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Internationalization of Education and the Fulbright Program

Internationalization of Education and the Fulbright Program. Dr. Julia Stefanova, Executive Director, Bulgarian-American Fulbright Commission jstefanova@fulbright.bg. The Importance of Being Earnest about Education.

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Internationalization of Education and the Fulbright Program

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  1. Internationalization of Educationand the Fulbright Program Dr. Julia Stefanova, Executive Director, Bulgarian-American Fulbright Commission jstefanova@fulbright.bg

  2. The Importance of Being Earnestabout Education • Education in the 21st century is the strategic driver of progress based on the knowledge economy; • Education in the 21st century is a sine qua non of prosperity; • Education is an element of happiness: health, peace and competence (Pope); love, peace and software (Forbes); • A little learning is a dangerous thing (Pope).

  3. The New Profile of the Educated Person in the 21st Century • Diverse knowledge;Creativity and innovative thinking; • Communication and intercultural skills; global competence; • Ability to tackle unpredictability, uncertainty, ambiguity, non-linearity, complexity, risk; • Ability to manage delayered organizations and networks.

  4. Globalization and Internationalization • Globalization involves changes in the economic, social, political, and cultural environment brought about by global competition, the integration of markets, increasingly dense communication networks, information flows and mobility. • Internationalization is a conscious process, a set of policies by which institutions foster global learning; a way to control globalization and mitigate its negative effects. • Global learning: the knowledge, skills and attitudes that students acquire through a variety of experiences that enable them to understand world cultures and events; to analyze global systems; to appreciate cultural differences; to apply this knowledge to their lives as citizens and workers. Reichert, S. and Wachter, B. 2000. The Globalization of Education and Training: Recommendations For a Coherent Response of the European Union. Brussels: European Commission.

  5. What Does Internationalization of Education Involve? A process of integrating an international intercultural or global dimension into the purpose, functions, or delivery of postsecondary education; the process by which institutions foster global learning. Olson, Christa L.; Green, Madeleine, and Hill, Barbara, 2006. A Handbook for Advancing Comprehensive Internationalization: What Institutions Can Do and What Students Should Learn. Global Learning for All: The Third in a Series of Working Papers on Internationalizing Higher Education in The United States. American Council on Education. Washington, D.C. (www.acenet.edu)

  6. What Can International Education Achieve? The essence of intercultural education is the acquisition of empathy – the ability to see the world as others see it, and to allow for the possibility that others may see something we have failed to see or may see it more accurately. The simple purpose of the exchange programs … is to erode the culturally rooted mistrust that sets nations against one another. The exchange program is not a panacea but an avenue of hope. J.W. Fulbright, The Price of Empire

  7. Elements of Internationalization in University Education • Awareness of the importance of internationalization by the central administration and faculty; mission and vision statements, strategic plans and goals specifically including internationalization; • Education/study abroad programs; • Curricular integration with study abroad; • Academic and research programs offered through partnerships and linkages with international universities: double and joint degrees.

  8. Elements of Internationalization in University Education • Recruitment and active academic and co-curricular involvement of international students and scholars in all disciplines; • Courses with components supporting global learning; • Increased foreign language requirements in degree programs and fluency of faculty and students; • Service learning programs for credit toward degrees; • Institutional investment in faculty involved in internationalization; • Organizational and administrative infrastructure of support for internationalizing elements.

  9. Elements of Internationalization in University Education • Incorporation of international activities in the promotion of faculty; • External financial support for faculty and students in international activities; • Connecting the above discrete internationalizing elements to achieve synergistic effects, e.g. international agreements leading to study abroad , double/joint degrees; student and faculty exchanges; joint research projects etc. Yopp, John, University of Kentucky,Lexington,2008. Internationalization Strategies of Institutions of Higher Education in the United States and Their Impact on Trans-Atlantic Student Exchange and Institutional Cooperation, 2008

  10. Mobility • Time-distance; • Ease of access; • Ability to send/receive communication any time anywhere; • Mobility-related exclusion

  11. Academic Mobility • Faculty mobility: teaching, research, scientific and professional fora, institutional exchanges, associations (ACA, Professors across Borders); • Student mobility: • forms: degree/non-degree; inbound/outbound; vertical/horizontal; • purpose: study (degree/non-degree programs; internships; summer schools; service learning; language training); search for better quality.

