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We don’t normally post articles about Study Abroad since there are already several wonderful blogs that focus on that arena, but the article we read this morning in the Chronicle of Higher Education was just too fascinating not to share.

http://chronicle.com/article/Colleges-Help-Students-to/123653/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en

Colleges Help Students to Translate the Benefits of Study Abroad

By Ilana Kowarski

Clemson University administrators were troubled by what they discovered on YouTube in the summer of 2008. Students at the university had posted videos of themselves drinking and partying during their study abroad in Spain, and the videos had been widely circulated.

Many feared that the videos would wind up in the hands of employers and would hurt students’ chances of being hired. And the images certainly didn’t paint Clemson’s Office of International Affairs in a positive light.

“The video was so outrageous that I realized change was urgently necessary,” says Constancio K. Nakuma, a French professor and an associate dean in the humanities college.

In the spring semester of the following year, Mr. Nakuma sponsored a pilot program, Cultural Literacies Across Media, to encourage study-abroad students to be more thoughtful about their time in other countries. The course, which is now officially part of the Clemson curriculum, teaches students how to understand their international experience and present it to the world using multimedia.

“This program is an attempt to reveal what it is that people who did study abroad mean when they say, ‘Oh, wow, that totally transformed me,’” Mr. Nakuma says.

Helping students do that is a challenge many colleges face. It was a hot topic at the recent Forum on Education Abroad conference, in Charlotte. And recent research at Michigan State University indicates that colleges may be right to worry. The Collegiate Employment Research Institute there found that many employers did not value time spent abroad—in large part, because students couldn’t articulate its value.

As a former study-abroad student himself, Mr. Nakuma knows firsthand that international study can be a life-changing experience. And he’s learned how to talk about it. When he studied in France during his undergraduate days at a Ghanaian university, he was forced to adapt to the French language and culture. That, Mr. Nakuma says, clarified and deepened his way of thinking.

“With the mirror of the other, you begin to see yourself for who you are,” he says. “You begin to see yourself in the wider world.”

Colleges, Mr. Nakuma says, must find ways to make those kinds of personal transformations more palpable both to study-abroad students and to their prospective employers.

A Common Problem

Inge E. Steglitz, for one, is distressed by the thought that students are selling themselves short.

“I continue to be amazed by students’ inability to articulate what they’ve learned,” says Ms. Steglitz, assistant director of Michigan State’s Office of Study Abroad. “‘I can’t put it into words’ is not a convincing argument in a job interview.”

Research done by Michigan State in 2008 seems to back up her view. That year the employment institute issued a report stating that study abroad did not substantially increase a student’s chance of getting a job upon graduation. Because many students could not explain their international experiences in a compelling way, the report said, many employers did not highly value those experiences.

“Students have given very little thought to how their study abroad has shaped and prepared them for the world of work,” wrote Philip D. Gardner, director of the institute. “In other words, graduating seniors have flunked one of their most important exams—the hiring interview—because they were not prepared with appropriate examples of skills required from their international experiences.”

In response to the report, Michigan State developed a workshop to train study-abroad students in how to speak about their experiences, called Unpacking Your Study Abroad Experience.

During her “unpacking” sessions, Linda S. Gross, associate director of career services, interviews students about their studies overseas and attempts to glean what they learned that might be of value to an employer. At the end of each interview, Ms. Gross compiles a list of bullet points the student can use on his or her résumé.

According to Ms. Gross, that kind of retrospective reflection is essential for students to capitalize on their international experiences. “Study abroad doesn’t count to an employer unless the job candidate can say how it has made them a better person, scholar, citizen, and professional,” she says. “We need to think across the academy on how we can prompt reflection on study abroad so that students can make meaning of the experience for themselves.”

A New Approach

Many study-abroad students keep journals or participate in some form of a debriefing. But at Clemson, students document their international experience for public consumption. Students in the cultural-literacies course do not simply pontificate about what they have learned; they have to showcase their discoveries in online photos, blog posts, and documentaries.

Tharon W. Howard, a professor of English, and his graduate assistant require students to engage with citizens in their host countries to complete their projects. After lessons in how to interpret cultural symbols and understand people who are different from themselves, students venture into foreign communities with cameras and notepads to investigate social issues, cultural artifacts, and business practices.

