Title: An International Strategy for Education
1An International Strategy for Education
- Mary Ritter and Ulrike-Hillemann-Delaney
2An International Strategy for Education agenda
- Drivers for internationalisation of education
- Direct, education per se
- Synergy with other aspects of college strategy
- Models for international education interactions
- Guiding principles and key questions
- Strategy development
- E.g. the Middle East
- Today is the first stage for discussion
- Next steps, to focus on individual key regions of
the world research, assess, discuss, decide
3Internationalisation of education
- 2 main drivers for the internationalisation of
Higher Education - Educational rationale per se
- Support for other strategic goals of the HEI
(research, finance, reputation) -
4Education rationale does our education reflect
the global context?
- Global problems need global solutions
- Global brain power
- Are we educating global citizens?
- For the global employment market
- To be aware of the challenges facing our global
society - To sustain the UKs competitiveness in the world
- What educational goals might be needed beyond
subject-specific knowledge? - Entrepreneurship (international aspects of)
- Knowledge of global economics/international
management - Knowledge of world politics and history
- Transferable skills, including intercultural
skills
5Education rationale How can we achieve this? (1)
- Encourage extra-curricular activities how can
we support this? - Humanities
- Student mobility
- One year exchanges
- Summer internships
- 46 Imperials students are from outside the UK
therefore already international - Our competitors (e.g. USA, Europe) could be our
collaborators - Many/most have a requirement for a semester/year
abroad - Are there new collaborations we should establish
to create opportunities for our students? - Universities and other institutions Industry
- Split and joint PhD programmes
- Reciprocal fit/synergism with other elements of
overall College strategy
6Education rationale How can we achieve this? (2)
- Address global issues within the curriculum?
Benefit from the international student
population. (Are there existing good examples?) - Implications for teaching staff (teaching
programme, their own intercultural skills) - Transferable skills training (Roberts), with
intercultural focus - In collaboration with international partners
- IDEA League 3-day residential summer school for
early PhD students. Based on our RSD workshop.
2007, 2008. - Singapore (NTU, NUS, ASTAR) 2008, 2009 (PMI2
funding) - Hong Kong and Tsinghua, 2009
- Imperial-Tsinghua 2009-2010. PMI2 funding.
Programme aimed at later stage PhD students, with
career and entrepreneurship focus. - Excellent feedback from both participants and
collaborating universities dual relevance
education per se and support for PhD
collaboration - PMI2 and Roberts funding. Team of professional
staff. - Research ? lessons learnt integrated into our
home programme
7Synergy with overall College strategy (1)
- Research Collaborations
- Closer links through student exchanges on all
levels - UG exchanges and Joint Masters Programmes as pool
for PhD students - Split and joint PhDs
- Alumni
- Benefits both students and College
- Brings benefit now and future potential
- Reputation
- Addressing global challenges through skills
development - Quality of education /graduates (the global
university for science, engineering, medicine and
business) - Alumni
8Synergy with overall College Strategy (2)
- Financial Income for the College
- On Campus
- Competitive pricing of courses
- Increase of overseas fee-paying students at PGT
level - Diversification of markets on all levels to
maintain numbers and quality - Do we need quotas on some courses?
- Transnational Education?
- Mentoring
- Distance Learning
- Overseas Campus
9Modes of international interaction
10Levels of international engagement
- Level 1- an institution-level partnership
- Level 2 a Faculty-level partnership
- Level 3 an individual collaboration between
academic staff - Levels 1 and 2 are key to international strategy,
but - Level 3 is essential for their success
- Also, any Level 1 and 2 partnership needs buy-in
from our academic staff because the
research/teaching will be done by them
11International partnerships - what?
- Physical presence
- Multi-faculty campus
- UG, PGT, PGR, (research) e.g. OGTech Nottingham
Malaysia, Nottingham China - UG,PGT, PGR, no research (UNSW-Asia)
- PGT, PGR (MIT in Abu Dhabi/Masdar)
- UG /- PG (Newcastle Medical School Malaysia)
- Subject-specific campus (e.g. research, clinical,
education) - (imperial Abu Dhabi Diabetes Centre Imperial
Qatar Genomics Centre UCL School of Energy and
Resources, Adelaide) - Teaching franchise
- Home courses taught on overseas campus (Uclan in
China) - Mentor consultant role for setting up new
institution - (Imperial-KAUST Imperial-IIT Delhi)
12International partnerships - what?
