Internationalisation of Teaching and Learning through Blended Mobility: Potentials of Joint International Blended Courses and Challenges in Their Implementation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Internationalisation
1.2. Sustainable Development in the EU Context
2. Methodology: Experimentation Description
2.1. Implementation of the Joint Blended International Course
- Pillar 1. Social Progress and Health, including SDGs 1 to 7 as well as SDG11 and SDG16.
- Pillar 2. Economic growth and Circular bioeconomy, including SDGs 8 to 10 and SDG12.
- Pillar 3. Climate change, life underwater and life on land, including SDGs13 to 15.
2.2. Student and Teacher Survey
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Challenges in the Joint Planning of the Blended International Course
- Financial framework: Identification and calculation of available funds and funds to be raised, application for funding
- Available time frame: Determine the start and end of the project, consider possible constraints through fixed dates such as the course of a semester, draw up a milestone plan with buffer zones and deadlines.
- Personnel capacities: Clarify responsibilities and division of tasks with the teaching partner; if applicable, include student assistants or research assistants
- Support from services for teaching and learning should be asked for at the beginning of the planning process and at important points during the project
- Technical aspects: Clarify the technical and E-Learning infrastructure at own and partner university and decide early on which systems you want to use
- Which (learning) tasks are suitable to support learners in acquiring competences through self-organised and cooperative forms of learning?
- Which forms of assignments and examination are best suited for working on these tasks?
- What information must be made available to the learners so that they can work on the tasks?
- Which information should they work out themselves and, if necessary, also make available to other course participants?
- Which learning tasks and information should be combined into learning units?
- What organisational and procedural plan, i.e., what learning scenario does this combination of learning tasks and forms of work suggest?
3.2. Student Survey
3.2.1. “Seminar Content”: Internationalisation
I joined the curse [sic!] for two reasons: first, to continue participating in inter-university projects, and second, to have a chance to travel to Germany. My expectations were fully met since I was looking forward to a project that would emphasise teamwork (as well as individual participation and investigation) in relation to sustainability. Of course, the prospect of a trip was highly motivating and made me work even harder than if there had not been a “reward” of some sort.(Supplementary Materials, p. 2)
Treating with people from different countries is, I feel, essential to understand that we are not that different after all and that it simply requires more time to understand another point of view that may even challenge ours, but it always leads to growth.(Supplementary Materials, p. 4)
3.2.2. “Media Didactics”: Blended Learning
3.2.3. “Teaching Skills”: Teaching Concept and Methods
3.3. Teacher Survey
- Diverse online and face-to-face inputs from different disciplines and from different countries and regions would increase motivation and competencies of the students
- Joint international online teaching would meet the EU target that, by 2030, at least 45% of 25–34-year-olds obtain tertiary level attainment [25]
- Universities would have a unique position at the crossroads of education, research, innovation, serving society and economy [26].
- Joint international online would have the potential to strengthen the flow of knowledge also in research and innovation, enhancing transnational cooperation, creating a more inclusive and connected Higher Education, and helping build resilience and global competitiveness of European higher education system [27].
- There would also be opportunities to maximise Europe’s global influence when it comes to values, education, research, industry and societal impact, helping universities become lighthouses of the European way of life and reinforcing universities as drivers of the EU’s global role and leadership.
- Joint international online teaching could empower universities as actors of change in the twin green and digital transitions.
- alignment of policy priorities and investments at EU, national, regional and institutional levels
- the elimination of legal and administrative obstacles to international strategic institutional partnerships
- structural and operational issues that include
- possible incompatible requirements
- diverse temporal frameworks
- different syllabuses that prevent the execution of programmes as well as the award of joint evaluations
- admission and enrolment criteria of students and lifelong learners
- defining the languages of instruction
- inclusion of flexible learning pathways
- new instruments and legal frameworks for alliances
- funding of universities is often insufficient to fulfil their growing societal mission. Additional funding is needed to help in fostering synergies [28].
- significant disparities in digital skills across the EU must be overcome
- quality assurance procedures, impact assessment European Quality Assurance and Recognition System needed.
- similar infrastructures (e.g., in digital tools) should be in place
- adequate compensation for extra time needed to engage in communication and exchanges with university administrations at different levels
- recognise in their career assessment the time spent by academics in the development of new innovative pedagogies through transnational cooperation
- adequate financial support
- economically valorise a teacher’s time in these activities, or else recognise them as part of their teaching workload
- support online as well as face-to-face interactions, including short mobility exchanges.
- ensure flexibility in funding programmes to allow for interdisciplinarity
- administrative and tech support from higher education institutions
- joint digital strategies and shared interoperable IT infrastructure
- training and support services
- seamless access to findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data and other interoperable services
- support capacity building for strong and effective leadership in implementing joint ventures
4. Conclusions
4.1. Opportunities of Joint International Blended Courses
4.2. Challenges in the Implementation
4.3. Requirements for the Joint Digital Platform (BLOOM)
4.4. Policy Implications
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Perfölz, R.; López-Varela, A. Internationalisation of Teaching and Learning through Blended Mobility: Potentials of Joint International Blended Courses and Challenges in Their Implementation. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 810. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110810
Perfölz R, López-Varela A. Internationalisation of Teaching and Learning through Blended Mobility: Potentials of Joint International Blended Courses and Challenges in Their Implementation. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(11):810. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110810
Chicago/Turabian StylePerfölz, René, and Asun López-Varela. 2022. "Internationalisation of Teaching and Learning through Blended Mobility: Potentials of Joint International Blended Courses and Challenges in Their Implementation" Education Sciences 12, no. 11: 810. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110810
APA StylePerfölz, R., & López-Varela, A. (2022). Internationalisation of Teaching and Learning through Blended Mobility: Potentials of Joint International Blended Courses and Challenges in Their Implementation. Education Sciences, 12(11), 810. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110810