Title: Student Experience
1Student Experience ( Employment) WorkshopPMI
Development Day, 6 December 2007
1. Introduction - Dominic Scott 2. The story
so far - Celia Partridge 3. Priorities for the
future - All
2The story so far
- What priorities did we identify?
- What are we doing about it?
3Priorities identified
- Importance of continually improving standards of
support services - More time and more money for staff to devise
innovative solutions - Managing the transition pre-arrival and
orientation - Realistic financial expectations for students
4Improving standards
- How do we measure how well we are doing?
- How do we avoid complacency?
- What about staff new to their role?
5Improving standards
- Benchmarking survey
- First UK-wide survey of provision for
international students in HEIs (and a similar
survey for FE institutions is planned for 2008). - The full report allows you to benchmark your
institution against the national average on all
aspects of international student support - We found
- Consistency between institutions in offering core
services to international students. - Some institutions going beyond the basic
services, or managing to provide services to a
larger proportion of their students.
6(No Transcript)
7Improving standards
8Improving standards
9Improving standards
- Database of best practice
- Case studies available on UKCISA website at
www.ukcisa.org.uk/pmi covering topics such as - Orientation programmes
- English language support
- Support for dependants Family Ambassador scheme
- One World Week
- Research on the experience of international
students
10Improving standards
11Improving standards
- Review of continuing professional development
(CPD) for staff working with international
students - Guide to dealing with the under 18s in FE HE
- Cross-cultural training DVD
- Regional sectoral workshops
- NUS/UKCISA residential conference
- Association for International Student Advisers
(AISA) conference - Relaunch of FE international network
12More time and more money
- Time is limited.
- Resources are limited.
- Where do new ideas come from?
- If someone has a good idea, what can they do
about it?
13More time and more money
- Pilot Projects Scheme
- 21 projects funded so far, with grants of up to
5,000 - to encourage innovation and develop and publicise
examples of best practice in international
student support
14More time and more money
- Examples of pilot projects
- Event management students organising events as
part of assessed group project (Bring a Brit,
Multicultural fair, etc) - E-buddies resource
- Computer game to raise awareness of academic
cultural differences - Training event for student officers
- FE/HE transitions
- Remote interviewing
- Re-orientation website
- Projects on work experience, job hunting
employment skills
15 16More time and more money
- Overseas Study Visits
- new this year, 5 visits funded so far, with
grants of up to 2,000 - aims to identify relevant aspects of policy and
best practice in institutions in key competitor
countries overseas - Visits supported include
- The involvement and development of international
students within volunteer programmes at Boston,
Massachusetts, North-Eastern, Harvard and MIT. - A comparative study of the processes of social
integration at Melbourne, Monash and Auckland.
17Managing the transition
- Pre-arrival preparation
- The effectiveness of the pre-arrival and
orientation period has a real impact on the
long-term success of international students,
especially for those on short-term or one-year
Masters courses, where a fast transition is
required. - Our HE benchmarking report showed that only
11 of institutions offered any interactive
online tools to prepare students in terms of
language, culture or study skills. - The need for an online pre-arrival interactive
resource which institutions can customise just
awarded the tender for this to Southampton
University. - This project will focus on the academic
experience - study skills, UK learning styles,
methods of teaching
18Managing the transition
Orientation
- Participation rate in orientation programmes
remains not much above 50 - Production of a new guide to running
Orientation Programmes taking into account new
technology
19Managing the transition
Mentoring and buddying schemes
- 57 of respondent institutions ran activities
specifically to encourage home and international
students to mix - Production of a guide to setting up and running
mentoring schemes for international students
20Managing the transition
- UK students response to international students
- International studentsreally just want to work
and they dont socialise that much and they
knuckle down and thats how they are different in
a way, they just dont have as much in common as
us. - I dont know if its a cultural thing. Because I
lived with two different Chinese people and one
did nothing, the other worked really hard. - Staff students unions already do a lot of work
to get UK and international students to mix with
each other - However, this is often from the perspective of
international students - We have encouraged research from the perspective
of UK students
21Managing the transition
- Understanding the UK student response to
internationalisation - (University of the West of England and
Bournemouth University) - Interactions between UK students and some groups
of international students can be limited,
problematic or non-existent. Proximity is not
enough - Discomfort with difference and obstacles around
language ability, work orientation and alcohol
use. - UK students report limited benefits of working in
an international classroom - Cross-cultural interaction in the classroom needs
to be actively managed - Discussion of this topic with UK students in
itself is a positive learning intervention
22Financial expectations
- International students find it difficult to
budget accurately or appropriately - What are international students expectations of
cost? - What else do we need to think about?
- Grant to International Students House to produce
a Guide to the cost of living and studying in
London - Currently working with UNIAID to develop an
online website called the International Student
Calculator
23Financial expectations
24Financial expectations
25Financial expectations
26More information
- UKCISA website
- www.ukcisa.org.uk/pmi
- email
- celia_at_ukcisa.org.uk
27Priorities for the future
What do you think? What are the gaps? What,
in terms of government policy or institutional
practice, are the 3 top areas where we are not
sufficiently satisfying expectations?
28Priorities for the future
What do you think? What projects, centrally
funded or supported, might best assist?
29Priorities for the future
What do you think? Which projects are most
urgent or important?