leonardo, 2020
Example in practice: Yao, 2018
Subjugation
Forced dominance of one group over another through (neo-)colonialism and violence
Original: Fanon, 1952
Helpful guide in education: Leonardo & Singh, 2017
Third space / hybridity
The sense of ‘limbo’ or ‘in between-ness’ of individuals’ cultural identities
Original: Bhabha, 1994
Example in practice: Pitts & Brooks, 2017
Double consciousness
The experience of dual identities in conflict within an oppressive society
Original: Du Bois, 1903
Example in practice: Valdez, 2015
Theories about mobilities
Theory
Purposefully over-simplified description
Suggested reading(s)
Spacial theories
Relations between socially-constructed spaces and times
Original: Lefebvre & Nicholson-Smith (1991)
Further theorisation in higher education: Larsen & Beech, 2014
Example in practice: Waters & Leung, 2012
Migration infrastructures
Interlinking structures that enable or constrain mobilities
Starting point: Xiang & Lindquist, 2018
Example in practice: Hu et al., 2020