International Students who Became U.S. Counseling Psychology Faculty Members: A Collaborative Autoethnography

Andrés J. Consoli, Ayşe Çiftçi, Şenel Poyrazlı, Michiko Iwasaki, Silvia Sara Canetto, Elin Ovrebo, Chiachih D.C. Wang, Linda Forrest

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

International students have a considerable presence in U.S. counseling psychology programs; what happens when they pursue academic counseling psychology positions in U.S. institutions? Seven counseling psychology faculty who started as international students in the United States used collaborative autoethnography to examine this matter. We found that our identification with counseling psychology philosophy and our lifelong, self-reflective process as cultural insiders/outsiders have proven crucial. Likewise, we found that our academic career development has been shaped by extra challenges encountered when dealing with ethnocentric aspects of U.S. psychology and by unique opportunities generated by our multinational professional identities and multilingual abilities. Three themes recurred across our reflections: Overcoming Linguistic Differences, Learning to Thrive Across Cultures, and Mentoring as a Valued Experience. We offer advice for international counseling students considering careers in U.S. academia and discuss the implications of our findings for research, training, and advocacy.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)874-910
Number of pages37
JournalCounseling Psychologist
Volume50
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2022

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Applied Psychology

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