Internationalization of Teacher Education

A few days ago, we came across this online publication written by Charlotte West and published by the international education and exchange organization NAFSA. The document is entitled “Internationalization of Teacher Education” and reviews three case studies of US universities establishing innovative practices in incorporating intercultural learning into their programs.

The article first reviews the Cultural Immersion Programs at Indiana University‘s School of Education, which places students who will become certified teachers in an eight-week or semester program where they teach full-time in a new cultural environment. This environment can be abroad, on Navajo reservations in the Southwest of the United States, or in multicultural urban schools in the U.S. The main purpose of this experience is to immerse the future teachers as active participants of the host culture, working with students and other teachers and completing a project and written assignments that allow them to “dig below the surface of that cultural iceberg.” The School of Leadership and Education Sciences at the University of San Diego requires that all students have an international experience during the course of their program. This requirement, which seemed controversial at the beginning, has been accompanied by a wider offer of international programs that do not necessarily equal studying abroad. International experiences can also occur in the San Diego community, in multicultural environments or courses that allow students to explore the impact of international and intercultural relations in the local context, or working with international scholars or partners in the San Diego area. The objectives of the program are to “develop a deeper understanding of another culture; appreciate its differences and similarities; consider its gifts and challenges; and understand the educational and practical implications of cultural diversity and globalization issues.”

Charlotte West also features the efforts of University of Maryland‘s College of Education in developing an infrastructure that allows students, professors and departments to create international initiatives. A key part of this infrastructure is a university-wide international advisory committee that captures cross-departmental dialogue and acts as a hub to share ideas, resources and best practices to enhance international and intercultural programs across the school. This “think-tank” came along with the creation of an Office of International Initiatives, travel funds for students and professors, and an initiative to create an international experience requirement in certain programs. In their view, this intercultural educational experience should be “integrating, rather than adding on, a global perspective across all course content.” At AFS Intercultural Programs, we also want to foster an intercultural learning experience for our AFS Volunteers and Staff by providing the opportunity to understand international and intercultural challenges in our daily work. We value and admire the initiatives of like-minded professionals and organizations that believe that cultural immersion and exchange can enhance our learning experience, not only that of our participants, and can help us grow as professionals and as individuals.

Parlez-vous français?

 

Are you looking for the latest publications on multicultural, intercultural, and/or cross-cultural issues IN FRENCH? Well, here’s a link for you! L’Harmattan publishers, based in Paris, France, offers wonderful intercultural books and journals for our francophone readers. Their books can be found in several French bookstores, as well as online. There is even a space for video media to be accessed, including movies, documentaries and author interviews.

L’Harmattan emphasizes diversity, education and the importance of multicultural awareness and competence, which makes this resource an incredibly valuable tool for interculturally-focused French speakers.

Intercultural Events in October and November (US and Japan)

In the US, SIETAR-USA is celebrating the Twelfth Annual SIETAR-USA Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota from October 17 to 20. The theme of this year’s conference is “Navigating Complexity in an Intercultural World.”

Two AFS Staff members, Anna Collier (AFS International) and Carolyn Rehn (AFS-USA) are collaborating with a session titled A Global Curriculum for Intercultural Competence Development,” where they will be presenting the AFS Intercultural Link Learning Program. Attendees will learn more about Intercultural Learning and the way in which AFS develops a collective intercultural competence and a language around intercultural topics.

To attend the SIETAR-USA Conference, you can still register on the website and get ready for four days of exciting intercultural opportunities and learning experiences with the keynote speakers, concurrent sessions and other opportunities to connect with professionals and researchers.

Can’t make it to the SIETAR-USA Conference? SIETAR Baltimore (October 17) and SIETAR Metro New York (October 23) are organizing events this month in the US.

If you are in Japan, the Japan Intercultural Institute is celebrating its 2012 Annual Conference on November 11 in Tokyo. The title of the one-day conference is “Developing Global Leaders: Education and Training for Language, Culture and Confidence” and it will cover a wide variety of topics such as intercultural leadership, bilingualism and biculturalism in a globalized world, and intercultural understanding. To check the presentations, the special workshop and the keynote speaker, go to the conference’s website in the previous link and request a reservation.

Wherever you are, we encourage you to connect with Intercultural Education specialists in your area!

An AFS Interview with David Kolb

Dr. David Kolb

Many of you may already know David Kolb‘s work with experiential learning styles. They were originally published in 1984 and put David Kolb on the map as an important educational and cognitive theorist. This year, David Kolb and his team developed a new and improved version of the learning styles, Kolb 4.0, expanding from 4 to 9 ways that people learn, as well as exploring how to expand your capability to learn outside  your preferred style. Anna Collier of AFS International had the chance to sit down with Mr. Kolb and talk about his approach to learning. Look for the following interview in Volume 3, Issue 4 of the Intercultural Link Newsletter, to be published very soon!

