Title: Developing a
1Developing a Global Perspective taking it
forward at Bournemouth University
- Chris Shiel
- September 2005
2Presentation outline
- How did we get into Global Perspectives and why?
- What do we mean by sustainable development and
global perspectives? - Partnership work at the curriculum level
- Overcoming barriers to change
- Curriculum audit and development
- Moving the agenda forward
- Reflections and concerns
3 Global Perspectives, the beginning partnership
work at institutional level
- Partnership with Development Education in Dorset
(DEED) - Enlisting support and establishing a network to
develop a Global Vision for BU - Endorsed by Senate
- Formalising a Global Perspectives Group -
chaired by the Pro Vice Chancellor and reporting
to the Learning and Teaching Development
Committee.
4Why?
- Belief of volunteers that education should
address broader concerns - Moral argument - short changing students
- Educational principles developing more critical
students, pursuit of knowledge and truth - Business case
- Reflective practice (sense making) in the light
of corporate scandals and world disasters - Are the theories we propagate defensible?
- Are our classes pulpits for the ideological
celebration of the invisible hand of the market
(Adler 2002) - Role of education in a democratic society and in
the context of globalisation - Challenging inequity speaking out
- Universities contribute to the globalisation of
values - Preparing graduates for the future
5 How do we interpret a global perspective?
- Sustainable Development
- Development which meets the needs of the
present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their needs
(Brundtland) - Global Perspective
- Enables people to understand the links between
their own lives and those of people throughout
the world - Increases understanding of economic, social and
political forces which shape life - Develops skills, attitudes and values to enable
people working together to bring about change for
common good and to take control of their own
lives - Works towards a more just and sustainable world
where power and resources are more equitably
shared -
6 Second cycle developing a language to
support partnership work facilitate change
at School level
- Development of global citizens endorsed as an
approach - DEA national project to develop GP within HE
curriculum audit within Business School and
development of a Level H unit. - Overcoming barriers and addressing indifference
- Rationale at School level relevance to business
education - More critical students
- Appropriate to Subject Benchmark (educational
sense) - Link to international
- Link to employability
- Role of education in a democratic society
7 Overcoming barriers reinforcing rationale
- Aligns with development of critical beings
(Barnett,1997), able to cope with
super-complexity (Barnett 2000) - Through GP students will develop skills required
by employers - Compatible with Cognate skills of critical
thinking, ability to detect false logic and
to identify implicit values (B M Subject
Benchmark)
8 A Global Perspective
A global perspective is a broader perspective of
the subject and facilitates the development of
students who are Self Reliant (global awareness
heightens self-awareness/confidence) Connected
(global citizens work as part of a team,
appreciate diversity/equity) Well rounded (self
awareness and self-efficacy) Critical reflectors
(challenging knowledge, appreciating
risk) Specialist (subject knowledge plus
approach)
9 Overcoming barriers link to employability
and national agendas
- A set of achievements, skills, understandings
and personal attributes that make graduates more
likely to gain employment and be successful in
their chosen occupations, which benefits
themselves, the workforce, the community and the
economy (ESECT) - Business educators can do more to prepare the
business leaders of the future to meet the
challenge of sustainable development (Blunkett
1999) - BAA, B Q, Sainsbury, London Transport(HE 21
Project) high priority business needs
these skills - Demonstrating that cannot escape global in
local - Showing growth in demand from SMEs (supply chain
pressure/need expertise) - Increasing awareness of Cutting costs by going
green (Environment Centres)
10Curriculum audit and development
- In Business programmes
- International Awareness (Level C)
- International Competence (Level I)
- Business ethics (Level I)
- Social Responsibility (M level)
- Changes resulting from audit
- Development of a Level H unit Global
Responsibility and Sustainable Business practice - Preferred Futures at Induction
- Enhance community action local citizenship
- Published outcome Global Perspectives in HE, The
Improving Practice Series, DEA -
11Example from Services Management
- Level C
- Industry Context and the Experience Economy
- Global ethical issues, global shaping influences
- Environmental Studies
- Appreciation of the global impact of human
activities on natural ecosystems, interdependence
of tourism industry with natural environment - Tourism Context
- Introduction to the concept of sustainable
tourism, the environmental/social/economic
impacts of tourism development. - Personal Professional Development
- Cultural perspectives, national identities,
cultural norms and differences, personal values.
12Third cycle extending institutional development
- Enhancing the global perspective and the
multicultural - experience of education and through this, the
employability of - graduates.
- Develop integrated BU strategy
- To ensure that by 2010 all graduates of BU are
aware of and - confident in dealing with issues relating to
sustainable - development and global perspectives
13Activities
- Staff development programmes to show that all
subjects have a global dimension - Enhancing the student experience - and
understanding it - Ensure university as a business demonstrates SD
- Work with employers/community
- Improving opportunities for cross-cultural
learning and developing resources for
staff/students
14 Approach to change strategy formulation is
not a sequential process
- Creating Awareness and commitment incrementally
(Quinn 1980) - Amplifying awareness and understanding
- Legitimising new view points
- Broadening support
- Solidifying Progress incrementally
- Creating pockets of commitment
- Focusing the organisation
- Integration of processes and interests
- Evolving formulation of strategic direction
- By the time strategies began to crystallize,
pieces of them were already being implemented
(Quinn)
15Global Cinema popular and art house films from
around the world
16So far
- Stakeholder analysis (meetings , presentations
and more meetings) seeking inhibitors and
enablers but testing the concepts and educating
at the same time - Staff survey
- Student focus groups and student survey
- Developing Fair Trade Policy
- Aligning with other aspects of the L T agenda
e.g. Employability agenda requirement to audit
in ARPM - Working with International Office
- Raising staff and student awareness
- Workshops
- BUGLE
- Global Cinema (planned for September)
- Working with SU (drive for Fair Trade and
volunteering) - Freshers Fair
- Diversity Week
17Developing a document
- Presenting the policy context and rationale
- Audit Results
- Feedback from across the university
- Staff Experience and Knowledge (questionnaire,
meetings) - Student views (focus group, questionnaire).
- Recommendations
- Curricula
- Extra curricula
- Corporate e.g. values, marketing and
communication - Environmental management
- Research
- Action Plan
18 Factors that have contributed to successand
reflection
- Working in partnership with development education
(DEED and DEA) facilitated policy change and
action based curriculum - Aims of development education are compatible with
higher education - Partnership work expands networks, access to
sub-networks, resources and opportunities for
learning - Critical to development at BU
- developing strong internal external network
- champions to work across boundaries
- institutional support
- linking to Learning and Teaching Strategy
- vision that education can make a difference
- reciprocity in partnership activities
19The policy context supports change but personal
concerns
- The multifaceted nature of the concepts and the
challenge of definition - Contradictions and complexity
- Routinisation of L T Instrumental students
uncomfortable/unfamiliar techniques less
popular - The challenge of working across disciplines
- The context of HE complexity and too many
demands - Engaging a wider staff base and students
(particularly UK) - The business case is important but equally
important is raising the question about the role
of HE in society - The enormity of the agenda
- Looking from the outside in need greater
collaboration with institutions in the South
20BUTEducation is the most powerful tool we have
to change the world (Nelson Mandela)We need to
persuade others that subjects can be broadened to
include a global dimension, to continue to
explore what it means to adopt a global
perspective and to continue learning to ensure a
sustainable future. No one academic group owns
this agenda collaboratively we can inspire
change! Thank you