  12. Global Mobility • Fourfold increase of degree mobility since the late 1970s and early 1980s: 3 mln increase in less than 35 years; Europe’s share – 50%;US share -20%; • Credit mobility statistics is unknown; • Foreign students in Europe: 704 000; • Foreign students in the US: 671 000.

  13. Foreign Students in some EU Countries in AY 2008-2009 • UK: 460 000; • Germany: 259 000; • France: 247 000; • Italy: 57 000; • Spain: 60 000; • Poland: 13 000; • Bulgaria: 10 034.

  14. BG Students in Europe • Austria: about 4000 (AY 2009-2010) • UK: 3636 (AY 2009-2010) • Germany: about 10 000 (AY 2008-2009) • France: over 3000 (AY 2009-2010) • Spain: over 200 (AY 2009-2010)

  15. The Role of the Fulbright Program in Internationalizing Education • Mission: • Promote mutual understanding and cultural empathy through exchange of education, knowledge, skills and values; • Prestige, potential, achievements: • Flagship US and international program of academic exchange established in 1946; • Programs: Core Fulbright US and foreign graduate student, scholar and teacher exchanges; Fulbright Specialist Program, New Century Scholars; Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminars; US Studies Institutes; ETA and FLTA programs; Fulbright Science and Technology Award; • Over 300,000 alumni from 140 countries; • 18 heads of state; 20 Ministers of Foreign affairs; 1UN Secretary General; 1 NATO Secretary General; 1 walked on the Moon; 36 Nobel prize winners; 60 Pulitzer prize winners;1 Olympic gold medalist, etc.

  16. The Fulbright Program in Bulgaria • Administered by the Bulgarian-American Commission of Educational Exchange established in 1993 by a bilateral agreement between the governments of the US and the Republic of Bulgaria; • Programs in Bulgaria: core student and scholar program; senior specialist program; ETA program; Fulbright-Hays Summer seminars; Hubert Humphrey fellowship; New Century Scholars; Science and Technology Award; Fulbright-Oklahoma MBA scholarship; Fulbright-Thanks to Scandinavia scholarship; Fulbright-CEE Trust research award; • Supplemental activities: advising and outreach; language training, paper-based and computer-based testing (SAT, GMAT, GRE, LSAT,CFA, EPSO etc); biennial conferences, seminars, workshops; binational and regional projects; FISI; • Fulbright  alumni by 2010: 907 ( 479 Bulgarians and 428 Americans).

  17. US Grantees and Alumni by Home State Over 30 • Between 10-30 • Less than 10

  18. US Grantees and Alumni by Host City Svishtov - Trojan – Pravets - Chelopech - Karnobat - Over 30 • Between 10-30 • Less than 10

  19. Bulgarian Grantees and Alumni by Host US State Over 30 • Between 10-30 • Less than 10

  20. Bulgarian Grantees and Alumni by Home City/Institution Asenovgrad Balchik Bansko Blagoevgrad Botevgrad Bourgas Cherven Bryag Dobrich Dolna Oryahovitsa Gabrovo Haskovo Karnare Kardzhali Kazanlak Kyustendil Lovech Montana Nova Zagora Ognyanovo Pazardjik Pernik Pleven Plovdiv Pravets Rousse Sandanski Shoumen Simitli Sofia Stara Zagora Varna Veliko Turnovo Vidin Vratsa Yambol Over 30 • Between 10-30 • Less than 10

  21. Fulbright International Summer Institute (FISI) • FISI is an academic and cultural program created by the Bulgarian-American Fulbright Commission in 2002.  • FISI offers one- or two-week intensive courses in a wide variety of subject areas: politics and international relations; business and economics; law, communication, education, science, social studies, art, culture and Bulgarian studies. • All courses are taught in English by distinguished Bulgarian, European and American professors, most of whom are Fulbright grantees or alumni.

  22. FISI Goals and Results • Promotes the Fulbright idea of mutual understanding through academic exchange and cultural empathy; • Helps US Fulbrighters adjust to the Bulgarian educational and cultural environment; • Promotes international education; • Provides unique opportunities for intercultural and interpersonal communication; • Exposes FISI students to diverse educational models and philosophies, and up-to-date teaching methods and techniques; • Offers interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary courses that are not taught in most universities, especially in Bulgaria; • Creates unique opportunities for communication among students and faculty; • Offers opportunities for FISI students to practice and improve  their English; • Gives Bulgarian and foreign instructors the great opportunity to teach a highly motivated and diverse student audience; • Brings together students from Bulgaria and the Balkan region and creates conditions for unbiased positive contacts and friendship; • Promotes Bulgaria, its people, beautiful nature, rich history and culture.