How did you get involved in the intercultural field?

It was when I first became a professor at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, right after completing my Ph. D. in social psychology from Harvard. I was teaching organizational psychology by lecturing to graduate students on the psychological topics I found fascinating but they were getting bored. So, as they say, necessity is the mother of invention. At the same time, I was also working for the Peace Corps (an international volunteer organization based in the United States) back when they first started, running a self-assessment workshop for volunteers. Back then, the Peace Corps used psychologists to study volunteers, to see if they were fit to go overseas. The self-assessment we proposed was based on experiential learning. We ran training programs for volunteers that gave them experiences such as teaching and working in inner city neighborhoods. The volunteers were helped to reflect about how they handled these experiences, and then decide if they felt they would be successful with work like this in their prospective host country. The program had a positive result and we were successful in reducing the number of volunteers who returned early because they couldn’t handle the experience. It was then that I decided to apply the experiential learning cycle in my lecture courses. I developed exercises based on the group dynamics theory of Kirk Lewin and my work in the Peace Corps, and then applied them to my classes.

Since the original study groups were primarily U.S. Americans, have you applied your model and/or found it relevant in other cultures?

Yes, in subsequent years I used it in a number of different countries. If you go to our website, www.learningfromexperience.com, there is a section called the Research Library that has a bibliography of research papers. There are over 3000 articles published by researchers from all over the world. Many of the papers are on intercultural topics that would be of interest to many of your readers.

Which aspect of intercultural learning or communication has your work primarily focused on?

In my work with experiential learning, I noticed that people seemed to prefer and be most comfortable with different stages of the learning cycle. I coined the term “learning style” to describe these differences and developed the Learning Style Inventory, which has become a very popular tool for individuals to understand how they learn best. From my point of view, however, the most important idea is the learning cycle and the idea that it’s a process–That you become more effective at learning by managing your own learning process. This is the most powerful idea.

What do you wish more people would understand about intercultural learning?

For me, it is the idea of experiencing. I guess the big idea about experiential learning is that you have to experience to learn. Many times people don’t learn because they don’t allow themselves to experience. They have distractions and preoccupations and expectations that cause them to be trapped in their head telling themselves their own narrative. In addition they can actually create a social world that preserves their narrative. Expatriate managers, for example, often withdraw into a group of their countrymen that limits experiencing and learning about the host culture. Experiencing is a key part of the cycle of learning that has been overlooked. Some theorists have left out Experience altogether, while others confuse it with Action.

It is also important to realize the central role educators can take to help people go through the stages of the learning cycle. When transitioning from Experience to Reflection, an educator plays the role of Facilitator, for example. In the move from the Concrete realm to Reflexive, one needs to be facilitated. You need to draw people out, understand them and develop a relationship so that they feel comfortable saying and revealing their innermost thoughts and feelings. Abstraction requires a teaching and expert role, so that you can guide learners forward. The Action phase requires standards-setting and evaluating from the educator, so that you can say ‘you need to know this, and this, and this…’ The transition from Action to back to Experience needs coaching. These four educator roles are all necessary to take people through the learning cycle.

What inspired the updating to the Learning Style Inventory 4.0 this year?

It stemmed from feedback from users. Four styles didn’t adequately describe people’s styles. Some scored in the middle, so some styles were in between. It’s a result from years of experience with the instrument; we’ve given it a sharper resolution. In addition we have added a measure of learning flexibility to emphasize that learning styles are not fixed traits but dynamic states of learning that we all go through. We also changed the wording to be more understandable and user-friendly.

What would you suggest for people new to the ICL field to read as they get started?

A great article would be Using Experiential Learning Theory to Promote Student Learning and Development in Programs of Education Abroad, which I co-authored with Angela M. Passarelli. It was published in a brand new book that came out in June 2012 by Michael Vande Berg, along with Michael Paige and Kris Hemming Lou: Student Learning Abroad: What Our Students Are Learning, What They’re Not, and What We Can Do About It. Another interesting focus is “Deliberate Experiential Learning” that involves mindful management of one’s learning identity, learning relationships and deliberate practice.  There is a paper on this on our website www.learningfromexperience.com, as well as papers on mindfulness and experiential learning. You can deliberately choose to learn, and educators can help by making you aware of that.

What are the hot topics in ICL these days? And who do you consider to be producing the more intriguing thoughts that in turn advance your own contributions?

