Research | TCKID 2.0

Posts categorized “Research”.

Interaction International’s International Therapist Directory

Greetings fellow TCKs and ATCKs,

Over the past many months, I’ve been developing the beginning of a very important project, and as of early this morning, just after midnight (Seattle Time), Interaction International’s International Therapist Directory was launched LIVE online. Check out the initial version here:

http://www.interactionintl.org/resourcesite.asp

And if you know of any qualified therapists who have a solid understanding of the TCK and expatriate experience, please forward them the link and my contact information (joshsandoz@interactionintl.org) to help us grow this site!!

Popularity: 5% [?]

Living Around the World: The Effect of International Relocations on Children

June 17, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

As globalized market forces increasingly lead families to temporarily relocate to other countries, parents should be aware of the challenges facing the youngest family members upon their return home.

NORTHAMPTON, Mass. – Children who live abroad with their parents on extended sojourns may experience a setback to their psychological wellbeing, say researchers in a recent study. But not in the way experts initially thought.

Traditionally in the United States, large companies, Christian missions and the State Department considered regularly repatriating back to the country beneficial for children in helping them retain their national identity and a sense of “home.” Some missionaries are even required to spend a year in the U.S. for every three or four abroad.

However, a recent Smith College study of 170 children of American parents found that multiple repatriations to the U.S. seemed to compromise childrens’ adjustment abilities as adults. Meanwhile, the total number of years the children spent living abroad did not affect their ability to ultimately adjust to life back in the U.S.

The study examined American citizens aged 18 to 25 who had returned to the U.S. For men, researchers found, multiple repatriations earlier in life were related to a less positive psychological wellbeing. For women, multiple repatriations were associated with higher levels of prejudice, lack of introspection and feelings of moral superiority.

“It seems that while periodic return to the U.S. may sound good in theory, in reality it may be something that parents should not take for granted,” said Bill E. Peterson, associate professor of psychology at Smith. “Vacationing in the U.S. is probably fine, but coming back to live in the U.S. for a more extended time between sojourns may be bad for the later adjustment of their kids.”

Peterson co-authored the paper, “Third culture kids and the consequences of international sojourns on authoritarianism, acculturative balance, and positive affect,” with Laila T. Plamondon, a Smith undergraduate at the time. It is available online in the Journal of Research in Personality.

Third culture kids – or TCKs – is a term first coined in the 1950s to designate the numerous cultures these children inhabit – the “first culture” being their country of origin; the “second,” their host country; and “third,” the transient community of expatriates, said Plamondon. Importantly, while a parent makes a conscious decision to go abroad, the children accompany them whether or not they want to.

Instead of transitioning back and forth between the U.S. and foreign assignments, it may be better for children to stay abroad in a larger chunk of continuous time.

“For example, it might be better for someone working in business to take her family to India, Japan, and Korea in succession rather than come back and live in the U.S. between sojourns,” said Peterson. “This, of course, has serious implications for sending agencies and families living abroad.”

More research needs to be done to replicate the findings, according to the researchers. “TCKs provide a fairly unique opportunity for psychologists interested in studying the effects of globalization on culture and identity,” added Peterson.

-30-

Popularity: 12% [?]

Your School Experience

I work with families relocating for business and I am interested in learning about the school experiences of TCKs. Could you please email your answers to lsupraner@callearning.com? You can just cut and paste the questions. Or you can post your answers here. thanks.

  1. In what county do you go to school? What grade are you in?
  2. Do you like your school? Why or why not?
  3. How many days a year is school?
  4. How many kids in one class?
  5. What courses do you study?
  6. Is there a gifted and talented program for some kids?
  7. How often do you have physical education class?
  8. Is the work difficult compared to your home country?
  9. Are you in a local school or one for expat kids?
  10. Is creativity and independent thinking encouraged or is it more memorization and testing?
  11. Anything else you’d like to say about your school experience?

thanks! I can’t wait to read your answers

Popularity: 4% [?]

Top 20 Third Culture Kid Cities in The World

TCKID has released its first annual list of the top 10 cities in the world in which TCKs live, ranking them by popularity based on its membership of 21,458 Cross Cultural people. (This is not a poll or a survey. It’s the location of our members based on their I.P addresses as given to us by Facebook.)

The table below lists the largest 20 cities in the world based on population for the year of 2009 of people who identity themselves as “Cross Cultural” and/or “Third Culture”.
tckid-cities

The most popular city is New York!

Top 10 Cities

1. New York 474
2. Bangkok 381
3. Singapore 306
4. Hong Kong 290
5. Washington 279
6. London 274
7. Sydney 259
8. Los Angeles 222
9. Makati 213
10. Jakarta 210

Other Cities

Toronto 210
Seoul 204
Dubai 202
Chicago 197
Kuala Lumpur 177
Seattle 166
Melbourne 163
Atlanta 157
Houston 157
Oslo 148

Learn more the TCKID New York City group.

