Synopses & Reviews
The educational literature suggests that international contact contributes to a comprehensive educational experience. The Five Stages of Culture Shock examines an international shipboard educational program and seeks to identify specific insights resulting from informal extracurricular contact between students and host nationals in the context of culture shock experiences. Using the critical incident methodology, Pedersen analyzes students' responses to nearly 300 specific incidents which resulted in insights that apply to the students' own development, as well as the sociocultural context of the host countries. This use of critical incidents shows one way to evaluate and assess the subjective experiences of the informal curriculum. More broadly, the analysis sheds light on the concept of culture shock as a psychological construct.
Synopsis
Examines an international shipboard educational program and seeks to identify specific insights resulting from informal extracurricular contact between students and host nationals in the context of culture shock experiences.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [271]-275) and index.
About the Author
PAUL PEDERSEN is Professor of Education in the Department of Counseling and Human Services at Syracuse University in New York.
Table of Contents
Preface
Experiencing Culture Shock
Critical Incidents Around the World
The Honeymoon Stage
The Disintegration Stage
The Reintegration Stage
The Autonomy Stage
The Interdependence Stage
References