Great new theories have been produced by James Zull in his books The Art of Changing the Brain (2002) and From Brain to Mind (2011). He says concrete experiences come from sensory receptors in the brain, to the pre-temporal lobe, to the frontal lobe, then into the action region of the brain as the learning cycle progresses. The Student Learning Abroad book that I mentioned also has a lot of great articles in it that I would recommend.

Using Artwork to Explain ICL Concepts

“What do you see in this picture?” 

“And what do you see in this picture?”

Helga Schepersone of the 2012 Intercultural LINK Learning Program Qualified Trainers designed a lesson on Cultural Values and Dimensions to start with these questions and these photos by urban artist Slinkachu. The topics of the lesson revolve around some of the foundational concepts of the AFS Intercultural Link Learning Program: Hall’s Values Frameworks (High/Low Context, Territory, Personal Space) and Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions (Individualism vs. Collectivism, Power Distance, etc.).

Using artwork can be an engaging way to explain some ICL concepts. In this case, a Qualified Teacher from AFS Belgium Flanders used the pictures of Slinkachu’s Little People art project to get participants thinking about the idea of culture as something that may be perceived by the individual eye, but that is constructed in a collective way.

“Culture is the collective programming of the human mind that distinguishes the members of one human group from those of another. Culture in this sense is a system of collectively held values.” — Geert Hofstede.

 Do you know other artwork that could be useful to explain ICL concepts and could be as engaging as Slinkachu’s photos? How can we use visuals and art to convey these ideas? Please share your ideas and resources!

 

Are you a globally focused youth?

Do you consider yourself a global citizen? Would you like to become more involved in global issues? The organization New Global Citizen (GNC) provides globally conscious youth with opportunities to make their reach go farther and their impact stronger in relation to some of the world’s greatest challenges. It’s an organization for youth– and by youth!

One youth team focused on the right to education for all children around the world.

GNC offers a wide range of global projects, such as providing sanitation and clean water, shelter, education and doing many more important works to improve vulnerable populations around the world. Their main focus is sustainable development that is not the “cookie-cutter” approach. Instead, they hope to find solutions while keeping the population and culture in mind.

For those of you in education, they also have initiatives for you to use in your classroom, including team building exercises and curriculum to develop intercultural competency.

If you are a youth interested in global causes, this is an organization you might want to explore! Learn more on their website: http://www.newglobalcitizens.org/ or their blog:  http://newglobalcitizens.wordpress.com/

 

The Daisy Model: A Tool to Create Shared Meaning

The Daisy Model is a visual activity that can be used in a classroom to increase diversity awareness, in a group as a team building exercise to help members get to know each other, as a visual aid for resolving a conflict, or when we talk with someone who goes abroad and encounters cultural differences. Values, worldviews, group and personal traits all coincide in the center (see image below) and shape the interaction between two individuals, or an individual and a different culture. Let us look at an example:

I am having a conversation with a student from a different culture. The conversation occurs in English. She is in a study break, I am looking for a book in the library but I ran into her, and the conversation only lasts ten minutes. We do not see each other very often lately, but when we do, we enjoy talking about common friends and getting an update on each other’s lives.

When I think of this conversation, which happened in only ten minutes, I can put it in the center of a daisy (flower). And what are the petals around it? The petals are the other conversations, our respective cultural and personal backgrounds, and the circumstances, that shape what occurs in the center. So one of the petals may be that she is a student; another one that I graduated years ago but still go to the library because I often pick up psychology books; while the conversation is in English, our first languages are far from each other (two more petals!); I like living in this city; she wants to finish her degree and go back to her town, which is a medium-sized town by the sea where she will be able to eat the food she likes most (in her culture, having a meal with family is an important event for bonding; in my culture or family, maybe not so much); etc. In such a short conversation, so many factors, values, worldviews and identity traits can arise!

This Daisy Model can be used as an activity or a tool in intercultural groups to help us represent the diversity in conversations in multicultural groups that apparently seem quite casual and brief. When two individuals know which petals each person is bringing into the conversation, this can help them understand more about each other’s background and what the intersections of the intercultural exchange look like. Understanding better the connection and/or overlap between these petals can provide greater learning and improved intercultural experiences.

The Daisy Model is a tool that is part of the Coordinated Management of Meaning (CMM), a practical theory that sees communication as a performative entity (doing things) and constitutive of social interactions. From this perspective, communication is not a channel by which we exchange information, but rather an active tool that helps us build and interpret the world and our relationships with others. With this theoretical focus, Barnett Pearce and Vernon Cronen developed a collection of tools that can help us create coordinated (or co-built) meaning between people of different cultures. Besides the Daisy Model, Pearce and Cronen developed the Serpentine Model, the Hierarchy Model and the LUUUTT ModelBecause communication is such a core component to Intercultural Learning, using these models with others or with ourselves can help us enrich our Communication Styles.