Join a local TCKID group (over 50 cities)

Top Countries

United States 8,549
United Kingdom 1,829
Canada 1,003
Australia 841
China 453
Thailand 387
Germany 348
France 342
Netherlands 313
Japan 311
Philippines 308
Hong Kong 302
Singapore 299
Indonesia 274
India 259
South Korea 221
Norway 218
Malaysia 215
United Arab Emirates 206
Switzerland 202

Where to meet TCKs?
third culture kids
Want to meet TCKs in your area? Join a local group and meet other TCKs from 50 locations.

Popularity: 16% [?]

TCKs Needed for Online Research Study

Hello! My name is K. Elizabeth McDonald and I am a doctoral candidate in Counselor Education at The Pennsylvania State University. I am currently conducting research that explores wellness in transcultural individuals. I am looking for participants for a research study. If you fit the following criteria, please consider participating in this study:

1. You have spent a significant part of your formative years (before age 18) outside of the country that issued your passport.

2. You intended/have intent to return to your passport country to reside.

3. You are 18-years-old or older.

If you agree to participate, you will respond to questionnaires that will take approximately 15-25 minutes to complete. Your participation in this study is completely voluntary and you are free to withdraw from the study at anytime. No personal identifying information is required, therefore you will not be linked to any publications or presentations from this study. Participants will be eligible to participate in a drawing for one of five $25.00 gift certificates to Better World Books (an online bookstore that ships internationally for a flat fee).

Please click on the link below if you are eligible and interested in participating.

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=SLd1AlxFgCj9U7iSGW_2b1_2bQ_3d_3d

This study is voluntary and for research purposes. If you have any questions or comments, please contact me, K. Elizabeth MCDonald (kem319@psu.edu) or my advisor, Dr. JoLynn Carney (jcarney@psu.edu).

If you know of someone who fits this criteria, please send this email to them!

Please do not hit “reply” because that may reply to a list-serve.

Thank you very much for your help,
~K. Elizabeth McDonald

Popularity: 4% [?]

TCKs Needed for Online Research Study

Hello! My name is K. Elizabeth McDonald and I am a doctoral candidate in Counselor Education at The Pennsylvania State University. I am currently conducting research that explores wellness in transcultural individuals. I am looking for participants for a research study. If you fit the following criteria, please consider participating in this study:
1. You have spent a significant part of your formative years (before age 18) outside of the country that issued your passport.

2. You intended/have intent to return to your passport country to reside.

3. You are 18-years-old or older.

If you agree to participate, you will respond to questionnaires that will take approximately 15-25 minutes to complete. Your participation in this study is completely voluntary and you are free to withdraw from the study at anytime. No personal identifying information is required, therefore you will not be linked to any publications or presentations from this study. Participants will be eligible to participate in a drawing for one of five $25.00 gift certificates to Better World Books (an online bookstore that ships internationally for a flat fee).

Please click on the link below if you are eligible and interested in participating.

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=SLd1AlxFgCj9U7iSGW_2b1_2bQ_3d_3d

This study is voluntary and for research purposes. If you have any questions or comments, please contact me, K. Elizabeth MCDonald (kem319@psu.edu) or my advisor, Dr. JoLynn Carney (jcarney@psu.edu).

If you know of someone who fits this criteria, please send this email to them!

Please do not hit “reply” because that may reply to a list-serve.

Thank you very much for your help,
~K. Elizabeth McDonald

Popularity: 4% [?]

Is it time to start a relationship? or should I waste more time sitting around waiting for the perfect girl?

My whole life I’ve been avoiding any close relationships. I just turned 22, 5 days ago, and as of yet, I’ve never had a girlfriend. A lot of it probably has to do with having extremely low self esteem during my teenage years (continuing to now). I was short, fat, and extremely emotionally unbalanced (haha, i probably make myself sound a lot worse then I’m actually am). So low self esteem, plus living as a foreigner in my home country which made finding people similar to me a very hard aspect, and the girls who i liked and had a lot in common with, i avoided getting into a boyfriend/girlfriend relationship because our families were all so close, and it would be like dating a close relative or a sibling (problem with being a minority, is everyone knows everyone, and we all grow up together!). There were also many local girls that i was interested in, but we always had too little in common with each other, and being the pastors kid made me feel like everyone’s eyes were always on me, and whatever i did, seemed to be so interesting to everyone. Not wanting to bring any extra attention to myself (more then i already had) i avoided any sort of relationship.

