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What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013
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What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad?

Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D.St. Olaf College

24-25 October, 2013

Page 2: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Three dominant narratives: Our community’s ”stories” about learning across cultural gaps

1. Humans learn through exposure to cultural difference

2. Humans learn by being immersed in different types of cultural difference

3. Humans learn and develop: a) by being immersed in cultural difference, b) by reflecting on how they & others frame experience,

c) and by re-framing their experience Vande Berg, M., Paige, R. M., & Lou, K. H. (Eds.) (2012). Student learning abroad: what our students are learning, what they’re not, and what we can do about it. Sterling, VA: Stylus.

Page 3: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

First story: students learn when they are exposed to the unfamiliar culture “out there”

• Students learn through exposure to the new and different in privileged places.

• Students learn when educators describe, talk about cultural-specific differences.

Page 4: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

The first story is hierarchical: Students encounter sophisticated, “civilized” people & places

• With the Grand Tour—this story’s signature program—learning occurs through exposure to the new & different in privileged places, and through modeling and imitation

Page 5: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

With story one, we learn to cross cultural gaps through imitating external models • To learn, we climb up. . .

• And when weslide down. . .

Page 6: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Second story: Cultural relativism undermines the assumption of cultural hierarchy

Our common humanity binds us together, and no culture is superior to any other

Page 7: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Second narrative: immersing learners productively through social engineering

The Contact Hypothesis*: several “Conditions” need to be present if groups separated by deep differences are to change attitudes about each other:

• Equal status• Common goals• Intergroup cooperation• Authority support• Friendship potential

*Allport, G. W. (1954). The Nature of Prejudice. Reading, MA: Addision-Wesley.*Pettigrew, T. (1998). Intergroup contact theory. Annual Review of Psychology, 49, 65-85. *Pettigrew, T. (2008). Future directions for intergroup contact theory and research.

International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 32, 187-199.

Page 8: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Second Story: educators foster learning through “immersing” students in difference

Types of differenceseducators teach beforeimmersing students:• Non-verbal

communication• Communication

styles• Learning styles• Cognitive styles• Value contrasts

Page 9: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Second story: our community’s core immersion assumptions and practices

• Maximize duration of experience

• Enroll students in host institutions

• Improve second language proficiency

• Maximize contact with host nationals

• Carry out “experiential” activities: Internships, service learning, field work, etc.

• House students with host families or host students

Page 10: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Evidence supporting first and second stories

Most frequently cited: “Study abroad transformed me”

Page 11: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Convergence of disciplinary evidence challenges the positivism of stories 1 & 2: “Constructivism”

• The History of Science (Kuhn)

• Cultural Anthropology (Hall, La Brack)

• Experiential learning theory (Kolb, Osland)

• Developmental theory (Piaget, Perry, Belenky, Kegan, Baxter Magolda)

• Intercultural Communication (Hall, Bennett, Bennett, Hammer)

• Psychology (Lewin, Kelly, Savicki)

• Linguistics (Sapir, Whorf, Deutscher)

• Cognitive Biology (Maturana, Varela)

• Neuroscience (Zull)

Page 12: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Recent research findings also challenge first & second story assumptions about learning

• In the Georgetown Consortium study* 1,159 study abroad students enrolled in 61 separate study abroad programs; 138 control students did not study abroad.

• On average, students abroad did not make significant gains in intercultural competence: “a student is all too often in the vicinity of Shanghai without having a Shanghai experience.”

• While learning gains of female students were not large, they did, on average, learn & developsignificantly more—interculturally and linguistically—than did males.

*Vande Berg, M. (2009). Intervening in student learning abroad: A research-based inquiry. (M. Bennett, Guest Ed.) Intercultural Education, Vol. 20, Issue 4, pp. 15-27.

Page 13: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Core Georgetown Study findings*: To whatextent do traditional “immersion”

practices foster intercultural learning?

• Send students abroad for longer periods: Limited impact • Take steps to improve SL proficiency: No impact• Maximize contact with host nationals: No impact• Enroll in host school classes: No impact• Doing Internships, service learning: No impact• Maximizing contact with host nationals: No impact• Being housed in home stays: No impact• Pre departure cultural orientation: Yes—some impact• Home stays: Yes—when students engaged with host family • Cultural mentoring at sites abroad: Yes—the highest impact practice in

the study

*Vande Berg, M.; Connor-Linton, J.; & Paige, R. M. The Georgetown Consortium Study: Intervening in student learning abroad. Frontiers: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad. Vol. XVIII, pp. 1-75.