What cultural dimensions do you think this tool can help you explore? Do you know other activities that could be used similarly? Share them in our comments area!

“Communication is about meaning,… but not just in a passive sense of perceiving messages. Rather, we live in lives filled with meanings and one of our life challenges is to manage those meanings so that we can make our social worlds coherent and live within them with honor and respect. But this process of managing our meanings is never done in isolation. We are always and necessarily coordinating the way we manage our meanings with other people. So, I concluded, communication is about the coordinated management of meaning.” –B. Pearce

Intercultural Dialogue Day 2012

27 September 2012 was the 5th annual Intercultural Dialogue Day (IDD), a day of intercultural awareness and diversity promotion organized by the European Federation of Intercultural Learning (EFIL). Across Europe, AFS organizations and intercultural enthusiasts celebrated with events centered around creating a dialogue on the value of intercultural learning.

Examples include AFS Boznia and Herezgovina who offered a screening of the movie “East is East” in Banja Luca. AFS Latvia partnered with the Central Baltic INTERREG project “Youth Space”, holding a seminar in Riga about Intercultural learning, including team-building activities, discussions, and experience sharing from exchange students. These are among the many activities centered around IDD. You can also check out the map of Intercultural Dialogue Day events around Europe, or look forward to photos and comments posted on Intercultural Dialogue Day’s Facebook page.

EFIL also just opened the IDD Best Video and Best Photo contest that will extend until 14 October 2012. AFS volunteers are invited to post photos and videos of their IDD events on the Wall of the Face Book page, together with the description of the IDD event itself. It is very important that each video and picture submitted for the contest is accompanied by a description of the IDD event. For each of the two categories, the submission that receives the most votes – “Likes” – will win a free registration for one volunteer team member at the EFIL Volunteer Summer Summit 2013. Inspired by the top three finalists in each category (photo and video), EFIL will develop ‘IDD toolkits’ that will be replicable by volunteers across Europe in the next edition of the IDD. Be sure to enter with what you were doing on Intercultural Dialogue Day!

5 October: World Teachers’ Day


October 5, World Teachers' Day

World Teachers’ Day is approaching! Every year since 1994, 5 October has been a day to celebrate teachers worldwide. The date was chosen by UNESCO to commemorate the adoption of the Recommendation concerning the Status of Teachers on 5 October, 1966. This recommendation states the rights, responsibilities and international standards of teachers. Its adoption has helped to establish guidelines to promote the status of teachers and increase the quality of education worldwide.

One of the challenges for teachers in the decades to come will be how to welcome multicultural perspectives into their classrooms and how to bring together students, young and adult, with diverse backgrounds to work in common projects and build a shared multi-faceted culture. Incorporating Intercultural Learning skills and tools into education is needed more than ever.

If you are asking yourself: “What can I do on World Teachers’ Day?”, maybe you can start by creating awareness about the importance of teachers and education in your immediate environment and in our society. Take some time to discuss, share, listen and learn about what education means to you and to those around you. And maybe you can also send an e-card to your teacher (available in English, French and Spanish) to thank her or him for the change that her or his work has represented in your life!

Send your teacher a ‘Thank you’ e-card!

Global Youth Voice Conference

International opportunities for interculturally-minded youth to get involved and collaborate with each other are becoming more and more accessible. A great example is “Global Youth Voice“, an international youth conference which brings together 200 young people from all over the globe with the common intention of finding out how young people can make the world better, together. An innovative approach to international organization, the project began in 2011 with a small group of 8 young people who dreamt of a place where all the intercultural-driven youth could collaborate and be in contact.

This year’s conference took place in Moscow, Russia on the 18th of August, and was held at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. It is one of the three conferences that together make up the AISEC International Congress, an international event to plan projects for social and economic development. At the Global Youth Voice event, two AFS staff members had the opportunity to take a more active role and act as facilitators for one of the sessions.

Tom McLeod, an AFS returnee (Australia 2000-2001) and current Intern at the AFS Russia office in Moscow, along with Nonna Kovrizhnykh, Partner Director of AFS Russia, and Organisational Development Coordinator Natalia Zakharova facilitated a session on Intercultural Dialogue and Tolerance. The 10-day conference hopes to foster a positive global impact in the way youth collaborate and interact, and aims to build a global perspective for future generations.