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Discursive constructions of internationalisation at an Australian university :Leask, Betty. Unknown Date (has links)
The portfolio explores the construction, representation and interpretation of internationalisation at the University of South Australia (UniSA) within the broader concept of internationalisation in higher education. The research is situated within a postmodern, postcolonial world and is influenced significantly by the work of Foucault ([1972] 2003), Fairclough (1989; 1992), Said (1995 [1978]) and Cherryholmes (1988). / The portfolio consists of three related research reports and a meta-analysis which both connects these individual reports and conducts further analysis of the issues and themes arising from the research. The literature reviewed in Research Report 1 describes a range of approaches to internationalisation and issues associated with its definition and implementation in universities. It is concluded that internationalisation in higher education is part of a network of constantly developing and changing discourses all of which both influence and are influenced by political, social and economic contexts and agendas. The nature of the discourse of internationalisation at UniSA and the power/knowledge relations which are embedded within and support it are the focus of the second research report which consists of a critical discourse analysis of a corpus of documents related to internationalisation and Graduate Quality #7 at UniSA. Five discourses of internationalisation at UniSA are identified and the roles associated with the primary subjects of the discourse (academic staff, Australian students and international students) are described. Significant shifts in the discursive construction of internationalisation at UniSA over time are also identified, including the tendency for the economic discourse to be viewed as dominant and the associated ideology to be naturalised. / The third research report consists of snapshots of the experience of internationalisation in different places and from different perspectives. It strives for a deeper understanding of the complexity of internationalisation at UniSA through exploration of the construction of Graduate Quality #7 (that students of UniSA will develop international perspectives as professionals and citizens) in two different cultural and educational contexts, Adelaide and Hong Kong. The research highlights the need to embed and integrate intercultural learning into the culture of UniSA, to assist all staff and all students to move into uncomfortable intercultural spaces; to learn from and with each other within those spaces; to challenge their stereotypes and prejudices and to move on from them. / The three reports are drawn together in the meta-analysis which concludes that although there are signs of ideological struggle within the discourse of internationalisation, the constructions of internationalisation and its subjects and actors at UniSA and beyond are consistent with a construction of internationalisation as a neo-colonialist activity. It suggests a modified approach to internationalisation one that challenges the stereotypes and hegemonies currently associated with it. This has implications for the focus of professional development and student services to support internationalisation at UniSA and other Australian universities. / Thesis (PhDEducation)--University of South Australia, 2004.
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Internationalizing an institution an emerging model of effective leadership, infrastructure and cultural factors /Davis Courts, Amelia. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--West Virginia University, 2004. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains iii, 167 p. : ill. Vita. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 147-164).
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Educating without borders the influence of international cross-cultural experiences on teaching with a global perspective in higher education /Ciccarello, Nicholas A. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--West Virginia University, 2004. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vii, 153 p. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 141-150).
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Critical pedagogy abroad : a case study of the Center for Global Education in Mexico /Burns, Heather L. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.I.S.)--Oregon State University, 2001. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the World Wide Web.
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International education in Florida community colleges an analysis /Blankenship, Edward Smith. January 1980 (has links)
Thesis--University of Florida. / Description based on print version record. Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 157-166).
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The global economy and education a comparison of the competencies considered important by business and teachers in grades 7-12 /McKay, Helen E. Padavil, George. January 1991 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Illinois State University, 1991. / Title from title page screen, viewed January 3, 2006. Dissertation Committee: George A. Padavil (chair), Sally B. Pancrazio, John R. McCarthy, JoAnn McCarthy, Wayne Benenson. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 225-241) and abstract. Also available in print.
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Global education as moral education: building a community of concernDarling, Linda 11 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation, I construct and defend a conception of global
education as a moral enterprise. I argue that the ethical and political
commitments which should be at the heart of programs have not been made
explicit or central. Fundamental commitments to democracy are incompatible
with global education that focuses mainly on existing world systems and
relationships, and promotes national interests. The foundations of global
education should be those that underlie projects of communicative ethics,
defined here as frameworks for uncoerced communication between particular
individuals in actual contexts. On this view, global education is education toward
just and respectful exchanges across social, political, and cultural differences.
A central feature of this conception is the development of a defensible
global perspective. To attain such a perspective is, in part, to develop the
sensitivities and dispositions that will help one understand and appreciate
another’s point of view. This kind of understanding can only be partial and is
often problematic. There is always the possibility of misunderstanding, even
incommensurability. Further, understanding does not entail agreement. Dialogue
needs to proceed cautiously and with awareness of the potential for coercion.
Nevertheless, it is hoped that educational efforts toward communicating with
others will lead to the mutual recognition of some commonalities, and may
eventuate in the construction of a limited global community of concern.
There are a number of communicative virtues necessary for listening and
speaking to individuals who are beyond the boundaries of our existing local and
national concerns. The three moral dispositions presented here are especially
important. Empathy, tolerance, and a sense of justice are discussed in terms of
meeting the challenges of communicating across differences and distance. Classrooms are places where these virtues can be carefully cultivated, and
where the possibilities for constructing community can be explored through
defensible programs of global education. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Predicting Study Abroad Propensity among College StudentsPruitt, William Nelson III 02 November 2017 (has links)
The present and increasingly globalized environment of commerce and information has created the need for a workforce adept at global citizenship (Reimers, 2009). As a demand for global citizens has increased, higher education has responded by developing 21st century workforce competencies among its students (NAFSA International Strategic Plans and Mission Statements, 2012). Study abroad is one of the means employed by higher education to increase students' global competency (Carlson, Bum, Useem and Yachimowicz, 1990).
