Volume 18 Number 1 

Connectedness: Human Relations,
Learning, & Wellness

Safary Wa-Mbaleka

 


Socio-Pragmatic Role of Songs in the L2 Classroom
Cinthya Samojluk de Graf
 
Perceived Global Trends Cognition and Management Competencies of Master in Business Administration Students
Gloria Gempes 

Lived Social Life Experiences of Female
Elderly People 

Stella Appiah & Safary Wa-Mbaleka

A Narrative Inquiry of One Female Married-Single: A Story of Loneliness and Isolation 
Nadine A. Joseph

The Small Group: Connected for Wellness and
Success in Adventist Higher Education 

Ikechukwu Michael Oluikpe

Quality of Vegetarian Cafeteria Services and Students’ Overall Satisfactionwith their University 
Darrin Thomas 


International Forum 
Vol. 18, No. 1
April 2015
Print ISSN : 0119-2000
Online ISSN : 2350-7497
 
FEATURE

A Narrative Inquiry of One Female Married-Single:
A Story of Loneliness and Isolation

 

Abstract. The Organization for Economic Cooperation (OECD, 2013) reported that, during the past three decades, there has been a steady rise in the number of international students studying outside their countries of citizenship. Those figures rose from 0.8 million in 1975 to almost 3.7 million in 2009, and to 4.1 million in 2010. There is an associated growing body of research that explores the experiences of international students in general; some exploring the experiences of married international students studying abroad with their families (see Arthur, 2004);but little exploring the experiences of married students studying abroad without their families with them (Wa-Mbaleka, 2013). Wa-Mbaleka and Joseph (2013) uncovered a phenomenon they termed “the married-single phenomenon,” referring to married persons who were studying abroad without their spouses or children. This narrative study documents the experience of one female doctoral student while studying in the Philippines without her family. Data was collected through extensive and repeated interviews, oral and written, formal and informal, an examination of the participant’s retrospective journal, and participant observation. The findings do not show differences between how this married-single woman coped with loneliness and isolation and the strategies reportedly used by other international students in previous studies.

 

Keywords: International students, married-single students, loneliness, isolation, narrative inquiry, Philippines

 

Nadine A. Joseph, PhD
Founder & CEO, Educational Consult Inc.,
Brooklyn, NY, USA

 

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