So now I’m an adult (better looking, with a little more self confidence then i had as a teen), and living in my passport country but because I had zero practice in relationships during my youth, I have no clue how to be more then just friends when around girls! which is annoying since I know there are some girls who are actually interested in me and I’m interested in them. But that’s not the only problem, I’m thinking far ahead, i don’t what to wast mine or her time, on a relationship that won’t have the possibility of eventual marriage, which makes me have very high standards in finding someone who would be compatible to my global view of things. And as of yet, I haven’t found a girl who would want to leave Canada eventually, which really sucks since I know i can’t spend much longer in this wonderful yet not-for-me country. and i don’t want to end up like my sisters, who although they married some great husbands, by marrying monos, they’ve pretty much sealed their fate in northamerica, even though my sisters would much rather live elsewhere. Well I guess marriage is about sacrifice, but honestly I know I am not willing to sacrifice my dreams and identity. So this is why I’m still waiting. Waiting for the right girl. Are my expectations to high? Should i wait until I settle down in a country i can live in before starting a relationship?

One reason why I’m thinking about this now, is i have been faced over the last year again and again with the thought of our limited life, and mortality. About a year ago, my dad was diagnosed with cancer, then a few months ago, right after he finished radiation treatment, my mom was diagnosed with a much worse type of cancer! So perhaps that is pushing me to stop wasting time, start a relationship, and make some commitments to someone other then myself.

anyways, I’m not going to rush into anything stupid, Its just got me thinking. I wonder is this inability for relationships common among tcks? from what I’v seen a few of my friends end up getting married much earlier then the mono population, while the majority of my tck friends are very behind monos in having relationships. It’s seems like we grow up fast, but many of us suck at making commitments, and have a late start in the field of dating. another unscientific observation of mine (about my tck friends) is tck females (seems like mono guys find them exotic) seem to do a little better in getting a boyfriends while me and all my male friends seem to have no clue about how to get a girlfriend. Now i now that is one crude observation, which is often not true, but this is just from my own personal observation. I still know many tck girls my age or older who are in the same boat as me (relationshipless).

I haven’t read that tck book yet, but dose it say anything about tcks and their boyfriend/girlfriend relationships?

and does anyone else here suffer from the same problems or similar problems, in the whole field of romance?

anyways i thought this was an intresting topic, although mostlikly it’s been discused on these fourms before.

Popularity: 7% [?]

Please Help! Thesis Questionnaire!

Hello Everyone!

I really need your help for my thesis, its due May 1st and all you have to do is take a questionnaire.

I’m a senior at Haverford College currently writing my thesis on Intercultural Relationships. I’m also a TCK and have been fascinated with doing research on our uniqueness for some time.

This is a short, maximum 5 minute questionnaire looking at TCKs and relationships. You do not need to be in a relationship to participate.

The only requirement: you must be a TCK. There are some definitive aspects on the first page of the survey if you are at all confused about your ability to participate.

The quiz also providesthe contact information for me and my advising professor.

That’s about it! Follow this link if you want to participate:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=5NEPqaCbNkIhy33hDkAbGQ_3d_3d

Thank you all in advance!

- Stephanie

Popularity: 4% [?]

Really Need Help with Research

Hi Everyone!

I’m doing a huge research study for my Psychology degree this semester. My project is on the well-being, social connectedness, socio-cultural identity, and university transition experience of TCKs.

I’ve had an impossible time finding TCKs and would GREATLY appreciate your participation in a quick 5 or so minute questionnaire. The results are anonymous and confidential.

https://www.uwec.edu/websurvey/TakeSurvey.asp?SurveyID=l0H3p4319p32M2

Thanks a Ton!

Popularity: 4% [?]

Progressive vs. Conservative?

This was supposed to become part of my comment on Besu-Chan’s post in Different sides of God?, but I started going off-topic, so I’ll write this in it’s own thread:

“…
I also think the last thing Shirby(comment 2) wrote is very important; about people not liking [or wanting] to be open-minded/ to be able to see beyond the filters.”
I can understand it, when someone hasn’t had the chance to experience views from past their cultural filters; but I feel entirely helpless when confronted by people who see “thinking outside the box” as something harmful that has to be avoided.

I completely have no idea how to deal with them – do I feel sorry for them, do I avoid them (what if I am obliged to work with them?), do I fight with them over points of view?
I guess this is the same ancient fued as between conservatists and progressivists. I see the strengths in both attitudes, but conservatism just wouldn’t do for my lifestyle – I had to become progressivist and learn to adapt along with my ever changing surroundings.
Do any of you also feel very sensitive to this conflict: conservative vs. progressive?
To what side do you tend, and why?

I’ll elaborate a bit more if I get any feedback.

Popularity: 4% [?]