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The Internationalisation of the Curriculum Christine Ennew

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Presentation on theme: "The Internationalisation of the Curriculum Christine Ennew"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Internationalisation of the Curriculum Christine Ennew
Launch event – October 2012

2 Internationalisation: nothing new?
Strategic Human Resource Management Internationalisation: nothing new? Worcestershire sauce, 1834 UK Vinegar Caribbean Sugar & Molasses Spanish anchovies Black Calcutta tamarinds Dutch shallots Chinese chillies Madagascar cloves French garlic Sparrow, Brewster & Harris 2004

3 Internationalising Higher Education
Globalisation isn’t new, internationalisation isn’t new Scholars have always been mobile, knowledge is not constrained by borders Jewish philosopher Maimonides, exiled from his native Spain, studied at University of Al-Karaouine in Morocco William of Tyre travelled from Jerusalem to study liberal arts and cannon law at Paris, Orleans and Bologna. Ibn Battutah travelled from Morocoo, throughout Asia to China in pursuit of knowledge

4 Internationalisation - how
An international curriculum International student recruitment/mobility International staff International networks (eg U21) International research partnerships Cross border delivery Distance learning Partnerships (eg articulations, in country delivery) Greenfield development (campuses) Partnerships for capacity development

5 Why should you be interested?
Immediate considerations Income (volume and security), mobility opportunities, citation impacts, accreditation, executive education Longer term Working with the best students and staff at all levels Access to new sources of research funding (govt and industry) Developing the curriculum and enhancing employability Developing people Social Responsibility Support the development of HE elsewhere – practice what we preach?

6 Grand Challenge Recommendation 1: School Challenge Statements
The School Challenge Statements (section 3.2) and Professional Services challenges should be disseminated in a paper to Schools, setting out the Grand Challenge and requiring responses. Recommendation 2: Internationalisation Champions and Network Schools should identify an Internationalisation Champion and a University-wide Curriculum Internationalisation Network should be established and a coordinator identified. Recommendation 3: Funding for Projects Funding should be made available to assist Schools in meeting the Challenges through competitive bidding for projects. Funding will be allocated according to criteria to be agreed.

7 Internationalisation of the Curriculum
NOT just about teaching international students Preparing students to operate in a global environment (employability) Producing global citizens with intercultural skills and competences (better people?) Skills and knowledge The formal and the informal curriculum

8 What should an internationalised curriculum deliver?
Genuinely global perspective on the subject of study A broader international and global awareness Skills and competences to work within and across diverse cultures Awareness of own culture and ability to understand and critique (and explore implications for actions Ability to engage across cultures Global citizenship – a broader recognition of individual and institutional responsibilities in an international environment

9 Options for delivery: Immersion
International students Domestic students International staff International content Mobility The Global Citizen

10 Or..........more actively managed?
Graduate attributes reflect global citizenship Integration of internationalisation into curriculum design (including learning outcomes) at the programme level Translation through to module level (content and outcomes) Integration of globally significant agendas (climate, equity, social justice) Managing student interactions and activity Reflected in assessment

11 The Attributes of a Global Citizen?
a broad international perspective of the subject area. an ability to apply disciplinary concepts in their own cultural context and in wider cultural contexts. a critical awareness of their own cultural values and an ability to empathise with, and respect, other cultural perspectives. an understanding and recognition of the value of a diverse, interconnected and global society.

12 The Attributes of a Global Citizen?
an ability to communicate cross-culturally and within international environments. a commitment to the broader social good, at the local, national and global level. an ability to exercise their intellectual capacity and moral standing to defend and actively disseminate universally accepted values. an ability to meet the needs of any relevant sector of human activity as responsible global citizens.

13 Skills versus Content Skills Content
Do global citizens require different skills? Or are those skills already integral to the curriculum? Languages Content Discipline specific perspectives Generic content – comparative/global issues Generic content – environment, social justice,

14 Challenges? Securing a clear view of what an internationalised curriculum means – variations by discipline, institution Balancing skills versus content Student engagement Easier for students with some international experience Moving students outside of their “comfort zone” Managing different cultural perspectives Students as resources for IoC Monitoring impact

15 Some Resources http://www.ioc.net.au


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