Defense Date
12-18-2024
Graduation Date
Spring 5-10-2025
Availability
Immediate Access
Submission Type
dissertation
Degree Name
PhD
Department
Counselor Education and Supervision (ExCES)
School
School of Education
Committee Chair
DR MATTHEW JOSEPH
Committee Member
DR JASON RITTER
Committee Member
DR DAVID DELMONICO
Keywords
intercultural communication, intercultural competence, Critical Race Theory, autoethnography, storytelling, immigration
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to share experiences as an immigrant student and answer the following question: What does my personal life history reveal about the importance of intercultural communication in the U.S. educational system? Immigrants leave their countries of origin and migrate to the United States for various reasons. Many are traumatized when they enter the country due to civil unrest in their native countries. Immigrants arrive with their children, who join a school system that is generally unprepared to meet their needs. In order to document immigrant experiences, the researcher utilized an autoethnographic approach using counter-storytelling from Critical Race Theory and Intercultural Communication Theoretical Frameworks. Data were collected from personal journal entries, photographs, and letters and analyzed using tools from Schultz’s Keys to Identifying Prototypical Scenes and Alexander’s Primary Indicators of Psychological Saliency. As a result of this study, the researcher concluded that adjustment and adaptation are difficult for immigrant students because of ineffective intercultural communication within the school system.
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Ngangana, A. (2025). AN AUTOETHNOGRAPHY OF MY EXPERIENCE NAVIGATING THE UNITED STATES EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM AS AN IMMIGRANT: INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION CHALLENGES AND CULTURAL ASYNCHRONIZATION (Doctoral dissertation, Duquesne University). Retrieved from https://dsc.duq.edu/etd/2318