Exchange Student 4 Xxx 〈Reliable — Release〉
Exchange students, popular media, acculturation, streaming platforms, identity, social integration 1. Introduction Every year, over 1.5 million students participate in international exchange programs (UNESCO, 2023). While most research focuses on academic adjustment and language barriers, little attention is paid to a daily, pervasive activity: consuming entertainment content . From binge-watching local reality TV to sharing memes on Instagram Reels, exchange students are constantly engaging with popular media—both from their home country and the host culture.
[Your Name] Affiliation: [Your University/Department] Date: [Current Date] Abstract Background: With the globalization of media streaming platforms (Netflix, YouTube, TikTok) and transnational pop culture (K-dramas, Latin telenovelas, Turkish dizis), exchange students no longer rely solely on host-country television or news for cultural learning. Instead, they curate hybrid media diets. Objective: This paper investigates how international exchange students engage with entertainment content and popular media during their sojourn, focusing on three dimensions: (1) media as a tool for acculturation, (2) media as a space for coping with homesickness, and (3) media as a social bridge or barrier with local peers. Method: Mixed-methods study with 50 exchange students (aged 18–25) in a European host university, combining media diaries and semi-structured interviews. Findings (expected): Preliminary analysis suggests students use media in three distinct phases: pre-departure (stereotyping host culture through films), early sojourn (comfort re-watching home-country content), and late sojourn (co-viewing local memes/series with host nationals). Notably, algorithmic recommendations on TikTok/Instagram often replace formal intercultural training. Conclusion: Entertainment media functions as an informal acculturation curriculum, yet it can also reinforce stereotypes. The paper proposes a “media literacy intervention” for exchange programs. Exchange Student 4 XXX
This is designed as a research paper proposal (suitable for a communication, media studies, or international education journal) with a clear abstract, literature review framework, methodology, and discussion points. Navigating New Screens: How Exchange Students Use Entertainment Content and Popular Media for Acculturation, Identity Negotiation, and Social Integration From binge-watching local reality TV to sharing memes
This paper asks: How does entertainment content shape the exchange student experience? Rather than treating media as mere distraction, I argue it is a critical site of cultural negotiation. The paper reviews three intersecting fields: 2.1 Acculturation Theory (Berry, 1997) Traditional models focus on integration, assimilation, separation, or marginalization. However, these models rarely account for transnational media consumption —e.g., a Japanese student in France watching Japanese anime with French subtitles, or a German student following Brazilian YouTubers. 2.2 Media as Cultural Toolkit (Swidler, 1986; Appadurai, 1996) Media provides scripts for “how to act” in new social situations. For example, watching a host country’s sitcom teaches informal greetings and humor styles faster than any textbook. 2.3 Parasocial Relationships and Coping (Derrick et al., 2009) Exchange students often experience loneliness. Continued engagement with home-country influencers, podcasts, or soap operas serves as a “transitional object,” reducing anxiety but potentially delaying real-world interaction. 1997) Traditional models focus on integration