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I am both pleased and honored to introduce this book to readers,
and I want to take a few moments to explain why. Michael Romanos
and Christopher Auffrey have produced a volume which will be of
immense value to several different types of people. Planners and
other specialists concerned with the development of the Southeast
Asian region and the issues and opportunities associated with urban
growth and sustainable development will find much to interest them
in this book. But the book, I believe, has much wider appeal, and
that is what I want to touch on briefly here. The University of
Cincinnati, where Michael, Chris, and I work, is attempting to
globalize itself - to develop its institutional capacity for
international activities, to infuse its curriculum with
international themes, and to promote and increase global competence
among its graduates. Many American universities are doing this, of
course. In the process, we are seeing some very interesting
experiments in pedagogy, as faculty look for "learning moments" in
new and sometimes exotic places. Michael, Chris, and their
colleagues have, it seems to me, developed an outstanding model for
learning across national and cultural boundaries. In the chapters
which follow, you will read the results of their work. What will be
less apparent, however, is the process by which that work was
produced.
I am both pleased and honored to introduce this book to readers,
and I want to take a few moments to explain why. Michael Romanos
and Christopher Auffrey have produced a volume which will be of
immense value to several different types of people. Planners and
other specialists concerned with the development of the Southeast
Asian region and the issues and opportunities associated with urban
growth and sustainable development will find much to interest them
in this book. But the book, I believe, has much wider appeal, and
that is what I want to touch on briefly here. The University of
Cincinnati, where Michael, Chris, and I work, is attempting to
globalize itself - to develop its institutional capacity for
international activities, to infuse its curriculum with
international themes, and to promote and increase global competence
among its graduates. Many American universities are doing this, of
course. In the process, we are seeing some very interesting
experiments in pedagogy, as faculty look for "learning moments" in
new and sometimes exotic places. Michael, Chris, and their
colleagues have, it seems to me, developed an outstanding model for
learning across national and cultural boundaries. In the chapters
which follow, you will read the results of their work. What will be
less apparent, however, is the process by which that work was
produced.
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