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Internationalizing the curriculum at home. Creating Global Citizens Locally. ICE-BREAKER ACTIVITY. WORKSHOP OUTCOMES. Articulate what it means to have a global perspective Describe the process involved in internationalizing the curriculum within the context of your discipline
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Internationalizing the curriculum at home Creating Global Citizens Locally
WORKSHOP OUTCOMES • Articulate what it means to have a global perspective • Describe the process involved in internationalizing the curriculum within the context of your discipline • Determine the degree to which a course will be internationalized • Identify resources to internationalize your courses • Create a course internationalization toolkit
Profile of a globally competent student A globally competent person can work effectively in international settings; is aware of and adaptable to diverse cultures, perceptions, and approaches; is familiar with the major currents of global change and the issues they raise; and is capable of communicating effectively across cultural and linguistic boundaries. (Brustein, n.d.)
Why Internationalize? • Strengthen liberal education. • Enhance the quality of teaching and research. • Prepare students for careers. • Contribute to local economic development and competitiveness. • Enhance students’ ability to live in an increasingly multicultural environment in the U.S. • Enhance the development, excellence, and relevance of institutions in other countries. • Contribute to international and intercultural understanding. • Produce experts required to support U.S. foreign policy and diplomacy. • Create goodwill and support for the U.S. and other countries. (Green & Olsen, 2003)
KEY TERMINOLOGY International education is a comprehensive approach to the students’ academic plan that intentionally prepares them to be active and engaged participants in a multicultural, interconnected world through internationalization of the curriculum(Green & Olsen, 2003). Internationalization is the process of integrating an international, intercultural, or global dimension into the purpose, functions, or delivery of postsecondary education (Knight, 2003).
An attainable global perspective Perspective Consciousness Cross-Cultural Awareness “State of the Planet” Awareness Awareness of Human Choices Knowledge of Global Dynamics
activity #1 Work in pairs or groups to answer the questions in the workbook.
OTHER PRECOURSE READINGS • College Learning for the New Global Century (2007) • Where Faculty Live: Internationalizing the Disciplines (2006)
LEARNING BY DESIGN Create Global Learning Outcomes Design Summative Assessment Align & Sequence Reflect & Use Results to Improve for Next Time Start Here! Align & Sequence Design Learning Activities, Formative Assessments, & Course Content Implement the New Curriculum
SMART Goals
Approaches to CURRICULUM inz • Add-on • Infusion • Transformation MASTER COURSE LEVEL COURSE SECTION LEVEL COURSE SECTION LEVEL COURSE SECTION LEVEL (Bond, 2003)
Levels of curriculum inz • assessment (ACE, Internationalization in Action)
activity #2 Work in pairs or groups to answer the questions in the workbook.
GOALS of the Course internationalization toolkit • Encourage curriculum internationalization • Create new materials to share college-wide • Maintain institutional knowledge
Project overview • Optimal for 2-3 faculty to work together on one toolkit • Can be one or more toolkits as an end product • Must go through the workshop the first time • A completed toolkit and at least 6 artifacts required to pass the course
Inz resources SAGE Website: • INZ Faculty Resource Guide • Competencies of a Global Citizen • International Guest Speakers • Travel Blogs Declaration of Interdependence
Inz resources Valencia’s INZ SharePoint: • INZ Library • Internet Resources • Course INZ Toolkits • Professional Development ACE’s Center for Interationalization & Global Engagement ACE’s Internationalization in Action
Example #1 – expanded GLO DISCIPLINE: Humanities AUDIENCE: Students in general education. EXISTING CLO: Shows sensitivity toward different cultural perspectives. EXPANDED GLOs: • Describes perspectives from diverse cultures and historical eras • Represents a greater degree of interest in and conviction about global themes • Identifies the perspective of the contemporary indigenous population with objectivity
Example #2 – MODIFIED GLO DISCIPLINE: Criminal Justice AUDIENCE: Students studying to be police officers. EXISTING CLO: Students will critique various dilemmas that confront criminal justice professionals. MODIFIED GLO: Students will critique various dilemmas that confront criminal justice professionals from a cross-cultural perspective.
Example #3 – New GLO DISCIPLINE: Education AUDIENCE: Students studying to be teachers in secondary school. NEW GLO: Students will be able to demonstrate their ability to modify classroom pedagogy based on the belief and value systems of various classroom ethnicities. EXAMPLE: What is important to know about the Asian culture in terms of teaching and learning? ASSESSMENT: Develop a lesson plan for X with a variety of learning activities that support student learning based on the culture from which they come.
Example #3 – New GLO PERFORMANCE INDICATORS: • Understand secondary students’ cross-cultural belief and value systems based on their country of origin. • Compare and contrast American pedagogy with that of other countries. • Develop classroom activities that support secondary students’ learning styles from a cross-cultural perspective.
Building your toolkit – Part #2 Click the toolbox to go to course INZ toolkits on the INZ SharePoint
Next steps • Follow online course instructions • Visit and explore INZ Sharepoint • Do research to build your toolkit content • Prepare final project presentation or video