Title: INTERNATIONALIZATION OF APRU UNIVERSITIES LOCAL PRACTICES AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
1INTERNATIONALIZATION OF APRU UNIVERSITIES-LOCAL
PRACTICES AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS-
Summary Report for APRU Senior Staff Meeting
Stanford University, April 13-15, 2004
Richard Drobnick, University of Southern
California
- Based on materials presented by Professor
Wan-hua Ma, Peking U. and Professor K. Ravi
Kumar, USC - at the APRU Workshop which was co-sponsored by
Peking University USC, Feb 25-27, 2004 -
2Survey Objectives
- to have APRU members know each others current
internationalization strategies both at the
university level and school level - to have APRU members learn from each others
best-practices in the internationalization of
teaching, research, and outreach activities - to increase collaboration among APRU members on
such internationalization activities.
3Terminology in Survey
- Internationalizationthe international teaching,
research, and outreach activities of students,
faculty, and alumni at university/school - Outreachnon-degree teaching and consulting
activities by faculty, students, or staff with
domestic or foreign participants - Best-practicesactivities which university/school
thinks it does as well or better than the top
national or regional universities with which it
competes for students, faculty, research funds,
and prestige
4Structure of SurveyIndividual School Survey
- Section 1 Best Practices in the
Internationalization of - Teaching Activities Present/Ongoing and Future
Activities - Research Activities Present/Ongoing and Future
Activities - Outreach Activities Present/Ongoing and Future
Activities - Section 2 Missions, Goals and Priorities for
Internationalization - Priority for Internationalization
- Important Factors for Internationalization
- Outcomes Stimulated by Internationalization
- Section 3 International Nature of
- Students International, Exchange
(In-bound/Out-bound), Total - Faculty International Visitors, Going Abroad,
Total - Alumni Located outside of country, current
contact info
5Structure of SurveyUniversity-wide Survey
- Section 4 Best Practices in the
Internationalization of - Exchange Activities Present/Ongoing and Future
Activities - Outreach Activities Present/Ongoing and Future
Activities - Section 5 Missions, Goals and Priorities for
Internationalization - Priority for Internationalization
- Important Factors for Internationalization
- Outcomes Stimulated by Internationalization
- Section 6 International Nature of
- Students International, Exchange
(In-bound/Out-bound), Total - Faculty International Visitors, Going Abroad,
Total - Alumni Located outside of country, current
contact info
6Method for Choosing Best Practices
- Step 1 Setting criteria for evaluating best
practices proposed - Innovativeness, creativity, uniqueness
- Scalability, transferability
- Impact, involvement
- Anticipated Durability
- Step 2 Evaluation of best practices proposed
- Scoring each practice by 1 to 7 points (1 poor,
7 outstanding) - Discussion among four independent evaluators for
consensus - Step 3 Selection of best practices
- Choosing ones that are scored 6 and 7
- Step 4 Clustering selected practices for
purposes of the workshop by content analysis
7Obtained clusters of best practices
- Teaching
- Student Research Projects
- Research
- Outreach
- IT Enabled Education and Outreach
- Integration of Teaching, Research, and Outreach
8Number of Responded Universities and Schools
9Respondents by Region
10Priority for InternationalizationDifference
between University and Schools
University-wide
School
Universities have higher mean and lower standard
deviation than Schools.
Priority for internationalization is
significantly different between university and
school mean (p 0.05).
11Priority for InternationalizationDifference
between Regions
University-wide
No significant difference between regions.
School
Means are significantly different between regions
(p0.05).
The gap between university and schools is larger
in North America/Oceania than Asia
12Where Is Internationalization Stated?Comparison
between university and school
School
University-wide
45.2 of schools stated in strategic plan
83.3 of universities stated in mission statement
Most universities stated internationalization as
a priority in written documents. But more than
half of schools did not state it as a priority.
13Responsible person for promoting
internationalizationComparison between
university and school
School
University-wide
At university level, most universities have
responsible person in internationalization. At
school level, 40.9 of schools do not have one.
14Responsible person for promoting
internationalizationComparison by region (at
school level)
At school level, schools in Asia have more
responsible person in internationalization than
those in North America/Oceania.
15Importance of Factors to InternationalizationComp
arison between university and school
- There is no significant difference between
university and school in the importance of
factors (c1 to c7) to internationalization. - For factor c8, there is a significant difference
between university and school. (p0.01)
16Success of Outcomes Stimulated by
InternationalizationComparison between
university and school
Note that D8 showed the lowest scores, meaning
internationalization has not been successful in
generating additional sources of income for both
Universities and Schools.