Randy D. Nichols, Mr. Howard’s teaching assistant, says that exposure to a different culture will give students insight not only into alternative perspectives but also into their own identities. “Oftentimes our own cultures are invisible to us until we encounter other cultures,” he says. “The dominant culture names the other cultures, but it doesn’t name itself.”

For Mr. Howard, who also directs a multimedia center at Clemson, the multimedia focus of the program is one of its most exciting features. He says that by giving students new communication tools, he is also giving them new ways of understanding and interpreting the world.

“There’s that old adage that if you want to learn something, you teach it to somebody else,” he says. “That’s the underlying idea here.”

Through their blogs, students are linked not only to their professors and fellow students but also to the broader online community. And the interactivity built into the blogs allows students to have conversations with a wide range of people about their cultural discoveries.

The multimedia focus has also generated a great deal of student enthusiasm, says Mr. Nichols. “Before now, these students were consumers of Web sites, not producers,” he says, “but all of them will be working in the 21st-century workplace, and having these technological skills gives them a great sense of comfort.”

Learning and Giving Back

By creating blogs about their study-abroad experience, Clemson students are also contributing to a university collection of information on cultures around the world. In this way, Mr. Howard says, the students give back to the campus community that sent them abroad.

The cultural-literacies project covers an eclectic spectrum of subjects. For example, one student’s video project, “The Au Pair Diaries,” featured confessions of au pairs about what went on behind closed doors in the homes of families they worked for and also included details about their social lives. Another video focused on the way Belgian chocolate companies marketed their products.

Jennifer D. McAmis, a rising senior and public-policy major at Clemson, created a film analyzing Argentinian social movements through the lens of graffiti. At the beginning of her video, Ms. McAmis explained why she chose her subject matter. “Graffiti is an anonymous art form through which people feel free to express themselves even if their feelings are not accepted in the mainstream of politics or culture,” she says.

Ms. McAmis followed protesters and interviewed a former state prisoner named Jose, providing insight into the sources of unhappiness among working-class Argentinians and others in Argentina who want to change the status quo.

The records the students create of their experiences also serve as memory aids. Meg K. Sparkman, a 2010 graduate, says the videos she made in the course help her recall what she learned in Spain. Ms. Sparkman, a tourism and Spanish major, worked as a receptionist in a youth hostel and as an English tutor. The experience taught her, for example, how to adapt as a teacher to overcome language boundaries. When Ms. Sparkman realized that the Spanish she knew did not always suffice to tutor a small child, she provided educational cartoons.

When she returns to her blog, she is reminded both of the friends she made and the social phenomena she noticed, such as a political rift between traditional and modernist Spaniards.

“I will always have these videos, so I can go back in 10 years and look at them,” she says. “They definitely helped me put experiences into words that were hard to describe.”

Our new application form and system for international credentials evaluation is coming soon, so stay tuned!

Today is the deadline for presenters at the 2010 AACRAO Annual Conference to submit their handouts to be posted online, so I can only imagine that we’ll all find wonderful gems for building our resource libraries.

http://handouts.aacrao.org/am10/display.php

Speaking of conferences, we should take a moment to let you know that we’re working with the fabulous Emily Tse of International Educational Research Foundation (IERF) to present a workshop on practical applications for dealing with secondary education credentials around the world.

Called “Focus on Secondary Education: Evaluating Credentials from Around the World,” it will be offered at NAFSA on Tuesday, June 1, from 8 am until 12 pm. It will be a VERY robust four hours since we’re going to cover a lot of really exciting things:

- a world roundup of the four main educational patterns including an overview of the US educational system
- resources for secondary credentials
- identifying appropriate academic records for determining assessment, especially what’s considered an official document and who the authority is
- how to deal with it when the applicant hasn’t yet reached the official document phase
- confusion between such terms as college, bachiller, baccalaureate, etc.
- academic vs. vocational track and what they can do with the respective documents at home
- lower vs. upper secondary and where they can go afterward
- GEDs
- advanced credit and things that seem like advanced credit
- Carnegie units
- forgeries and verification

For each of these exciting topics, we’ll have samples and exercises for participants to review and process during the workshop to ensure a thorough understanding. We’re also going to provide a manual of all of the documents including samples of resource material, resources to use in the workshop, a copy of the new & exciting IERF “Index of Secondary Credentials” which also has sample documents, and an appendix of the major secondary credentials. The workshop won’t be your standard lecture and note-taking; it will include discussion, case studies, debate, group exercises, and more!

