The Globalisation of Higher Education
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The Globalisation of Higher Education

Developing Internationalised Education Research and Practice

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eBook - ePub

The Globalisation of Higher Education

Developing Internationalised Education Research and Practice

About this book

This book argues that the neoliberal globalisation of higher education faces a need for recalibration. In light of increased concerns from universities in cultivating globalisation, this volume brings together a multi-ethnic and multilingual team of researchers who argue that the continued development of internationalized education now requires new research and practices. As university leaders seek to build the best programs to help students to go abroad, they can face a number of challenges – risk management, negotiating with diverse partners, designing rich experience-based learning and the hopes, fears and limitations of the students themselves. Consequently, the authors argue that changes are particularly important given the current US-centric and UK-centric structural readjustments to globalization policies across all fields of higher education and knowledge production. This multi-perspectival edited collection will appeal to students and scholars of global education, globalization and international education.

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Information

Year
2018
Print ISBN
9783319745787
eBook ISBN
9783319745794
Part IIntroduction
Ā© The Author(s) 2018
Timothy Hall, Tonia Gray, Greg Downey and Michael Singh (eds.)The Globalisation of Higher Educationhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-74579-4_1
Begin Abstract

Developing Global Perspectives: Responding to the State of International Education in Australian Universities

Greg Downey1 , Tonia Gray2 , Timothy Hall2 and Michael Singh2
(1)
Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia
(2)
Western Sydney University, Penrith, NSW, Australia
Greg Downey (Corresponding author)
Tonia Gray
Timothy Hall
Michael Singh

Keywords

International educationInternationalizationStudy abroadOutbound student mobility
End Abstract

Introduction

Universities have long been ā€œglobalā€ institutions, encouraging the flow of ideas and knowledge across borders. For more than 2000 years, people have travelled to centres of learning in places as diverse as Athens, Alexandria, Chang’an (modern Xi’an), Nalanda, Constantinople, Bologna, and Oxford. Nevertheless, the pace and scale of university internationalization have accelerated significantly in the post-Cold War era, just as global economic integration has also intensified. According to UNESCO, the number of students studying abroad around the world has grown from 1.3 million in 1990 to 4.3 million in 2011 (UNESCO, 2013, p. iii).
This surge in the international movement of students, with rapid changes in technology and communication , means that the university sector is increasingly globalized—our classrooms, students, staff, learning materials, courses, and leadership. At the same time, the sector is expected to help countries grapple with the global problems we face. The scale of contemporary challenges humanity faces in science, environment, and health demands a marshalling of intellectual resources beyond the scale of any one nation. In fact, as Wildavsky argues (2010, p. 8), ā€œacademic free trade may be more important than any other kind.ā€
This volume addresses the challenge of internationalizing university education, drawing heavily on the experience of Australia , one of the global leaders in the area. Historically, Australia ’s tertiary education sector has disproportionately directed its energies to attracting overseas students to our institutions, rather than on encouraging Australian students to learn abroad. In February 2017, over 460,000 overseas students were enrolled in Australian universities , including those in English language, veterinary medicine, and non-award courses (Department of Education and Training, 2017b). In contrast, in 2015, the last year for which the Department of Education and Training (2017a) provides statistics, the number of outbound Australian students engaged in international educational experiences was around 38,000.
This disparity—more than ten inbound students for every outbound Australian—arises because internationalization strategies have been strongly determined by economic considerations, by the fact that Australia has treated international education in recent decades like an export industry . Universities ’ international education offices have aggressively recruited students overseas in large part to compensate for decreases in government support for the tertiary education sector; the higher fees paid by international students plug gaps in university budgets.
In addition, internationalization and success in overseas recruiting affect university rankings on increasingly important international tables like the Times Higher Education and QS indices, including specialized lists for the most ā€œinternationalā€ universities . The race to improve standings is part of a self-reinforcing cycle, as universities seek higher rankings to attract international students. Together with the financial considerations, the tailoring of international policy specifically to influence a university’s ranking on these scales can undermine genuine academic exchange and research collaboration across borders. As Jane Knight (2013, p. 84) cautions, some internationalization efforts are less about ā€œcapacity building through international cooperation,ā€ and instead, ā€œstatus building initiatives to gain world class recognition and higher rankings.ā€ With so many conflicting, high-priority agendas, one fear is that educational priorities will be consigned to secondary status.
This volume specifically speaks to this environment of contradictory demands: Our contributors seek to emphasize the pedagogical and research opportunities present in international education , not simply the economic potential. As teachers and administrators, especially in universities like those in Australia that are so heavily internationalized, we face globalization as both an objective and an obstacle. Global processes transform our daily professional lives as they shape our aspirations for the future of our institutions. In the seminar room, we encounter an increasingly heterogeneous body of students; in virtual classrooms, we may find ourselves teaching simultaneously to students in multiple time zones. We have new resources at our disposal and are encouraged to design new types of global learning experiences. The authors in this collected work share about a variety of innovative, experimental efforts to take students overseas, better serve international students in Australia , and to more deeply internationalize the curriculum , even for those students who never leave our shores.
This introduction reviews the international education environment in Australia , including the economic forces that shape both institutional and individual efforts, and then discusses emerging trends in the area, especially the ā€œdemocratizationā€ of international study, diversification in programme types, and shifts in the regional focus of both student travel and government support, which many of the chapters address.