  23. Fun,Interaction,Study,Integration

  24. FISI Facts and Figures • Since 2002 FISI has hosted 393 participants from 31 countries (plus 100 participants from 19 countries expected to attend FISI 2010) (Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, China,Croatia, Czech Republic, Georgia, Italy, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Macedonia, Moldova, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, South Africa, Turkey, UK, Ukraine, USA, Uzbekistan) • Since 2002 FISI has hosted 66 lecturers from 35 institutions (plus 24 lecturers expected to teach at FISI 2010) (Academic Training Association, American Research Center in Sofia, American University in Bulgaria, Arizona State University, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgarian National Radio, Cleveland State University, Common Cause Foundation, Florida Atlantic University, George Washington University, Gettysburg College, Graceland University, Harvard University, Hewlett Packard Bulgaria, Indiana University, Media Development Center, National Academy of Arts, National Library "St.St. Cyril and Methodius", New Bulgarian University, Northwest Vista College, Phelps Dunbar LLP, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Technical University of Sofia, TV 7, UC Berkeley, University of British Columbia, University of Dayton, University of Delaware, University of Hull, University of Lincoln, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, University of National and World Economy, University of North Dakota, University of Tennessee)

  25. FISI 2010 Program • Course 01: International Investing: Opportunities and Risks Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Chenchu Bathala, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, USA • Course 02: Negotiation and Conflict Resolution Lecturer: Prof. George Siedel, University of Michigan, Ross School of Business, Ann Arbor, MI, USA • Course 03: Perspectives on Public Diplomacy and Foreign Policy Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Charles Gliozzo, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA • Course 04: Development Struggles in a Globalized World: The Political Economy of Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Middle East Lecturer: Dr. Ivani Vassoler-Froelich, State University of New York, Fredonia, NY, USA • Course 05: American Foreign Policy and the International System in the Era of Globalization Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Mark Kramer, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA • Course 06: Peace and Conflict Resolution in the 21st Century Lecturer: Dr. Syed Hussain Shaheed Soherwordi, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK • Course 07: Logic in the Continental Tradition Lecturer: Assoc. Prof. Dr. Alexander Gungov, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Sofia, Bulgaria • Course 08: Seeing Films Philosophically Lecturer: Dr. Costica Bradatan, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA • Course 09: The Philosophical Issues of the XXI Century (in Bulgarian) Lecturers: Assoc. Prof. Dr. Lidia Denkova and Prof. Dr. Hristo Todorov, New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria • Course 10: D.A.R.E. --- Debate. Argue. Reason. Examine. Lecturer: David M. Korn, Phelps Dunbar LLP, New Orleans, LA • Course 11: Projects Writing and Projects Management Lecturer: Danail Danov, Communications and Human Resources Development Center, Sofia, Bulgaria • Course 12: Introduction to Bulgarian Culture (history, politics, economy, folklore, art and culture) Lecturers: Team • MA – SU1 (Joint Program with Sofia University): North America and Europe in the Indochina Conflict Lecturer: Assoc. Prof. Dr. Kostadin Grozev, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Sofia, Bulgaria • MA – SU2 (Joint Program with Sofia University): Canadian Studies: Culture, Literature and Identity Lecturer: Assoc. Prof. Dr. Madeleine Danov, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Sofia, Bulgaria • SRC (Joint Program with Sofia Regional Court): Court-Annexed Mediation Lecturer: James Kerwin, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA, USA • NBU Workshop: Words and Worlds of Thinking and Art Presenter: Asst. Prof. Milka Hadjikoteva, New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria

  26. Fulbright International Summer Institutewww.fisi-bg.info

  27. 1976 International educational exchange is the most significant current project designed to continue the process of humanizing mankind to the point, we would hope, that man can learn to live in peace –eventually even to cooperate in constructive activities rather than compete in a mindless contest of mutual destruction… We must try to expand the boundaries of human wisdom, empathy and perception, and there is no way of doing that except through education.

  28. THANK YOU! www.fulbright.bg www.fisi-bg.info

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