- Virtual presence
- Consortia with collaborative education and/or
research programmes - IDEA League
- Bilateral/trilateral research collaboration /-
collaborative PhD programmes e.g. - Imperial-Singapore (ASTAR Research Institutes,
NTU) - Imperial, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Hanyang
University Korea Bioengineering - Student exchange programmes
- Multiple partners (MOU)
- Available data and hence analysis on usage not
good -
- A collaborative virtual presence requires
capability on the part of overseas partner, as
well as Imperial
13Guiding principles and key questions
- Guiding principles and key questions
- Essential for all potential projects
14Major guiding principles 1
- That the proposed activity (education, research,
innovation) fits with Imperials strategic
priorities - That there is an unmet need (Is this a real
opportunity to do something that Imperial needs
to do and otherwise would not do? Is the activity
of real benefit to Imperia?) - That there is (matching) capability within
Imperial (Do we have the people, the skills and
the resources/infrastructure? Alternatively,
could we recruit them? - That the proposed activity does not pose
unreasonable reputational or financial risk (the
level of reputational and/or financial risk has
been thoroughly assessed and found to be
acceptable)
15Major guiding principles 2
- That the proposed activity is consistent with the
ethical standards expected of Imperial and a UK
institution - That the proposed activity will be conducted
according to a legal framework that is consistent
with that of the UK - That the proposed activity does not conflict with
existing or potential future partnerships of a
similar nature and/or within the same
geographical region (e.g. activity is
exclusive/non-exclusive replicative) - A formal risk-benefit analysis is needed for any
major project
16Some further, specific, questions 1
- The proposed activity What exactly is the nature
of the proposed activity? (Focused research?
Focused PGR? Broad, including UG, PG and
research?). - Prioritisation How does this opportunity compare
with other opportunities? - Motivation Why are we interested in the
opportunity? (First class research? First class
PGR that fit with research strategy? Money?
Essentially, is it for research, education,
innovation, money, competition or collaboration?
- Real costs What is the duration of funding? What
are the real costs of delivery (staff time, other
opportunities lost)? - Delivery What is the likelihood of operational
success? Is this an activity to which our staff
would wish to devote time? (e.g. focused research
versus UG teaching)
17Strategy development and delivery
- Key regions of the world
- Europe
- Middle East
- India
- SE Asia
- China
- North America
- Africa
- South America
- Differ in education, population size, research
capacity, financial capacity - Different models of interaction will be suitable
for different regions of the world
18Next steps regional strategy what is our
motivation?
- Income generation
- Mutually beneficial collaboration
- Competitive advantage
- An international footprint
- A mixture of the above
- Broader UK foreign policy issues
- Caution
- If money is the motivation unlikely to be a
pot of gold/massive premiums - Most projects require the funding to spent within
the donor country - If this is the case, management fees, overheads
etc must be negotiated appropriately
19Next steps regional strategies research and
assessment
- Focus on each geographical region separately
- Research into
- political/economic situation
- Population size and need
- education and research capability
- Status of individual universities
- Imperial staff linkages (international database)
- Assess most appropriate model(s) for interaction
- Assess the best target(s) for interaction
- country/state within the region
- City
- Universities
- Etc
- Work in progress (Middle East, India, SE Asia,
China, Europe, N America)
20The Middle East
21Opportunities in the Middle East
- Period of great change - many things are possible
- Education moved to top of agenda in most
countries. In some (e.g. Abu Dhabi, Qatar)
governance and education are being radically
restructured - Countries have considerable funding at their
disposal, therefore potential opportunity for
income generation for HEI such as Imperial (but
even these countries are suffering an economic
downturn) - Projects could provide involvement in building
education and research capacity - Collaboration could provide access to new
avenues/resource material/facilities for research - Personal approaches made to the Rector by Masdar
(Abu Dhabi Science, Technology and Higher
Education Foundation) and the equivalent body in
Qatar
22Risks in the Middle East education 1
- Education not comparable to UK poor quality of
local student intake - e.g. GOTech 4-year BSc 1-year pre-degree
course plus an additional 1-year English Language
course if IELTS lt4.5 - Local social/cultural factors undermine QA
- e.g. inability to discipline local nationals
impossible to fail a member of a leading family
women avoid graduating to avoid forced marriages - Lack of educationally qualified local students
- and the best likely to want to go overseas, to
the home campus - Resultant need to recruit students in from other
areas (eg SE Asia) - would not sit well with our aim to attract the
best to Imperial in London
23Risks in the Middle East education 2
- School grade inflation, to help local students
get into overseas campuses - one college in Dubai awards 80 of students 71
(pass-mark 70) - Cultural differences (e.g. requirement for
segregation of the sexes) - Standing of other universities that we might
share a location with - risk to our brand (e.g. Middlesex University in
Dubai Knowledge Village) - No evidence that any existing satellite campus
