Towards diverse, critical understandings of “international” for higher education

Z. Huang, Heather Cockayne, Jenna Mittelmeier
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Abstract

PurposeThe study explores diverse and critical understandings of “international” in a higher education curriculum context, situated in a curriculum review of a postgraduate taught programme entitled “International Education” at a university located in England. Our study problematises and decentres some dominant, normalised notions of “international”, exploring critical possibilities of engaging with the term for higher education internationalisation.Design/methodology/approachWe examined a set of programme curriculum documents and conducted a survey exploring teaching staff’s uses and interpretations of “international” in their design and delivery of course units. Through a thematic analysis of the dataset, we identify what “international” might mean or how it may be missing across the curriculum.FindingsOur findings suggest a locally-developed conceptualisation of “international” beyond the normalised interpretation of “international” as the inclusion or comparison of multiple nations, and different, other countries around the global world. More diverse, critical understandings of the term have been considered, including international as intercultural, competences, ethics, languages and methods. The study provides an example approach to reflective scholarship that programmes can undergo in order to develop clarity, depth and purposefulness into internationalisation as enacted in a local curriculum context.Originality/valueThe study provides a first step towards establishing clearer guidelines on internationalising the curriculum by higher education institutions and individual programmes in order to challenge a superficial engagement of “international” within internationalisation. It exemplifies a starting point for making purposeful steps away from normalised notions and assumptions of international education and facilitates development towards its critical, ethically-grounded opportunities.
对高等教育 "国际性 "的多元、批判性理解
目的本研究通过对英国一所大学名为 "国际教育 "的研究生授课课程进行课程审查,探讨了高等教育课程背景下对 "国际 "的各种批判性理解。我们的研究对 "国际 "的一些主流的、规范化的概念提出了问题,并对其进行了解构,探索了高等教育国际化过程中使用该术语的批判性可能性。我们研究了一系列课程文件,并开展了一项调查,探索教学人员在设计和教授课程单元时对 "国际 "的使用和解释。通过对数据集的主题分析,我们确定了 "国际 "可能意味着什么,或者它如何在课程中缺失。研究结果我们的研究结果表明,"国际 "的概念是由当地发展而来的,超越了将 "国际 "解释为包括或比较多个国家以及全球不同的其他国家的常规解释。我们考虑了对这一术语更多样化的批判性理解,包括作为跨文化、能力、伦理、语言和方法的国际性。这项研究为反思性学术研究提供了一个范例,课程可以通过反思性学术研究,在本地课程背景下,清晰、深入、有目的性地发展国际化。原创性/价值这项研究为高等教育机构和个别课程建立更清晰的课程国际化指导方针迈出了第一步,以挑战国际化中 "国际 "的肤浅理解。它是一个起点,让我们有目的地摒弃国际教育的常规化概念和假设,促进国际教育朝着批判性的、以伦理为基础的方向发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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