Page 14: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Third Story: how each of us frames an event determines what it means

• We begin to learn interculturally as we become aware of how we and others typically frame our experiences:“ We don’t see things as they are, we see things as we are.” (Anias Nin)

Page 15: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Third story: Since most students abroad don’t develop on their own, educators need to intervene Educators help students learn to interact more effectively

and appropriately in unfamiliar cultural contexts through:

• Helping immerse students in difference—part of the time

• Helping students learn to reflect—and thus to become aware of the ways that they and others characteristically frame experience

• Helping students learn to re-frame—that is, to shift perspective and adapt behavior to other cultural contexts

Page 16: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

An influential third story learning theory: Learning is experiential, developmental and holistic

Kolb, A. & D. Kolb. (2005). Learning styles and learning spaces: Enhancing experiential learning in higher education. Academy of Management Learning & Education, Vol. 4, No. 2, 193-212.

Page 17: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

An influential developmental theory:the Intercultural Development Continuum

Denial

Polarization

Minimization

AcceptanceAdaptation

Modified from the Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity (DMIS), M. Bennett, 1986

Monocultural Mindset

Intercultural Mindset

Misses Difference

Judges Difference

De-emphasizes Difference

Deeply Comprehends Difference

Bridges across Difference

Copyright, 1998-2013, Mitchell R. Hammer, Ph.D., IDI, LLC, used with permission

Page 18: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Facilitating intercultural development through study abroad: 4 current approaches to intervention

• Faculty or staff living at sites abroad train students through required or elective courses

• Home campus faculty accompanying students train them at sites abroad

• Faculty and staff train students before and after study abroad through required training courses

• Faculty or TAs at home campuses train students, on line, while students are abroad

Page 19: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Assessing Intercultural Development: Comparative Program Data (IDI=90-point scale*)

SA without facilitation at program site: IDI Gains• Georgetown U. Consortium Study (60 progs.)** +1.32

SA with facilitation across program: IDI Gains• U of Pacific training program +17.46

• AUCP training program (Aix, Marseille) +13.00

• CIEE training program (20 programs, fall 2012) +11.34

• Intercultural Development Inventory (IDI): www.idiinventory.com; Hammer, M. (2012). • Hammer, M. (2012). The Intercultural Development Inventory: A new frontier in assessment and development of intercultural

competence. In Vande Berg, M., Paige, R. M. & Lou, K. H. (Eds.). What our students are learning, what they’re not, and what we can do about it. Sterling, VA: Stylus.

Page 20: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Four core intercultural competenciesHelping students learn to interact more effectively and appropriately with culturally different others means:

Helping them increase their cultural and personal self awareness through reflecting on their experiences;

Helping them increase their awareness of others within their own cultural and personal contexts;

Helping them learn to manage emotions in the face of ambiguity, change, and challenging circumstances & people

Helping them learn to bridge cultural gaps—which is to say, helping them learn to shift frames and adapt behavior to other cultural contexts.

Page 21: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Thank you! [email protected]

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Page 22: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Workshop: Applying Intercultural Theoryand Research to our Teaching & Training

Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D.St. Olaf College

Friday, October 25

Page 23: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Three dominant narratives—our community’s ”stories”—about learning across cultural gaps

1. Humans learn through exposure to cultural difference

2. Humans learn by being immersed in different types of cultural difference

3. Humans learn and develop: a) by being immersed in cultural difference, b) by reflecting on how they & others frame experience,

c) and by re-framing their experience Vande Berg, M., Paige, R. M., & Lou, K. H. (Eds.) (2012). Student learning abroad: what our students are learning, what they’re not, and what we can do about it. Sterling, VA: Stylus.

Page 24: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

A growing gap: different stories about learning away

• Which story or stories about learning away are students typically telling?

• We educators are increasingly likely to be telling story three.

• What can we do to bridge this learner/educator cultural gap?

Page 25: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Four core intercultural competenciesHelping students learn to interact more effectively and appropriately with culturally different others means:

Helping them increase their cultural and personal self awareness through reflecting on their experiences;

Helping them increase their awareness of others within their own cultural and personal contexts;

Helping them learn to manage emotions in the face of ambiguity, change, and challenging circumstances & people

Helping them learn to bridge cultural gaps—which is to say, helping them learn to shift frames and adapt behavior to other cultural contexts.

Page 26: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Approaching learning away developmentally:A profoundly intercultural process

1. Bring my own way of framing the event into awareness

2. Bring the student’s/students’ way(s) of framing the event into awareness

3. Start our teaching/training by shifting our frame and adapting our behavior to our students’ ways of framing learning away—a developmental approach to interacting more effectively and appropriately

Page 27: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

At the same time we’re working to shift our frame:We’re balancing learner Challenge & Support

Fadiman, Clifton. (1966). Self and Society.

Page 28: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Pre-departure & on-site orientations:Helping start student IC learning & development

• Identifying personal goals (identifying outcomes and obstacles comes later): “Why am I choosing to learn away from home?”

