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Teaching towards ‘Cosmopolitan Learning?’ International students and culturally-aware initiatives in an Australian university Jeannie Daniels - Curriculum, Teaching & Learning Centre La Trobe University, Melbourne.
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La Trobe University – Faculty of Business, Economics & Law (FBEL) Large numbers of international students – 35% of FBEL students are international; – 72% of university’s international student population
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Most of our university students used to look like this
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And this And often like this Our students look more like this
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‘[International students are] not accustomed to having to participate in the Australian manner and a lack of language competence and self- confidence further affects their capacity to do so’ (Novera, 2008, p.477)
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Challenges Language -40 different countries Educational practices/cultures – Learning styles; academic requirements; engagement
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Facing the challenges Voluntary workshops for first year skills acquisition – academic skills – information literacy; writing; and numeracy – Cultural ‘norms’ of university; of ‘western-style’ learning
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Cultural preparation workshops Design informed by literature and research in which educators identified: – English language; academic terminology; referencing issues; also – Behaviours – silences; expectations of being ‘given’ knowledge; not asking for clarification
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What culture? Whose culture? And whose education? Western education? Or …....… education that acknowledges the intercultural and transnational nature of the economic, political and social?
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Cosmopolitanism Not a new concept, many definitions Kant (1960): moral theory Nussbaum (1996) : political philosophy Rizvi (2009): cultural disposition – social, economic and political practices that respond to contemporary conditions of globalisation – have one thing in common…
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The importance they attach to education: Cosmopolitan learning ‘a different perspective on knowing and interacting with others’ (Rizvi 2008, p.111)
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Cosmopolitan learners Empirical understanding of global transformations Ethical orientation towards them Elements: Social identities Cultural trajectories Connectivity
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The workshops- double purpose How things are ‘done’ here – Western academic cultural ‘norms’ Prepare for active learning through – Knowing own culture – Examining their intercultural experiences – Recognizing difference – Considering the ways these differences impact on them
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The workshops – process Pilot workshops poorly attended Insufficient students for evaluation Will persevere Won’t overcome the language issues we face BUT …
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Potential to better prepare students for WHAT and HOW Also WHY: – Why things are ‘done’ this way, and – (learning to ask) why as a basis for developing an active and critical approach to learning – A basis for Cosmopolitan Learning?
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References Kant, I. 1960/1795. Perpetual peace. In LW Beck (ed.) On history (pp.3-13), New York; MacMillan Ly Thi Tran, 2008, ‘Unpacking academic requirements: international students in Management and Education disciplines’, Higher Education Research & Development, vol.23, no.3, pp.245-256. Novera, Isvet Amri, 2004, ‘Indonesian postgraduate students studying in Australia: an examination of their academic, social and cultural experiences’, International Education Journal, vol.5, no.4, 475-487. Nussbaum, M. 1996. Patriotism and cosmopolitanism. In M.Nussbaum & J. Cohen (eds.) For the love of country: debating the limits of patriotism (pp.1-14). Cambridge, MA; Beacon Press. Rizvi, Fazal, 2009, ‘Towards cosmopolitan learning’, Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, vol.30, no.3, pp.253-268. Rizvi, Fazal, 2008, ‘Education and its cosmopolitan possibilities’ in B. Lingard, J. Nixon & S. Ranson (eds.) Transforming learning in schools and communities: the remaking of education for a cosmopolitan society. London & New York; Continuum.
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