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This book explores emerging populations of mobile international
students in order to consider innovative and inclusive approaches
for a more equitable and socially just higher education for new
generations of international students. It offers critical
reflections on the intersections of race, place, and space at
universities hosting international students across multiple
geographic and cultural contexts. The volume is designed to
catalyze debate on how international student learning and exchange
needs to be reimagined for new generations of students in a world
of increasing complexity and virtual mobility. International
student mobility in higher education is intended to serve as an
educational experience that speaks to the need for more
interculturally sensitive and globally competent learners. However,
internationalization practices like study abroad have increasingly
been influenced by neoliberalism, and dynamics of commodification
and consumerism, emphasizing the private benefits of such
experiences in terms of the social and economic benefits to
individual participants. This raises the question of inequality in
such internationalization practices; who is benefitting from it? As
post-secondary institutions around the world become more and more
internationalized, what are the undesirable effects of these
developments? Given the rapid expansion of research on both
internationalization and inequality in higher education, it is
foreseeable that this book will become a much-referenced text
within the field and profession.
Responding to the growing need for recruitment and retention of
international talent in higher education institutions globally,
this volume documents the experiences and contribution of
international graduate students, researchers, and faculty. This
text foregrounds perspectives around recruitment, transition,
integration, professional development, and the retention of
scholars originating from, or arriving in, countries including
China, Australia, Iraq, Japan, and the US. By investigating the
support systems that are in place to assist foreign-born faculty
members in institutes of higher education, the text provides
important insights for departments and institutions as they look to
successfully attract and retain global academic talent. Moreover,
the scientific and practical implications of the research presented
in the text directly informs institutional policy, working towards
more effective, inclusive, and equitable ways to support
international faculty. This text will benefit researchers,
academics, and educators with an interest in higher education,
international and comparative education, and, more specifically,
those involved with faculty development programs. The text will
also support further discussion and reflection around multicultural
education, international teaching and learning, and educational
policy more broadly.
This book responds to the growing calls among international
educators, activists, and students themselves to pay closer
attention to the qualitative dimensions of international students'
experiences at U.S. colleges and universities. This book outlines
deep approaches to the academic and social integration of
international students at U.S. colleges and universities. It
describes concrete examples of strategies to enhance the
international student experience across a wide range of
institutional types, and explores actions that have enabled
colleges and universities to create more inclusive, connected, and
purposeful campus environments for international students. It
fleshes out the effects of these actions through the first person
narratives of international students themselves. It focuses on
reinforcing an institution's existing strengths and capacities to
help academic leaders at these institutions to develop
comprehensive strategies that will enable the creation of inclusive
campus climates for international students. The book combines
evidence derived from the national Global Perspective Inventory
dataset, the experiences of institutions at the forefront in
developing effective strategies, as well as first-person narrative
experiences of international students to illustrate the real-life
consequences of institutional policies, practice, and programs. One
of the aims of this book is to take readers on a journey, from
community colleges to liberal arts institutions to large public
flagship research universities, from rural parts of the U.S.to
highly-populated urban areas in order to raise questions about the
impact of the surge of international students in these environments
and about the corresponding challenges that confront senior
administrators seeking to strengthen and deepen connections for the
students. The book explores some of the actions that universities
and colleges across the U.S. have taken to create more inclusive,
connected, and purposeful campus environments for their
international students, placing particular emphasis on the
importance of tapping and reinforcing each institution's existing
strengths and capacities in the development of strategies that will
enable it to create more inclusive campus climates for current and
incoming international students, and engaging in active
collaboration with all departments and offices across the campus,
with the larger community, and most important, with the
international student community itself.
This book responds to the growing calls among international
educators, activists, and students themselves to pay closer
attention to the qualitative dimensions of international
students’ experiences at U.S. colleges and universities. This
book outlines deep approaches to the academic and social
integration of international students at U.S. colleges and
universities. It describes concrete examples of strategies to
enhance the international student experience across a wide range of
institutional types, and explores actions that have enabled
colleges and universities to create more inclusive, connected, and
purposeful campus environments for international students. It
fleshes out the effects of these actions through the first person
narratives of international students themselves. It focuses on
reinforcing an institution’s existing strengths and capacities to
help academic leaders at these institutions to develop
comprehensive strategies that will enable the creation of inclusive
campus climates for international students. The book combines
evidence derived from the national Global Perspective Inventory
dataset, the experiences of institutions at the forefront in
developing effective strategies, as well as first-person narrative
experiences of international students to illustrate the real-life
consequences of institutional policies, practice, and programs. One
of the aims of this book is to take readers on a journey, from
community colleges to liberal arts institutions to large public
flagship research universities, from rural parts of the U.S.to
highly-populated urban areas in order to raise questions about the
impact of the surge of international students in these environments
and about the corresponding challenges that confront senior
administrators seeking to strengthen and deepen connections for the
students. The book explores some of the actions that universities
and colleges across the U.S. have taken to create more inclusive,
connected, and purposeful campus environments for their
international students, placing particular emphasis on the
importance of tapping and reinforcing each institution’s existing
strengths and capacities in the development of strategies that will
enable it to create more inclusive campus climates for current and
incoming international students, and engaging in active
collaboration with all departments and offices across the campus,
with the larger community, and most important, with the
international student community itself.
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