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title slide 1. home. Welcome. Re-entry workshop. 1. title slide 2. Education. & culture. re-entry workshop. 2. goals. Think about education as a cultural institution & reflect on the differences between the education system in Australia & in your host country. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
title slide 1Welcome
home
Re-entry workshop
1
title slide 2Education& culture
re-entry workshop2
goals
goals
Think about education as a cultural institution & reflect on the differences between the education system in Australia & in your host country. Become more aware of the experience of international students in Australia.Integrate your exchange experience into your continuing studies.
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education
On exchange you learned a huge amount off campus.But don’t neglect what you learned on campus; and don’t overlook the chance to continue to make the most of this on your return.
& cultureeducation
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Photo by Zhijai Lai.La Sagrada Família designed by Antonia Gaudí, Barcelona, Spain.
globalisation in educationPart of campus
internationalisation.
Part of attaining the graduate attribute of ‘becoming a global citizen’.
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learning homeBringing the
globalisation
Photo by Luke Bagnall.‘Au francais day camus calais!’ From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/05/31/au-francais-day-camus-calais/
globalisation in education 2
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in terms of classroom learning
globalisation
Photo by ‘uonottingham’, 2012.University of Nottingham, UK.Creative Commons license.Original at http://www.flickr.com/photos/uonottingham/6679119787/
globalisation in education 3
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in terms of classroom learning
globalisation
(photo is link to video)
Photo by Morgan Petterson.Mykonos, Greece.
D.I.V.E method
8D.I.V.E.
cultural interpretation
describe
interpret
verify
explain
Photo by Simone Anderson.Ios, Greece.
D.I.V.E. method 2
9D.I.V.E.
blackboard
what was different about
education in your host
country?
University
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university
It’s like Hogwart’s here. It’s like your whole university identity is defined by your college rather than your faculty (as it would be in Australia). Maureen on Freshers week , University of LancasterPhoto by Chris Brunero.University of Alberta, Canada.
University 2
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I feel like I’m back in high school!
You know, you pay a lot of money to get taught at uni, not
to just do your own independent work.
university
Photo by Luke Bagnall.East Anglia, UK.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/04/23/university-of-east-anglia-a-crytoscopophiliacs-dream/
university
University 3
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UConn wasn’t just our school, it was our life. Photo by ‘Kelly McG.’University of Connecticut, USA.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/01/31/student-today-husky-forever/
University 4
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Being in Greek Life is probably one of the most American College experiences to have and I’m loving every minute of it.
university
Photo by Danielle PoupartAmerican University, Washington, D.C., USA.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/02/14/american-college-life/
university
University 5
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One of the best things about this university is the field trips. The most memorable one so far has been a three day village trip for my ‘Agriculture and nutrition in the developing world’ class... What better way to learn then standing in a hot cassava field with a farmer, in the interior of Fiji!
Photo by Katie B.University of the South Pacific, Fiji.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/04/19/bula-from-fiji/
arts
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People in Australia are always talking about the uselessness of art and arts degrees, but you find less of that attitude over here, and their attitude shows up in the extra, nonessential details of their cities, like the legs of public benches, the lamp posts, the gates, the fountains everywhere… artsPhoto by Luke Bagnall
Prague, Czech RepublicFrom OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/06/21/bohemian-rhapsody/
arts 2
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heroes or nerds?Intellectuals
What do the French think?
Try reading Almost French, pp 17-20, on French
and Australian attitudes to visiting art
galleries and museums. artsPhoto by Zhijai Lai.
The Louvre, Paris, France.
arts
arts 3
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My indifference for the magnificent Louvre is not a laughing matter, it seems. Chatting on the lovely terrace, our different attitudes to the Louvre reveal a wider cultural gap.
‘I’ve been going to museums since I was four,’ he states. ‘They were the highlight of family holidays. Whenever we arrived in a new town the first thing my parents did was take us to an art gallery or museum.’
