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Graduates and Global Citizens

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How is it related to globalisation? ... Proxemics. Chronemics. Kinesics. Oculesics. Individualism. Power Distance. Uncertainty- Avoidance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Graduates and Global Citizens


1
Graduates and Global Citizens
  • Perspectives on Learning Teaching
  • David Killick
  • Leeds Metropolitan University

2
Internationalisation
  • What is it?
  • How is it related to globalisation?
  • What might be some appropriate graduate
    attributes for global citizens?
  • Cross-cultural capability global perspectives

3
Basic PropositionsInternationalisation -
  • is about all students
  • must be embedded across the disciplines
  • requires a strategic approach
  • requires a whole institution approach
  • is not an optional extra

4
Basic PropositionsInternationalisation -
  • is about all students
  • must be embedded across the disciplines
  • requires a strategic approach
  • requires a whole institution approach
  • is not an optional extra
  • Meeting the needs of diverse students
  • Capitalising on the diverse perspectives and
    knowledge of those students
  • Our own development to help achieve these

5
Graduate attributes for effective and
responsible engagement with a globalising world
  • Cross-cultural capability
  • Intercultural awareness and the associated
    communication skills.
  • International and multicultural perspectives on
    ones discipline area.
  • Application in practice

6
Global Perspectives
  • the relationships between local actions and
    global consequences, highlighting inequalities
  • helping us reflect upon major issues such as
    global warming, world trade, poverty, sustainable
    development, and human migration, and
  • promoting a response based on justice and
    equality not charity.

7
critically examine how the student, through
participation on the course and as a member of
the university community, is enabled to develop
  • the awareness, knowledge and skills to operate in
    multicultural contexts and across cultural
    boundaries
  • the awareness, knowledge and skills to operate in
    a global context
  • values commensurate with those of responsible
    global citizenship.

8
Interaction
  • Read the instructions on your card
  • Immediately begin
  • Carry out the instructions with everybody in the
    room
  • When you have finished please sit down again

9
Barriers to engaging with the other
Individualism Power Distance Uncertainty-
Avoidance Masculine/Feminine Time Orientation
Haptics Proxemics Chronemics Kinesics Oculesics
Prototypes, Stereotypes Misattribution
World View
Schema
10
For each, think of a nationality who are said
  • to treat their wives very badly.
  • to be very hypocritical.
  • to be cruel to their children.
  • to be un-hygienic.
  • not to have proper meals
  • to be cold and hard, like their weather

11
Stereotyping
  • International Students ?
  • Asians ?
  • Chinese students ?

6,706,993,152 731,000,000
1,330,044,544
4,050,404,000


12
Classic Misattribution Error
  • When we do good its down to us.
  • When we do bad its down to circumstance.
  • When they do good its down to circumstance.
  • When they do bad its down to them.

13
Misattribution
14
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15
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16
Prototype Theory
17
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18
Schema
19
Supply Chain Management
In pairs quickly note key features in supply
chain management as it applies to the
agricultural industry
20
Crossing the line
21
Procedural Schema
22
A man went to the doctor
23
Watch Your Tongue!
  • Whose language is it anyway?
  • International English

24
English as an International Language Kachrus
Model
  • 0.5 billion speakers of English in inner and
    outer circles
  • 1.0 billion in expanding circle
  • 80 of conversations in English involve no native
    speaker

25
Sounds
  • OK
  • She lives in London
  • Final falls
  • The importance of stress
  • .and
    impotence

26
Get
27
Sentences Pragmatics
Im in the bath.
28
Issues and Impact
  • Communication
  • Schema
  • Cultural norms
  • Stereotyping

Culture Shock
29
Aspects of Culture Shock
  • anxious, confused, apparently apathetic
  • lacking points of reference, social norms and
    rules to guide their actions
  • powerlessness, meaninglessness, normlessness,
    self and social estrangement, and social
    isolation
  • a continuous general free-floating anxiety
    which affects peoples normal behaviour

Adrian Furnham, The experience of being an
overseas student, in McNamara Harris (Eds) 1997
Overseas Students in Higher Education Issues in
teaching and learning, Routledge, pp14-15
30
Culture Shock continued
  • confusion in role, role expectations, values,
    feeling and self-identity.
  • surprise, anxiety, even disgust and indignation
    after becoming aware of cultural differences.
  • feelings of impotence due to not being able to
    cope with the new environment.

Adrian Furnham, The experience of being an
overseas student, in McNamara Harris (Eds) 1997
Overseas Students in Higher Education Issues in
teaching and learning, Routledge, pp14-15
31
How good is your world knowledge?
  • Sketch a map of the world

32
Geographic projection
33
GDP Projection
34
Internet projection
35
Population projection
36
critically examine how the student, through
participation on the course and as a member of
the university community, is enabled to develop
  • the awareness, knowledge and skills to operate in
    multicultural contexts and across cultural
    boundaries
  • the awareness, knowledge and skills to operate in
    a global context
  • values commensurate with those of responsible
    global citizenship.

37
Review
  • Internationalisation is about higher education
    responding to a globalising world
  • One model proposes the twin dimensions of
    cross-cultural capability and global perspectives
  • Communication across cultures is a key aspect of
    cross-cultural capability
  • Understanding the barriers erected by our own
    cultural norms, values, schemas, and practices is
    an important attribute

38
Review
  • May be more relevant to our home students than
    our international students
  • Home students further disadvantaged by speaking
    English as a first language
  • We need to develop model good practice
  • Perhaps effective intercultural group work is a
    key tool to enable our students to be more
    effective in this dimension of global citizenship

39
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40
Diamond Ranking
  • Diamond rank each of the statements on the
    requirements for an internationalised curriculum
    according to how important you think each to be.

Most
Least
41
Diamond Ranking II
  • Review your ranking on the basis of your
    choices, have you given most/ least importance
    to
  • Knowledge
  • Skills
  • Values Attitudes
  • Equal ranking 1 from each
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