This study explored the beliefs about English language learning demonstrated by Korean-speaking college students
while sojourning in the United States. Adopting a contextual approach to learner beliefs, the study further examined the nature of
changes in sojourners’ beliefs and what aspects of study abroad were related to such changes. To this end, the study drew on the
participants’ accounts of their second language (L2) experiences in connection with different aspects of study abroad through
episodic narrative interviews. A thematic analysis of the interview data suggests that sojourners’ beliefs about language learning
are reminiscent of societal ideological structures and school or familial influences. During the sojourn, learner beliefs about L2
learning were reshaped by interactions with co-nationals and members of the host community as micro-level resources situated in
the meso-level host program. Sojourners further demonstrated changes in their broad perspectives on what constitutes an in situ
form of bilingualism in the sending and host countries.