Title: Pedagogic Research The Nature of CrossCultural Teaching and Learning
1Pedagogic ResearchThe Nature of Cross-Cultural
Teaching and Learning
- Dr. Alison Morrison
- University of Strathclyde
2PROJECT MANAGEMENT IMPLEMENTATION
- Overall project management Dr. Alison Morrison,
Director of Research - Research Principal Dr. Dennis Nickson, Iran
Programme Manager - Research Principal Bill Johnston, Centre for
Academic Practice
3PROJECT BACKGROUND
- In 1999 The Scottish Hotel School (SHS)
established an offshore higher education
provision in Tehran - Students complete a two-year diploma devised by
SHS delivered by Iranian lecturers - SHS personnel deliver the third year in Tehran
leading to a BA Hotel Hospitality Management
degree
4PEDAGOGIC ISSUES
- Quality assurance
- Cross-cultural dimensions
- Offshore challenges
- Geographically volatile environment
- Politically charged following 1979 Islamic
Revolution - Current Iraq war situation
5PROJECT AIMS
- Investigate the impact of cross-cultural features
at a micro-level within the context of the
learning teaching environment - Examine the implications of widening
participation in higher education
cross-culturally - Analyse appropriate innovative effective
learning teaching practices
6PROJECT OBJECTIVES
- Culturally align learning teaching approaches
that achieve stated educational objectives - Formulate learning teaching strategies that
explicitly recognise address the diversity of
cultural profiles - Provide an evidence-based example of innovative
effective learning teaching methods with
reference to QAA frameworks
7PROJECT METHODOLOGYPhase 1
- Review associated documentation
- Course design
- Class outlines
- Teaching packages
- QAA evaluation reports
- Samples of student coursework
- Minutes of review boards etc.
8PROJECT METHODOLOGYPhase 2
- Fieldwork Tehran
- Focus groups with the total first cohort of 38
student - In-depth taped interviews with a sample of 5 of
the students - Focus groups with Iranian lecturers senior
staff within the educational institute
9STUDENT EXPERIENCE
The induction programme in my opinion was very
good professional and it made us think that
Strathclyde really cared about us..
They taught us how to be more in control of
what we learn through asking questions and being
more active in and out the classroom to find out
information to help our studies.
10STUDENT EXPERIENCE
Our teacher was different from Iranian
teachers.. if I wanted them to help me out of
class, I could run to them with a question and
they would spend time helping me to understand
things
I was used to memorising the lessons and then
come to the exam and just write like a parrot and
this escapes from your mind very easily
11PROJECT METHODOLOGYPhase 3
- Fieldwork SHS
- Taped in-depth interviews with all SHS staff who
had been involved in the management delivery of
the programme in Tehran - Written reflections from each of these persons
reflecting on the key issues challenges they
encountered following the surfacing of trains
of thought in the interview - Focus group to discuss findings from two stages
above to consider implications for future
12TEACHER EXPERIENCES
..one of the issues is the challenge to
professionalism I was a female teaching in a
very male dominated environmentpersonnel seem
determined to undermine professionalism
There was excellent social interaction within
the group which didnt have a gendered image
13TEACHER EXPERIENCES
Using teaching materials of western origin
didnt cause a problem, in fact the students were
perhaps more interested because I was a foreign
teacher rather than someone perpetuating what was
happening in Iran.
It is a culture of an intelligent nation that
has gone through turbulent times. There is an
extremist approach to organising society but
what you see now is the emergence of a generation
that is questioning these values.
14PROJECT METHODOLOGYPhase 4
- Analysis, synthesis, conclusions
recommendations - Currently this is on-going
15SOME EARLY FINDINGS
- Professionalism in course design practice of
teaching learning as important as staff/student
cultural background - Fundamental human aspects of the learning
alliance such as rapport, trust, reliability,
commitment ambition appear to have been
significant in achieving a genuine breaking down
of cultural barriers - Attention to the practical and pedagogical
features of offshore micro culture context is
crucial
16SOME MORE EARLY FINDINGS
- The nature of critical thinking its explicit
positioning in offshore, cross-cultural teaching
programmes may provide a major focus in future
development of teaching learning strategies - Given the nexus of global, international,
regional and local relationships represented in
the discipline of hospitality management it would
seem essential to develop a strong sense of cross
cultural influences in teaching the
socio-political dimensions of the field of study
17EXPECTED OUTCOMES
- Development of teaching learning strategies
practices that are transferable generalisable
within wider international HE environment - Enhancement of learning teaching methods within
HLST subject specific areas - Understanding knowledge contribution to the
nature of cross-country offshore teaching