Check out http://acsearch.nafsa.org/Default.aspx for more information, and be sure to register before the Early Bird deadline on April 23.

9 Apr 2010, Comments (0)

New Look

Author: admin

We’ve got a new look for our website. Please note that we are no longer using http://transcriptresearch.wordpress.com/, so be sure to update your information to htttp://www.transcriptresearch.com

Thanks for your patience, and we look forward to your continued support and interest. Expect other new things in 2010!

24 Feb 2010, Comments (0)

Thanks for your patience

Author: transcriptresearch

Dear Friends,

This is just a quick note to let you know that we (okay, I) have been having a rough month.  Between a relocation, medical issues, and other life events, February cannot end soon enough.  As such, I am looking forward

While I catch my breath, however, let me remind you about two upcoming events that are pivotal for training for international educators who are stateside.

AACRAO Annual Meeting: April 21-24, 2010 in New Orleans, LA  http://www.aacrao.org/neworleans/

Registration for AACRAO’s annual conference is currently open, and the early bird deadline (discount!) is coming up soon: March 5th.  I was scheduled to present a session on “Professional Development Possibilities in International Education” based on the chapter that I wrote for the soon-to-be-released AACRAO 2010 International Guide, and update of the 2001 edition of (nearly) the same title, which should debut at the conference.  I’m very excited for its release; look for it to updated on the publications page at http://www.aacrao.org/publications/catalog/international.cfm

You can go here to search just for International sessions if you want to peruse their 36 awesome-sounding workshops and sessions related to international education.  I am very disappointed that I’m unable to attend this year, but since this is a totally volunteer gig for me, it just wasn’t feasible at this time.

NAFSA Annual Conference & Expo: May 30-June 3, 2010, in Kansas City, MO  http://www.nafsa.org/annualconference/default.aspx

NAFSA conference registration begins on March 1st, with an early bird deadline of April 23rd.  Assuming everything goes as planned, I am scheduled to co-present a workshop, Focus on Secondary Education: Practical Approaches to Evaluating Credentials around the World, with my great friend, Emily Tse of IERF.  We’re both very excited because we think it will give attendees a chance to really understand what to DO with secondary credentials, instead of just learning about equivalents.  Since so many workshops and sessions at NAFSA are geared towards Graduate admissions, we hope that this will hit a good niche by being very hands-on, with emphasis on practical applications and not just theoretical information.  It should be fun (assuming enough people register for it)!  You can get more information online at http://acsearch.nafsa.org/

I’m currently on the editorial board to the NAFSA wRAP-Up Newsletter, and we should release an issue in April or early May about the conference, specifically as it relates to RAP (Recruitment, Admissions, and Preparation) conference information.  The conference looks really great, with 6 other RAP-related workshops, 40 RAP-related sessions (!), tons of poster fairs, a networking center, the fabulous Expo Hall, and tons of other stuff!

Okay, I plan to be back providing 2-3 weekly updates on international education changes starting again in March.  Thanks for sticking around!

28 Jan 2010, Comments (0)

Hello world!

Author: admin

Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

22 Jan 2010, Comments (0)

Technical Difficulties

Author: transcriptresearch

We are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our site, links, and email.  Please bear with us.

6 Jan 2010, Comments (0)

Welcome to 2010!

Author: transcriptresearch

Greetings, all.  We took a short break for winter holidays, traveling, and moving to a new location, but we are back and ready to update you on the international education news as we find it.  We look forward to another exciting and interesting year in the education community!

5 Dec 2009, Comments (0)

Another Announcement

Author: transcriptresearch

For those following along via RSS feed, please note that some RSS readers are not downloading all the newly visible articles that are on the website.  It appears that articles posted after November 14th were not visible until the problem was corrected today, but not all of the articles are arriving in the news readers.

All articles are now available on the website www.transcriptresearch.com or the blog at www.transcriptresearch.wordpress.com

Thanks again!