logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Intercultural interaction willingness: a PLS-PM approach to influencing factors and its mediation effect

Sociology

Intercultural interaction willingness: a PLS-PM approach to influencing factors and its mediation effect

H. Zheng, P. Ding, et al.

This study sheds light on the crucial factors that shape international students' willingness to engage with their Chinese peers. It uncovers how language proficiency, cultural nuances, and environmental factors foster positive interactions, while racism and discrimination hinder these connections. The findings highlight the pivotal role of interaction willingness in enhancing social connections, as revealed by researchers Haijian Zheng, Peng Ding, Qian Liu, and Lirong Xing from Shandong University of Technology.... show more
Abstract
For international students, interaction with host nationals greatly influences their adjustment to the host country. Their willingness to interact is subject to the influence of multiple factors. Partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM) was employed in this study to explore three key research questions. Firstly, we sought to determine whether language proficiency, culture, racism and discrimination, and environment could affect international students’ willingness to interact with their Chinese peers. Secondly, we investigated whether interaction willingness was positively correlated with social connection. Thirdly, we examined whether interaction willingness had a mediation effect on intercultural communication. The measurement models and structural models were assessed using consistent PLS-SEM algorithm (PLSc) and consistent PLS-SEM bootstrapping. The assessment results indicated that the models exhibited a satisfactory goodness of fit. Path analysis results showed that (1) language proficiency, culture, and environment exhibited a positive correlation with interaction willingness, while racism and discrimination exerted a negative correlation; (2) interaction willingness was positively correlated with social connection and (3) the variable of interaction willingness was identified as a mediating variable in the correlation between independent variables (i.e. language proficiency, culture, racism and discrimination, and environment) and the dependent variable (i.e. social connection). The findings indicate that multilingualism, length of stay, and empathy from host nationals may contribute to willingness of international students to interact with Chinese students by reducing barriers of language, culture, and discrimination. It is therefore evident that a supportive environment is crucial for interaction and the development of social connection.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jul 04, 2024
Authors
Haijian Zheng, Peng Ding, Qian Liu, Lirong Xing
Tags
international students
interaction willingness
intercultural communication
social connection
language proficiency
racism
discrimination
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny