Building International Faculty-Development Collaborations: The Evolving Role of American Teaching Centers

In the last 30 years, teaching centers in American colleges and universities have moved from the margins of their institutions to the mainstream. Their roles have expanded exponentially: To their core task of providing instructional support for individuals, they have added cross-campus initiatives t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Change (New Rochelle, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2012-05, Vol.44 (3), p.24-33
Hauptverfasser: DeZure, Deborah, Van Note Chism, Nancy, Deane Sorcinelli, Mary, Cheong, Grace, Ellozy, Aziza Ragai, Holley, Matthew, Kazem, Bahaa, Atrushi, Dawood
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container_end_page 33
container_issue 3
container_start_page 24
container_title Change (New Rochelle, N.Y.)
container_volume 44
creator DeZure, Deborah
Van Note Chism, Nancy
Deane Sorcinelli, Mary
Cheong, Grace
Ellozy, Aziza Ragai
Holley, Matthew
Kazem, Bahaa
Atrushi, Dawood
description In the last 30 years, teaching centers in American colleges and universities have moved from the margins of their institutions to the mainstream. Their roles have expanded exponentially: To their core task of providing instructional support for individuals, they have added cross-campus initiatives to promote pedagogical innovation, curriculum reform and redesign, assessment, interdisciplinary work, re-accreditation, and (most recently) leadership and organizational development training. Meanwhile, during the last decade, there has been an escalating interest in globalizing American higher education, reflected in efforts to internationalize the curriculum; recruit international faculty and students; promote study abroad; and build international research, community-development, and outreach collaborations. Campus leaders are turning to their teaching centers to assist not just domestic but also international faculty and students, enabling many of those centers to build their capacity. This essay provides a framework for building international collaborations in a post-colonial world; describes four cases involving partnerships between US faculty developers and campus leaders in Egypt, Iraq, Singapore, and Thailand; and concludes with the lessons learned from those experiences. (Contains 10 resources.)
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Education Source
subjects Collaboration
Collaborative learning
College instruction
College students
Colleges & universities
Educational administration
Educational Change
Educational leadership
Educational partnerships
Egypt
Faculty Development
Foreign Countries
Global Approach
Higher Education
International development
International education
International Programs
Interpersonal Relationship
Iraq
Learning
Organizational Development
Partnerships in Education
Postcolonialism
Quality of education
Role
Singapore
Study Abroad
Teacher Collaboration
Teaching
Thailand
United States
Universities
title Building International Faculty-Development Collaborations: The Evolving Role of American Teaching Centers
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