‘Kids in France must be a lot different from kids in Australia.’ And I describe our family holidays… in the bush, near lakes, rivers or beaches…
Overlooking the spectacular glass pyramid, we laugh at the sharp contrast between our childhood holidays: that while one was trailing maturely through museums, the other was… standing on a floating Lilo.
Almost FrenchPhoto by Zhijai Lai.The Louvre, Paris, France.
university
University 6
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What were the most problematic differences you encountered in your exchange experience?
Why?
How did you resolve these issues?
Photo by Sandy Chen.From exchange at Tsing Hua University in China.
Education 2
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education
It’s all about
culture!
(or, It’s the
culture, stupid!)
Photo by Zhijai Lai.Display of music books in Venice, Italy.
perspective
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perspective
What does it look like
from the other side?
Photo by Zhijai Lai.Florence, Italy.
perspective 2
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perspective
What would
students from
overseas find
strange about
Australia, and
Australian
classrooms?Stephanie from the Netherlands enjoys
her first taste of Vegemite…
Photo by Will.Shared meal in Arnhem, the Netherlands.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2010/11/08/cuisineing/
perspective 3
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perspective
What would students from overseas find strange about Australia, Australian classrooms and Australian university culture?
Photo by Luke Bagnall.East Anglia, UK.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/04/23/university-of-east-anglia-a-crytoscopophiliacs-dream/
perspective 4
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perspective
How could life be made easier for an international student on an Australian campus?
Photo by Zhijai Lai.Display inside Notre Dame, Paris, France.
Pt 2: What have you learned?
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learning homeBringing the
What have you
learned?
part 2
education 3
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education
Education or just ‘educational
tourism’?
Think about how to capitalise on your exchange educational experience in the classroom!
Photo by Zhijai Lai.Statues from Vatican City.
education 4
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education
Education or just ‘‘educational
tourism’?
on the Holocaust
Photo by Luke Bagnall.Berlin Holocaust Memorial, Germany.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2011/06/27/cool-story-hansel/
All of this, I think, shows the world that Germany is serious about this issue. And it’s comforting that in a world where nothing’s sacred, something can be treated with such near-universal reverence by a nation. I’m glad it’s not like what I’ve heard the British history curriculum is like (from my friend Kim), awkwardly skipping over the fact that the British Empire screwed up the world wherever it went, or like in Australia where we learn about what we did to Aborigines… but it’s not really treated with any reverence, perhaps because we learn SO MUCH about it that we’re kind of desensitised.
education 5
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education
Education or just ‘‘educational
tourism’?
Morgan, Bringing the Learning Home (2 mins 13 sec)http://youtu.be/1RuzTfniD1M
Photo by Joan Teresa Soon.Display in Scotland.
education 6
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education
Education or just ‘‘educational
tourism’?Consider your own subjects...
What is culturally specific about the approach used?
How might that impact on the learning of a student from a different culture?
What could you do to introduce your newly acquired international perspective into that subject in your own classroom?
Perspective 5
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perspective
Taking the next Taking the next
steps...steps...
Photo by Bek.Montreal, Canada.From OzStudentsAbroad.comOriginal at http://ozstudentsabroad.com/2010/10/28/apology-and-culture-shock/
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Thank you!
Re-entry workshop
Credits
re-entry workshop
The Bringing the Learning Home Team: Jan Gothard (Murdoch), Greg Downey
(Macquarie), & Tonia Gray (Wollongong).
The BLTH Students at all three institutions.
For more information: ozstudentsabroad.com or
http://www.tlc.murdoch.edu.au/project/btlh/
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&Education culture
licence
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under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/).
The details of the relevant licence conditions are available on the Creative Commons website (accessible using the links provided) as is the full legal
code for the CC BY 3.0 AU licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/legalcode).
Requests and inquiries concerning these rights should be addressed to:
Office for Learning and TeachingDepartment of Industry, Innovation, Science, Research and Tertiary
EducationGPO Box 9880, Location code N255EL10
Sydney NSW 2001 [email protected]