Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"students" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Trajectories of Alcohol-Related Problems Among First-Year Nursing Students: Nature, Predictors, and Outcomes Cheyroux P; Morin AJS; O' Connor RM; Colombat P; Vancappel A; Eltanoukhi R; Gillet N; 41797206
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Exploring correlates of weight bias among university students in diverse programs Jeanningros A; Côté M; Forouhar V; Aimé A; Lavallière M; Blackburn P; Maïano C; Alberga AS; Baillot A; 41718586
SOH
3 Examining the Acceptability and Effectiveness of a Self-Directed, Web-Based Resource for Stress and Coping in University: Randomized Controlled Trial Böke BN; Mettler J; Bastien L; Cho S; Heath N; 41576346
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Web-Based Formal Versus Informal Mindfulness Programs for University Students With and Those Without Recent Self-Injury: Randomized Controlled Trial Petrovic J; Mettler J; Böke BN; Rogers MA; Hamza CA; Bloom E; Di Genova L; Romano V; Heath NL; 41313154
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Resilience, Stress, and Mental Health Among University Students: A Test of the Resilience Portfolio Model Fang S; Barker E; Arasaratnam G; Lane V; Rabinovich D; Panaccio A; O' Connor RM; Nguyen CT; Doucerain MM; 39641152
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Local residents' attitudes toward and contact with international students: a perspective from Montreal, Quebec Tekin O; Trofimovich P; 39606194
EDUCATION
7 The effectiveness and acceptability of formal versus informal mindfulness among university students with and without recent self-injury: A randomized controlled trial Petrovic J; Mettler J; Böke BN; Rogers MA; Hamza CA; Bloom E; Di Genova L; Romano V; Heath NL; 39489621
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Masters students' satisfaction with academic supervision and experiences of mental and emotional distress and wellbeing Nadine S Bekkouche 38848331
EDUCATION
9 What Comes First, Acculturation or Adjustment? A Longitudinal Investigation of Integration Versus Mental Resources Hypotheses Doucerain MM; Amiot CE; Jurcik T; Ryder AG; 38031873
CONCORDIA
10 Disrupted Lessons in Engineering Robotics: Pivoting Knowledge Transfer From Physical to Virtual Learning Environments Chichekian T; Trudeau J; Jawhar T; 35702710
PHYSICS
11 Extreme Situation Experienced by Dental Students of the Medical University of Silesia Due to the SARS-CoV-2 Epidemic during the First Lockdown Doniec R; Wójcik S; Valverde R; Piaseczna N; Siecinski S; Duraj K; Tkacz E; 34828557
ENCS
12 Attachment style and changes in systemic inflammation following migration to a new country among international students. Gouin JP, MacNeil S 30406717
PERFORM

 

Title:Local residents' attitudes toward and contact with international students: a perspective from Montreal, Quebec
Authors:Tekin OTrofimovich P
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39606194/
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1484985
Publication:Frontiers in psychology
Keywords:host communitiesintegrated threat theoryintergroup contactinternational studentslinguistic threatprejudice
PMID:39606194 Category: Date Added:2024-11-28
Dept Affiliation: EDUCATION
1 Institute for the Study of University Pedagogy, University of Toronto, Mississauga, ON, Canada.
2 Department of Education, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

As migrants holding temporary, foreign-resident status in their host communities, international students often experience prejudice and have little meaningful contact with locals. To date, a comprehensive account of international students' experience is lacking, and existing conceptualizations exclude linguistic threat as a potential source of increased prejudice and diminished contact. Therefore, our goal in this study (set in Quebec, Canada) was to explore local residents' attitudes toward and contact with international students in relation to five potential threats experienced by local residents, including cultural differences, competition over resources, intergroup anxiety, stereotypes, with linguistic threat added as a new, previously unexplored variable. We recruited 59 student and non-student local francophone residents as participants and examined their attitudes toward, perceptions of threat from, and the quality and quantity of contact with international students attending English-medium universities. Both student and non-student participants demonstrated positive attitudes toward and low levels of perceived threat from international students, except for linguistic threat. Compared to student participants, non-student participants reported significantly greater linguistic threat from international students and described contact with them that was both less frequent and lower in quality. Regression models accounted for 50-67% of variance in participants' attitudes, with symbolic threat to social values and belief systems emerging as the common significant predictor of attitudes for both groups. Adding linguistic threat did not improve regression models. Finally, only contact quality showed significant relationships with attitudes and perceived threat, where greater contact quality was associated with more favorable attitudes and reduced threat. We discuss implications of intergroup attitudes and contact for language planning and use in multilingual contexts.





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