This study explored the relationship between demographic characteristic, and personal, social, and academic experiences of students with respect to predicting propensity to study abroad. Prior research has focused on each of these factors individually while this study explored the influence of these factors collectively on the likelihood to study abroad. Factors were defined by variables measured by the 2014 National Survey on Student Engagement (NSSE) (NSSE, 2014). The data analyses included a combination of independent sample t tests, one-way ANOVAs, and linear regression.
The results revealed that gender, race, major, and SES are good predictors of participation in study abroad. Additionally, academic collegiate experiences germane to diversity and societal awareness increased propensity to participate in study abroad. / Ph. D. / The present and increasingly globalized environment of commerce and information has created the need for a workforce adept at global citizenship (Reimers, 2009). As a demand for global citizens has increased, higher education has responded by developing 21st century workforce competencies among its students (NAFSA International Strategic Plans and Mission Statements, 2012). Study abroad is one of the means employed by higher education to increase students’ global competency (Carlson, Bum, Useem & Yachimowicz, 1990).
This study explored the relationship between demographic characteristic, and personal, social, and academic experiences of students with respect to predicting propensity to study abroad. Prior research has focused on each of these factors individually while this study explored the influence of these factors collectively on the likelihood to study abroad. Factors were defined by variables measured by the 2014 National Survey on Student Engagement (NSSE) (NSSE, 2014). The data analyses included a combination of independent sample t tests, one-way ANOVAs, and linear regression.
The results revealed that gender, race, major, and SES are good predictors of participation in study abroad. Additionally, academic collegiate experiences germane to diversity and societal awareness increased propensity to participate in study abroad.
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Globalisation, international education and the marketing of TESOL: student identity as a site of conflicting forcesChowdhury, Md Raqibuddin January 2008 (has links)
This study provides a critique of institutional discourses that are informed by race, culture and identity, learning constraints and particular constructions of English and offers ways of thinking that encourage multiplicity and complexity. Its principal aim is to probe issues relating to the identity formation of international TESOL students in the context of the globalisation of international education. To achieve this aim, the study poses questions about the commodification of the TESOL machinery through marketing programmes and its impact on international TESOL students. In addressing these questions the study considers Australian universities’ marketing practices, the discursive representation of international students by these universities and the government, as well as wider matters of educational policy. The research draws on poststructuralist and postcolonial theories, particularly on selected aspects of the works of Foucault and Said and in so doing demonstrates the usefulness of such theories for exploring issues associated with international TESOL students. Taking from these theorists the concepts of power/knowledge, subjectivity, identity and agency, it also incorporates the work of cultural theorists such as Althusser and Hall. The participants were drawn from a wide range of cultural, linguistic and professional backgrounds, enrolled in Masters of TESOL at Australian universities. Through dialogic sessions with them and documentary analysis the discursive practices of the university sites were examined. So too were the subjectivities of students, as they became involved in the various activities of the institution in which they were enrolled, before, during and after their studies. Overall, the analysis reveals how the subjectivities of international TESOL students are constructed both by the university and the students themselves. The students’ accounts of their experiences broadly conflicted with the sweeping claims made by certain institutes, as well as by the dominant knowledges of marketing, international education and globalisation. The analysis shows how the subjectivities of international TESOL students are constructed by both the university and by the students themselves. It also shows how economics has become firmly entrenched in a market discourse and overall how international students are inscribed within policy shifts. The academic welfare, teaching and learning processes of the university indicated little awareness of the fluidity of culture and language or hybridity of its international students. A consequence of this myopic vision of the university is that students are subjected to constricting, divisive and exclusionary discursive practices that fail to properly acknowledge their complex histories, subjectivities and professional aspirations. An identity has been created for them that is not only superficial but also inaccurate. The findings point to the benefits of examining through a Foucauldian analytic such discursive practices of the institution alongside the subjectivities of students. The approach adopted in the research points to the possibility of moving beyond the current reductionist dualisms and binaries to the adoption of educational and institutional practices that recognise students’ hybridity and syncretic subjectivity. In such a space, the meaning of ‘international students’ and the institutional and educational policies and practices designed for them might be renegotiated. The study concludes that if the goal of genuine internationalisation is to be achieved, there is a need for significant institutional change.
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The Status of the Implementation of International Education in Texas Four-Year Colleges and Universities: a Comprehensive StudyBarker, Thomas S. 08 1900 (has links)
This study examined international education programs in Texas 4-year colleges and universities to determine how they compare to models found in the literature. A second purpose of the study was to compare Texas 4-year colleges and universities with out-of state benchmark institutions with a history of international education programs for over a decade. Areas examined in the study were: (a) administration of international education; (b) instructional activities of international education; (c) international student support services; and (d) outreach both in the community and abroad.
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