• Practicing framing & re-framing• Understanding “Culture,” mine and yours (objective & subjective)• Identifying out-of-awareness assumptions• The comfort, learning and panic zones (“holistic learning” without the third

story jargon)• Practicing reflection, & increasing awareness of self and other• Practicing learning around the experiential cycle• Reflecting and increasing awareness of own tendencies through practicing

basic transition model (not “culture shock” models)• Suspending judgment and engaging ambiguity • Becoming aware of learning styles, mine and yours• Becoming aware of common communication style dimensions, mine and

yours• Practicing basic adaptation process• Practicing mindfulness• Beginning to engage with cultural partner

Page 29: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Teachers/trainers need to familiarize themselves with:• Learner-centered needs at each stage of sojourn• Focusing all training around the four core intercultural competencies• Activities that help learners practice the four core competencies (see

bibliography)• Helping students shift perspective around their learning and adapt their

behavior to the third story (that is, practicing the basic adaptation process ourselves)

• Balancing learner challenge and support (including the comfort, learning and panic zones)

• Differentiating learning and development • Assessing Intercultural learning and development• Experiential training—through simulations, role plays, skits• The debriefing of such analogue activities “around the experiential cycle”

(Kolb and Thiagi question sequences)• Holistic training: legitimizing and practicing the emotional dimensions of

learning and training• Understanding and practicing mindfulness and empathy• Focusing on our own intercultural development

Page 30: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Facilitating our own intercultural learning and development: Some action steps

• From theory to practice: familiarizing ourselves with the literature (see bibliography)

• Learning to train developmentally, experientially & holistically: attendance at intercultural workshops– Summer Institute for Intercultural Communication (SIIC; annually

in July in Portland, OR)– Intercultural Development Inventory Qualifying Seminar (IDI QS;

multiple times a year, including in Minneapolis)– Queen University’s International Educators Training Program

(IETP; annually in June in Kingston, ON)– Wake Forest Skills Enhancement Program (WISE; annually in

February in Winston-Salem, NC)

Page 31: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Framing the experience their way: Students choose to learn away “to make a difference”

Goals• Study what I can’t at home in my major• Explore new academic perspectives• Improve Second Language proficiency• Make a difference in others’ lives: service• Make a difference in other’s lives: research• Enhance c.v. and employability • Travel to new and different places• Find romance, maybe the love of my life• Make friends in new & different places• Escape personal problems at home• Escape academic rigor of home campus• “Bragging rights”

“Making a difference”: for self, self & other, society111331122111

Page 32: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

One case: shifting our frame for those students who want to enhance their c.v. & employability

“There is real business value in employing staff who have the ability to work effectively with individuals and organizations from cultural backgrounds different from their own.

Employees who lack these skills may leave their organizations susceptible to risks including:

• Loss of clients• Damage to reputation• Conflict with Teams” *

Employers report that educational institutions should do more to help students develop intercultural competence.

*“Culture at Work: The Value of Intercultural Skills in the Workplace.”(2013). British Council, IPSOS, & Booz/Allen/Hamilton. http://www.britishcouncil.org/press/research-reveals-value-intercultural-skills-workplace

Page 33: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Providing support often means starting with the (more or less) familiar: “What do we see?”

Page 34: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Providing support by leading with the familiar:Describe the woman in this picture

Page 35: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Teaching Learning: A basic simulation game for introducing framing and assumptions

Draw four straight lines connecting all nine dots, without retracing any line or lifting your pen from the page

Page 36: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Practicing framing & frame shifting

“Ask yourself:What assumption am I making,That I’m not aware I’m making,That gives me what I see?

And when you answer that, ask yourself:What might I now invent,That I haven’t yet invented,That would give me other choices?”

* Zander, R. S. & Zander, B. (2000). The art of possibility. New York: Penguin

Page 37: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Becoming aware of out-of-awareness assumptions behind our frames. More practice!

Draw three straight lines connecting all nine dots, without retracing any line, or lifting your pen from the page

Page 38: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

What have we begin to experience through such optical illusions and simulations?

• We do not experience events in the same way: we frame our experience in different ways—even if we’re all from the same national culture.

• The meaning of events is not in the events themselves, but in us: We make the meaning that we perceive in events—and we can make meaning differently from others, even if we’re all from the same national culture.

• We can learn to shift our frames of reference.

• When we can see that there are different ways of framing an event, we have choices!

Page 39: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

An intercultural strategy: Simulations & Debriefing

Thiagi’s six debriefing stages (compare Kolb):

• How do you feel?• What happened?• What did you learn?• How does this relate to the world outside this

room?• What if. . . ?• What next?

Page 40: What Can Students and Faculty Do to Maximize Learning Abroad? Michael Vande Berg, Ph.D. St. Olaf College 24-25 October, 2013.

Thank you! [email protected]

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