This interview‐based qualitative study aimed to understand the acculturative experiences of marriage‐immigrant women in South Korea. Filipinas, who are married to Korean husbands, migrated to South Korea to live with their husbands, and could speak English, were recruited for the research. Interviews with 15 Filipinas were analyzed. As a result, the stories of each of the research participants were reconstructed based on their interviews, and three common themes and 11 subthemes emerged from the constant comparison method are presented. First, marriage‐immigrant Filipinas learned about the role and position of a daughter‐in‐law in South Korea. Second, as mothers with foreign backgrounds, marriage‐immigrant Filipinas' motherhood had to be negotiated. Finally, marriage‐immigrant Filipinas actively engaged in developing extrafamilial support in South Korea by expanding their horizons.
This study aimed to understand the factors that deter immigrants from participating in Korean language programs in South Korea by finding the underlying structure of the deterrents. A new instrument with 39 items that measures adult immigrants' deterrents to participation in Korean language programs was developed. In total, 267 responses were collected, and 170 complete useable responses were analyzed. A series of statistical analyses revealed that the lack of time was the most compelling reason for nonparticipation. In addition, three latent dimensions of deterrents to participation were discovered: negative attitudes, social isolation, and competing demands. The factors were compared with the findings from previous research and implications for theory and practice were suggested.
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