Study Abroad Overview and Internalization
International students are defined as a group of students coming from different countries who bring diversity of cultural and educational backgrounds from their home countries. This diversity can be both useful and challenging to their new life (Bevice and Lucas, 2007). However, based on my own experiences, studying abroad may be very challenging in many levels. From a social and cultural perspective, it is tough for most international students to become independent adults in terms of emotional and financial disconnect from their home. It is challenging to them to try to plug into the foreign culture and at the same time hold on to their own culture and tradition.
One of the main challenges of international students is the language barrier. The lack of the mastery of a foreign country’s language, reading, writing, listening and speaking skills is likely to impact international students’ academic performance. Living away from home and not being able to communicate with others can be very challenging for international students (Kuo, 2001). The limited mastery of the language prevents them from engaging in a constructive dialog with the class and the professor where debating opposite ideas are encouraged. However, studying abroad provides many benefits for the American students. It provides the students with a broadening world view and open their way of thinking by interacting with different cultures and languages of the world. According to Open Doors 2005, There are almost 191,321 American students studying outside the United States. The higher education institutions in the United States created an American study abroad strategy to manage their programs abroad and to benefit the American students who want to have a foreign experience in their education outside the country. This exchange program involves collaboration and interaction with institutions outside the country.
Engagement has a successful outcome for all students regardless their racial and academic backgrounds. Students Affairs professionals need to make the students engage through collaboration, communication and interaction (Kuh, 2009). Higher Education professionals should encourage students to participate in activities that require a high level of engagement. Participating in campus events such as workshops, student organizations, clubs, and voluntary organizations inside and outside the campus will promote and develop international students’ learning and will increase their sense of belonging for a better success.
The American program abroad offers five levels for the American students who share the motivation and the desire to pursue their education abroad and interact with the different cultures abroad. On the following table there is a brief description of each one of them.
Level 1
Study Tour |
Level 2
Short-Term Study |
Level 3
Cross-Cultural Contact Program |
Level 4
Cross-Cultural Encounter Program |
Level 5
Cross-Cultural Immersion Program |
The duration of this tour is from several days to few weeks. The coursework is performed in English language.
This tour offers no cultural interaction and no experiential learning. Students are required to have an elementary to an intermediate to the target language.
|
The duration of this step is 3 to 8 weeks. It is performed in the summer. English language and some of the target language are used to perform in teaching the courses.
Similar to the first level there no cultural or experience interaction with the foreign country.
|
The duration of this program is one full semester. The perspective American students are required to have an elementary to an intermediate level of a target language.
The perspective students have the option to integrate to some activities to interact with the foreigners. |
The duration of this program is 1 semester to 1 academic year.
The pre-advanced or the advanced level of the target language is required at this level of the program. Students have the option to participate in the integration activities. |
The duration of this level is the same as level 4.
The advanced target language level is required at this stage. The perspective students are required to interact and integrate to the foreign culture through intensive integration activities. |
The Bard Case
The institute of liberal education (IILE) was created at Bard in 1988. The purpose of the institution is to establish a dynamic relationship with the international institutions to ensure a positive exchange of learning experience, education, and new ideas between the American students and the rest of the world. This institution interacts with institutions in South Africa and Russia where they establish partnership with St. Petersburg and Witwatersrand universities. The Bard institution is committed to understand and fulfill the needs of their overseas partners.
The students at IILE institution have the advantage to carry a dual degree when they complete the joint academic program after 4 years of the program. Bard university maintain an excellent relationship with its oversea partners. This partnership maintains a long-term exchange that includes students and faculty as well as curricular exchange between the institutions.
Sources
Bevis, T. B. & Lucas, C. J. (2007). International Students in American Colleges and Universities. New York, NY/ https://jistudents.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/10-international-students-in-american.pdf
Kuo, 2011 Language challenges faced by international Graduate Students in the United States/ http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED526158.pdf
Engle, L., & Engle, J. (2003). Study abroad levels: Toward a classification of program types.Frontiers: The interdisciplinary journal of study abroad,
Creating Deep Partnerships with Institutions Abroad with Jonathan A. Becker, Bryan Billings, Sergey Bogdanov, Christina Davis, Fazela Haniff, Ayesha Kajee, Thomas Keenan, Nikolay Koposov, Tawana Kupe, and Valery Monakhov Chapter 28