The Context of International Education

According to the former Australian Minister for Tourism and International Education Richard Colbeck, tertiary education is ā€œone of the five super growth sectors contributing to Australia ’s transition from a resources-based to a modern service economyā€ (cited in Australian Government, 2016, p. v). In particular, international students enrolling in Australian universities offer an ā€œunprecedented opportunityā€ to ā€œcapitalise on increasing global demand for education servicesā€ (p. v). In fact, the Australian Government’s National Strategy for International Education 2025 focuses almost exclusively on inbound international students coming to Australia , highlighting the economic benefits of tertiary education as an export industry and, to a lesser degree, the ā€œopportunities to build enhanced bilateral and multilateral relationships, which increase cultural awareness and social engagementā€ (p. 7).
Australia , as the National Strategy emphasizes, is ranked third in the world in attracting international students, successfully bringing about 6% of the entire global flow, behind only the United States and United Kingdom (Australian Government, 2016, p. 3). International education is Australia ’s third most important export industry , providing 130,000 jobs (Australian Government, 2016) and generating A$19.7 billion in 2014–15, according to Deloitte Access Economics (2016, p. 1). Other estimates suggest that this figure is on the conservative side. Deloitte Access Economics (2015) estimates, in the report Growth and Opportunity in Australian International Education , that Australia’s onshore enrolments of international students will grow by around 45% by 2025. The point is that, the National Strategy document—like similar policy statements—focuses heavily on ways to ā€œremain a provider of choice for international studentsā€ (Australian Government, 2016, p. 12).
In contrast, the flow of Australian students overseas appears small but growing, but is very high relative to the total number of domestic students enrolled in tertiary education in the country. In 2005, only 7000 Australian students were studying abroad; by 2012, that number had risen to over 24,000 (Nerlich, 2015, p. 53; Olsen, 2008). Over the same time period, the percentage of Australian undergraduates who had some overseas study experience climbed from 4.8% to over 13%, slightly less than the figure in the United States (Nerlich, 2015, p. 53). The most recent figures (from 2015) indicate that the number of Australian students overseas has climbed to over 38,000 students, with up to 19.3% of the graduating cohort having international experience (Department of Education and Training, 2017a). Ironically, both the United States and Australia had higher rates of outbound mobility than students in Europe, in spite of the availability of Erasmus funding in the EU to encourage student mobility amongst member countries (Daly & Barker, 2010, p. 335). Globally, the high rate of international experience of Australian students stands out even more starkly. In 2011, less than 1.7% of all tertiary students internationally participated in any form of overseas study experience (UNESCO, 2013, p. iii).
Although economic considerations weigh heavily on overseas recruiting, pedagogical and employment-related outcomes are more often put forward as the rationale for efforts to grow outbound student flows. Pitman and Broomhall (2009, p. 445) reported that, of the Australian universities that provide graduate attributes statements, 71% included ā€œawareness and respect for others,ā€ especially interna...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Front Matter
  3. Part I. Introduction
  4. Part II. Office of Learning and Teaching (OLT) Projects
  5. Part III. The Importance of Developing Global Perspectives
  6. Part IV. Developing Globalization in an Online World
  7. Part V. Developing International Education in a Global Environment
  8. Part VI. An Indigenous Perspective of Study Abroad
  9. Part VII. Service Learning on the International Stage
  10. Part VIII. Conclusion
  11. Back Matter

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