ABSTRACT

In the current economic climate, more than ever, international students provide an important income to universities. They represent much-needed funds for many institutions, but they also come with their own diverse variety of characteristics and requirements.

This insightful book offers a critical stance on contemporary views of international students and challenges the way those involved address the important issues at hand. To do this, the authors focus specifically on giving voice to the student experience. In particular, the authors show how international student experience can be a ready asset from which to glean valuable information, particularly in relation to teaching and learning, academic support and the formal and informal curriculum. In this way, the issues affecting international students can be seen as part of the larger set of difficulties that face all students at university today.

Integrating contributions from a academics and student voices from a range of backgrounds issues raised include:

  • Academic Writing for International Students
  • The Internationalisation of the Curriculum
  • Identities: The use of stereotypes and auto-stereotypes
  • International Students’ Perceptions of Tutors, and
  • The system in reverse, English speaking learners as 'international students'.

This book will be of interest to education management and administrators, higher education professionals, especially those working or training to teach large numbers of international students, to which it offers a unique opportunity to understand better the students’ point-of-view. Because of this the book will likely appeal to academics in all English speaking countries that recruit significant numbers of international students, as well as the growing number of European universities which teach in English and those in the Indian sub-continent that send large numbers of international students to the UK, Australia, New Zealand and the US.

chapter Chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

part I|77 pages

Policy

chapter Chapter 2|19 pages

Equals or others?

Mobile students in a nationally bordered world

chapter Chapter 3|11 pages

Whose initiative?

International student policy in the UK

chapter Chapter 4|15 pages

An ethical commitment

Responsibility, care and cosmopolitanism in the internationalized university

chapter Chapter 5|13 pages

An international approach to teaching and learning from a UK university management perspective

Implications for international students' experience on campus

chapter Chapter 6|17 pages

Inheriting the earth

Competencies and competition within the internationalized curriculum

part II|85 pages

Teaching and learning

chapter Chapter 7|17 pages

Classroom encounters

International students' perceptions of tutors in the creative arts

chapter Chapter 8|20 pages

The critical meets the cultural

International students' responses to critical, dialogic postgraduate education in a western university

chapter Chapter 10|13 pages

Bringing forth the graduate as a global citizen

An exploratory study of masters-level business students in Australia

part III|38 pages

Language

chapter Chapter 12|17 pages

Negotiating writing

Challenges of the first written assignment at a UK university

chapter Chapter 13|19 pages

Ways with writing

International students' perspectives on responding to academic writing requirements in UK higher education

part IV|30 pages

Home students abroad

chapter Chapter 14|15 pages

Great expectations

The impact of friendship groups on the intercultural learning of Australian students abroad

chapter Chapter 15|13 pages

‘Going the other way'

The motivations and experiences of UK learners as ‘international students' in higher education