พรพรสำฦต

Summer internship blog series: พรพรสำฦตโ€™s third culture kids

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Mariam Nael '18

Self-described Third Culture Kid and researcher Mariam Nael โ€™18

พรพรสำฦต students have fanned out across the globe to apply their liberal arts know-how in a variety of real-world settings. They are writing back to campus to keep our community posted on their progress. This article was written by Mariam Nael โ€™18, a womenโ€™s studies major from Singapore, completing a student-initiated research fellowship with the university studies division. 

My parents are Pakistani, but I have lived in Singapore, Dubai, Hong Kong, and New York City. The way I see myself has changed a little since I arrived at พรพรสำฦต โ€” I think my race and ethnicity have become stronger facets of my identity.

One day, I was chatting with some friends from high school about our cultural identity, and I realized that studying the shifts would be an interesting summer research project. Luckily, พรพรสำฦต has a great program to conduct student-initiated summer research (with funding).

I quickly reached out to Meika Loe, professor of sociology and womenโ€™s studies. She helped me focus my idea and supported my proposal, and, fortunately, my proposal was accepted.

According to sociologist David Pollock, a Third Culture Kid (TCK) is defined as someone โ€œwho has spent a significant part of his or her developmental years outside [their] parentsโ€™ culture.โ€ The โ€œthirdโ€ culture refers to the mixing of the host countryโ€™s culture (the country in which he or she lives) and his or her parentsโ€™ culture.

The purpose of my research is to learn about how Third Culture Kids form their personal and cultural identity, especially in college, and whether they experience a shift in the way they self-identify. Additionally, I am interested in whether there is a difference in the formation of identity with non-white TCKs and white TCKs.

Throughout the last month, I have been conducting 45 to 90 minute interviews in Singapore with Third Culture Kids between the ages of 18 and 24. Additionally, I have begun transcribing interviews and systematically coding them for themes. The next step is to analyze them and write a research paper.

It has been fascinating hearing their stories and seeing the similarities and differences not only between the interviewees, but with my own experience as a TCK.

This has been a tough, but valuable, learning process. I wish to continue studying TCKs and identity formation throughout the next few years, hopefully using different methods as well. I am planning to write a research paper, and hopefully, down the line, will try to present or publish it.

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