has come close to the standards of the home
campus
24Risks in the Middle East research
- Local research base and infrastructure is
currently very small - Doctoral programmes are having a hard time
finding qualified local candidates and/or
recruit/retain international doctoral students - Integrated research and education programmes are
rare - Applied research ventures seem to have better
chance of succeeding, especially when tied into a
structured programme or driven by a clear
commercial imperative (e.g. Imperial Abu Dhabi
Diabetes Centre Imperial-Qatar projects)
25Possible models for Imperials engagement in the
Middle East, as an example
- Mentor role
- Multi-faculty campus
- Single-faculty campus
- Subject-specific centre
- research/PG education
- application (clinical care, engineering)
- Student exchanges
- UG, PGT, PGR
26Possible models mentor role (1)
- Clear benefits must be identified, e.g. finance,
future research collaboration, PGR students
otherwise altruistic - Boundary between mentoring and education delivery
can be blurred latter could impose heavy
teaching load for Imperial staff - Quality assurance difficult
- Managerial distraction
- Brand, reputation
27Possible models Multi-faculty campus (2)
Single-faculty campus (3)
- Multi-faculty
- Unlikely to contribute to Imperials core
strengths in research - Managerial distraction
- Heavy teaching load
- Does not fit Imperial culture (staff will not
want to go out to teach) - Quality assurance very difficult
- Divergent evolution leading to reputational
problems brand damage - Single-faculty
- Similar problems as above if UG education
included in remit - If restricted to PG, more likely to contribute to
Imperials core strengths in research, but
teaching load if PGT - Difficult to establish sufficiently large
research body to support high quality PhD training
28Possible models subject-specific centre(s) (4)
- Reflect and tie into Imperials research
- Opportunities in Engineering and Healthcare areas
- Some model projects already
- Helps to develop a brand
- Associated educational activities would be linked
to research focus
29Middle east current projects
- Abu Dhabi
- Diabetes Centre
- Masdar Research Network
- Qatar
- CO2-carbonates (Shell, Qatar Petrolium, QF)
- Under discussion
- BioBank
- Genomics Centre of Excellence
- Robotics
- Saudi Arabia
- KAUST (Chemical Engineering and Materials)
30Possible models for Imperials engagement in the
Middle East
- (Mentor role)
- Multi-faculty campus
- Single-faculty campus
- Subject-specific centre
- research/PG education
- application (clinical care, engineering)
- Student exchanges
- UG, PGT, PGR
31International Office
IO staff have responsibility for specific
geographical regions
Marketing and recruitment of international
students
IO Responsibilities
Welcome, induction, enquiries and support
Middle East
N and S America
India
SE Asia
Africa
China Japan
International Collaborative PhDs, Board meetings
Hosting international visits, briefings for
academic staff
Support for international funding initiatives
UKIERI, PMI2
Senior IO staff also have Faculty-facing
responsibilities interaction advice for
individual academics
32International Strategy
33India
34Opportunities in India
- Period of great change - rise to a global power
- Population as large as China by 2020
- Forecast to be worlds 3rd largest economy by
2050 - Education moved to top of agenda
- Young and growing population
- Desperate need for graduates and researchers
doctors - Ambitious expansion of HE provision (new IITs,
IISERs and universities) - Projects could provide involvement in building
education and research capacity - Collaboration could provide access to new
avenues/resource material/facilities for research - Already has a small number of world class HE
institutions - Good cultural interface, language
- Indian UK diaspora
35Risks of engagement in India
- Stiff competition with other universities (e.g.
both Oxford and Cambridge) delay is a risk - Shortage of Indian academics may put pressure on
time/workload commitment of Imperial academics - Gap between quality of IITs and most universities
- Much will depend upon private finance (e.g. 65
of medical care is private sector) - Benefit will be in research and education rather
than in direct financial gain
36Opportunities in SE Asia
- A very varied region
- Singapore
- Education and research hub
- Biopolis, Fusionopolis, NUS, NTU
- Many close links with Imperial e.g.
- Collaborative PhD (and masters) programmes
- Substantial investment in research and education
(China will soon catch up) - Recruiting staff worldwide
- UNSW experience with a teaching campus
- Good experience with/benefit from research
training/PhD programme
37Opportunities in China
- Period of great change - rise to a global power
- Large population (1,322,000,000) but
- 1 child family, social problems, ageing
population - India may catch up by 2020
- Currently worlds 3rd largest economy
- Education high on agenda
- Already has several world class HE institutions
- Scholarship programme
- Many students may stay in China to study in the
future - Imperial has many 11 interactions but no major
College-level projects. - MOUs signed in April 2007 with Shanghai Jiaotong
and Tsinghua universities discussions with
Chinese Academy of Sciences - PMI2 transferable skills project with Tsinghua
- Collaborative PhD (cant be joint) with Tsinghua
- Discussion planned with Jiaotong
38International Affairs
- Pro Rector (International Affairs) Mary Ritter
- International Relations Advisor John Wood
- Head of International Strategy and Partnerships
- Ulrike Hillemann-Delaney
- Head of International Student Support
- Sharon Bolton
- Head of International Student Recruitment and
Marketing - previously Ulrike Hillemann-Delaney tba
- Staff also have Faculty-facing and geographical
responsibilities