DOI: 10.3390/soc16060195 ISSN: 2075-4698

Exploring the Self-Perception of Complex Thinking Among International Master’s Students at a Japanese University

José Carlos Vázquez-Parra, Chris Blakely, Jenny Paola Lis-Gutiérrez, Arantxa Lucero Ramos-Huerta, Sergio Palomino-Gámez

This study examines complex thinking as a higher-order cognitive competence in international graduate education. Drawing on Edgar Morin’s theoretical perspective, it analyzes how master’s students perceive this competence through four interrelated dimensions: systemic, scientific, critical, and innovative thinking. A total of 491 international students from a graduate university in Japan participated in the study. Using a quantitative, cross-sectional design, data were collected with the validated eComplexity instrument and analyzed through PERMANOVA with 999 permutations. The analysis examined differences in self-perceived complex thinking by sex, academic field, nationality, and academic semester. Results showed moderately high levels of self-perceived complex thinking across the sample, with systemic and critical thinking emerging as the strongest dimensions. Significant differences were found by nationality and academic semester, while no significant differences were observed by sex or academic field. These findings suggest that students’ perceptions of complex thinking are associated with cultural and academic trajectories, although the cross-sectional and self-report design requires cautious interpretation. The study contributes to competence-based graduate education by showing that complex thinking can be examined as a multidimensional and context-sensitive form of perceived cognitive development. Educational implications are discussed in relation to curriculum design, intercultural learning, global citizenship, and inclusion in international master’s programs.

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