広島大学総合科学部紀要. IV, 理系編 Volume 19
published_at 1993-12-31

在日留学生に必要なソーシャル・スキル

Necessary Social Skills for International Students in Japan
Tanaka Tomoko
Takai Jiro
Kohyama Takaya
fulltext
987 KB
KJ00000197210.pdf
Abstract
As a part of researches on social skills training aimed at facilitating the cross-cultural adjustment of sojourners in Japan, this study asked Japanese experts in interpersonal behavior research about how international students should cope with ten aspects of social difficulty in interpersonal situations. The mailed questionnaire administered to 133 social psychologists. Twenty three subjects responded to the open-ended items. Their responses were categorized through the KJ method of content analysis. The following main categories were obtained; A) interpersonal relations (relationship with stranger, friendship formation, behavior toward a superior, overcoming language handicap, managing social exchange, behavior toward opposite sex members), B) social situations (public etiquette, dealing with collective behavior), C) indirectness (negating, indirect expression). Coping strategies suggested by the respondents were categorized into three areas of a) behavior, b) cognition, c) passiveness, and under these categories were identified their respective component structure. The results offer fundamental resources for formulating structured learning, cognitive restructuring and goal setting regarding social skills training.
Keywords
Japanese social skills training
culture specific
social difficulty
interpersonal behavior
coping strategies