1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910824067703321

Autore

Carpenter Scott Dominic <1958->

Titolo

Integrating worlds : off-campus study in undergraduate education / / Scott D. Carpenter, Helena Kaufman, and Malene Torp

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Sterling, Virginia : , : Taylor & Francis Group, , [2023]

©2019

ISBN

1-00-344535-7

1-000-97260-7

1-003-44535-7

1-62036-002-0

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (202 pages)

Disciplina

370.116

Soggetti

Foreign study

American students - Foreign countries

International education - United States

University extension - United States

Education, Higher - Aims and objectives - United States

Education, Higher - Curricula - United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Off-campus study : multiplying impact -- An integrative experience: off-campus study and liberal education -- The long runway -- Bringing it back -- A world of difference : the culture question -- Engaged global citizenship -- Measuring change -- Pressure points : the future off-campus study -- Sustaining integration.

Sommario/riassunto

What if the most powerful education our students ever receive occurs when they study off-campus? This book takes as its premise that the powerful potential to de-center and dislocate students preconceptions that off-campus study can stimulate and the urgent need for students to gain a broad understanding of the interconnectedness of our world, requires us to question and rethink how we deliver undergraduate education.The authors ask whether we should strive to make this experience available to all our students  as a necessity rather than as a



supplement or interlude -- using it to fuel their education and inspire their careers. They make the case that effective off-campus study (whether study abroad or study away) begins and ends on the home campus, requiring its integration into the curriculum, entwining on-campus and off-campus experiences, and making them mutually reinforcing.They offer evidence that off-campus study, when properly designed and implemented, can have a multiplier effect on learning, particularly when combined with other high-impact practices; asserting it can provide access to complex cultural and scientific problems in their natural context, adding practical and experiential components to classroom learning, and serve as a springboard for more advanced study and research when students return to their home campus.This book proposes that faculty or departments go beyond the generally episodic ways that currently link on-campus curricula to off-campus experience. It aims to speak, beyond specialists in international or intercultural education, to faculty, deans and provosts who may have little direct experience of study abroad, and feel unprepared to address an issue that is assuming a growing importance as disciplines and institutions address the complexities of our rapidly changing world. The goal of this book is to fuel such conversations.