Internationalising the curricula

As UK universities become increasingly international, a more globally conscious educational environment benefits overseas and home students alike

May 29, 2008

The internationalisation of universities means that UK-based lecturers can no longer assume that students are familiar with British television, popular culture or even basic Western notions about economics, says Digby Warren, learning, teaching and curriculum developer at London Metropolitan University.

Before you launch into internationalising a curriculum, however, you need to ask why you are doing so, says Beatrice Merrick, director of services and research at Ukcosa, the Council for International Education.

“Part of what drives this is making the curriculum more relevant to international students rather than being Anglocentric,” she says. “But it is also making UK students more prepared for a globalised world.”

Warren notes that rethinking the curricula is also a way to consider the needs of increasing numbers of non-traditional students from within the UK. “They are not entering the system with the conventional middle-class liberal education on which, historically, university has rested,” he says.

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Merrick says you need to recognise that internationalising the curriculum will vary from subject to subject. But she says tackling the issue at an institutional level is a way of prompting action from people who may not have thought about it before. “It’s an area where there aren't straightforward right or wrong answers,” she says.

Glynis Cousin, senior adviser at the Higher Education Academy, says it is a good idea to combine a subject-based approach with pressure from the top. She praises Leeds Metropolitan University, which has a strategy for every academic to look at his or her programmes and assess the extent to which cross-cultural capabilities can be integrated.

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Elspeth Jones, dean of the Leslie Silver International Faculty at Leeds Metropolitan, suggests thinking in detail about internationalisation every time a course comes up for review, which means that every course will eventually get covered.

Guidelines for curriculum review issued by her university stress that internationalising the curriculum must be done in the wider context of students’ overall university experience. Among many other suggestions, these guidelines urge careful use of language – for example, not saying things such as “Asians are...” or “In Africa...”

The guidelines suggest displaying international materials in the faculty, rewarding intercultural perspectives in assessments, and encouraging students to question whether their work excludes any national or other group.

Alison Dickens, senior academic co-ordinator for the Higher Education Academy subject centre for languages, linguistics and area studies, says you need to ask yourself whether you are using case studies, examples and references to academic work from outside the UK, whether students and staff have opportunities to learn languages, and to spend time abroad.

"These are all things to think about rather than being gospel," she says.

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Merrick says it is useful to establish links with partner universities abroad and perhaps develop a joint degree. This is a particularly good way of internationalising the curriculum because overseas partners can highlight differences in perspective that UK university staff may not be aware of.

David Pilsbury, chief executive of the Worldwide Universities Network, says students need opportunities to participate in a programme in a way that reflects and enables internationalisation. “The curriculum on its own is not enough to create an international programme,” he says. “It is how students engage with the curriculum that makes the difference.”

Merrick says it can be useful to make the most of the insights of your international students. “Expecting them to represent their country or culture can be too much of a burden,” she says. “But be open to what they bring.”

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Cousin suggests using both home and international students to inform you about their experience of studying on a multicultural campus – Coventry University is offering bursaries to students explicitly to conduct this kind of research – so that their findings can inform your curriculum.

But don't get too carried away about internationalisation, warns Dickens. If your curriculum is too international, foreign students may object that they are not receiving the British education they have travelled a long way to receive.

Links:

• Academy Exchange, a special issue of Higher Education Academy magazine, focusing on internationalisation, www.heacademy.ac.uk/4131.htm

• Internationalising Higher Education by Elspeth Jones and Sally Brown, Routledge, is published in May Worldwide Universities Network, www.wun.ac.uk

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• Council for International Education, Ukcosa, www.ukcosa.org.uk

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Reader's comments (1)

Internationalisation of the Computer Science curriculum seems to be much neglected but yet has so much potential to encompass and embed world cultures and languages. Put simply, Computer Science departments could teach students how to build software for the world. I have done much work on precisely this topic. My specialism is Computer Science internationalisation. I am a long time practitioner of internationalised Computer Science teaching. My aim is simple, teach students global Computer Science and programming skills. You can get a flavour of my thinking and work by browsing my blog at https://schappo.blogspot.co.uk My most recent endeavour is to develop a set of internationalised Computer Science exercises. Please see https://schappo.blogspot.co.uk/2018/01/computer-science-internationalization_21.html André Schappo

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