Title: Effective teaching and learning in a multicultural environment
1Effective teaching and learning in a
multi-cultural environment
- Barbara J Gabrys
- MPLS Division
- University of Oxford, UK
2Outline
- Setting the scene how foreign are foreign
students? - Critical thinking as a basis of academic practice
- Improving teacher-learner communication
- Improving teaching to improve learning
- Conclusions and open questions
31. Setting the scene
- us and them
- galloping globalisation of education a necessary
evil or benefit? - in 2005, 16 of FTE in the UK and 24 in
Australia were international students - contribution to economy
- BUT are they fit to study with us?
4Our assumptions about teaching and learning
- my main objectives in teaching are
- I expect my overseas students to be able to
5Teachers expectations
- do I know the recruitment criteria?
- how do overseas students measure up to them, and
how do they compare with home students? - if there is deficit, what or where is it?
6What do I know about them?
- What is their culture?
- What is their academic tradition?
- What about a (double) culture shock?
- What support do they have in my institution?
- What I personally could do to help them if they
ask for help?
7Ways to bridge differences
- Should they assimilate or not?
82. Critical thinking as a basis ofacademic
practice
- examine own assumptions about what constitutes
critical thinking - is it possible to teach the Western critical
thinking to other cultures during a study time? - how homogenous is the Western academic culture?
9Implementation teaching of critical thinking
- explore the cultural assumptions behind the
Western legacy - acknowledge culturally different approaches to
knowledge acquisition - illustrate the techniques and mechanisms expected
in the Western culture
10Critical thinking as a cultural concept
- origin the discipline of Philosophy
- Developed a range of argumentative skills, both
in speech and writing, through the ages - confrontational style
- contrast with the Chinese tradition which relies
on analogy, circular reasoning and incorporation
of the opponents argument
113. Improving teacher learnercommunication
- for both students and staff
- become aware of your own cultural
pre-programming - to learn about cultural encoding of others
- nice, but how?
12Developing intercultural competencies
- learning from lectures
- encouraging participation in classes, tutorials
and seminars - collaborative learning
- developing reading and writing skills
- understanding causes of plagiarism
- communicating across cultures verbal and
non-verbal communication
134. Improve teaching toimprove learning
- paper-based vs electronic-based resources
- the Age of the Internet but is information
always reliable? - and how to fairly assess international students?
14...challenges and possible solutions
- innovative teaching in combination with
traditional teaching - improved teaching does it imply improved
learning? - methods and resources
- improving teacher-learner communication as a
result of teachers personal development
15Innovation in teaching what?
- traditional methods (lectures, tutorials and
practicals) are crucial can be improved by
individuals - adapt individual projects, group work and some of
distance learning methods - introduce a short course in problem-solving in an
early stage of student development
16Why bother?
- the ultimate goal improved, inclusive learning
environment - encouraging students independence, creativity
and problem-solving skills - nurturing cultural ambassadors and networkers
- increased job satisfaction of lecturers
17Methods and resources
- introduce case studies link to research
- distributed teaching - e.g. see Department of
Chemistry, University of Oxford website - http//www.chem.ox.ac.uk/it/lectures.html
- http//www.ch.ic.ac.uk/GIC/
- http//ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Chemistry/index.htm
- but
- always reference your sources!
-
- project and group work in various guises
18Methods and resources
- case studies collaborative effort of more and
less experienced staff - distributed teaching use learning aids
developed by others - project and group work tailor to the needs of
departments or schools - resources required staff time, funding,
technical know-how
19Facilitating learning in small groups
- peer learning ?
- work in pairs/threes/fours
- ways to engage students
- half-filled handouts
- problem solving methodology
- tiered explanations
20Working with a group
- most likely it would be primary groups (classes
or labs), sometimes tutorials - group size affects its function
- need to establish authority and manage group
interactions - common problems with groups
21In a classroom setting
- it helps to be aware about (group)
characteristics of students - it helps not only with classroom management but
can help with learning - e.g. keep on track resource investigator who
quickly loses enthusiasm
22Facilitating classroom learning
- planning
- preparation
- aids
- feedback
- assessment
23Exercise
- in pairs, explain a problem/part of a problem to
a colleague - get the feedback
- change roles and give the feedback
24Challenges
- for HE institutions development of
internationalised curricula - for lecturers making time for developing their
interpersonal skills and teaching methods - for students preparing for life in a foreign
country, study in a foreign language
25Possible solutions
- no magic pill or quick fix
- in long term, develop self-awareness in terms of
roles (Covey) - regularly revisit your teaching practice
- cultivate empathy
- benefits better life-work balance
26Conclusions
- international students need support in their
adjustment to both popular and academic culture - staff teaching foreign students in a foreign
language need to develop cross-cultural
communication skills - improvement of teaching and learning can be
achieved by systematic introduction of
student-centred teaching methods
27Main sources
- Teaching international students (2006) Eds. J.
Carroll and J. Ryan, Routledge, London and New
York, ISBN10 0-415-35066-2 - Learning to teach in higher education (2006) P.
Ramsden, 2nd Edition, Routledge Falmer, London
and New York, 2006 ISBN 0-415-30345-1 - S. Egege and S. Kutieleh (2004) International
Education Journal 75, 4 (4) - JS Higgins et al., Studies in Higher Education,
14, 169 (1989) - See selected resources