A growing number of students around the world are engaged in cross-border study mobility. Their academic, intercultural and personal development is a major concern and responsibility of not only the students themselves and their families but also the host institutions and other actors involved in the education of this cohort. This chapter addresses the pressing need to capitalise on international students’ dual strengths of diverse knowledge and transformative capacity as a meaningful and valuable approach to optimising their personal, intercultural and academic development. It also argues that international students’ learning should be conceptualised from a critical approach that considers how these diverse and intangible dimensions of the mobility landscape affect their learning experience rather than merely locating their learning in cultural, institutional or individual parameters.
History
Chapter number
5
Pagination
95-113
ISBN-13
9789811004292
Language
eng
Publication classification
B1 Book chapter
Copyright notice
2016, Springer
Extent
18
Editor/Contributor(s)
Ng C, Fox R, Nakano M
Publisher
Springer
Place of publication
Berlin, Germany
Title of book
Reforming learning and teaching in Asia-Pacific Universities:
influences of globalised processes in Japan, Hong Kong and Australia