TY - JOUR
T1 - First-year Students in an EMI Program: Developing International Mindsets?
AU - Mair, Olivia
AU - Cantaluppi, Gabriele
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Developing international and intercultural competences is often considered one of the\r\nbenefits of studying in English-medium Instruction settings, but how students perceive\r\nuniversities' attempts to internationalize and how much importance they place on\r\ninternationalization activities, including curricular internationalization, is not yet fully clear.\r\nThis paper presents the results of part of a questionnaire for first-year students in an\r\nEnglish-taught Psychology bachelor's degree program in Italy regarding conceptions of\r\ninternationalization. The single case study design, using mixed methods, allows an in-depth,\r\nmicro-level analysis. It sheds light on how students perceive pedagogical, curricular and\r\nknowledge construction aspects in EMI settings. In this section of the questionnaire, students\r\n(n=52) ranked nine dimensions relating to internationalization and responded to an\r\nopen-ended question about what internationalization of the curriculum (IoC) means to them.\r\nStatistical analysis of the ranking showed students associated internationalization most\r\nfrequently with preparing for employment in a globalized world, followed by putting students\r\nfrom different backgrounds together and studying international content in the discipline.\r\nThematic analysis of answers to the open-ended question revealed students held multi-layered conceptions and engaged with the intercultural and epistemic aspects of Leask's definition of IoC (2015).
AB - Developing international and intercultural competences is often considered one of the\r\nbenefits of studying in English-medium Instruction settings, but how students perceive\r\nuniversities' attempts to internationalize and how much importance they place on\r\ninternationalization activities, including curricular internationalization, is not yet fully clear.\r\nThis paper presents the results of part of a questionnaire for first-year students in an\r\nEnglish-taught Psychology bachelor's degree program in Italy regarding conceptions of\r\ninternationalization. The single case study design, using mixed methods, allows an in-depth,\r\nmicro-level analysis. It sheds light on how students perceive pedagogical, curricular and\r\nknowledge construction aspects in EMI settings. In this section of the questionnaire, students\r\n(n=52) ranked nine dimensions relating to internationalization and responded to an\r\nopen-ended question about what internationalization of the curriculum (IoC) means to them.\r\nStatistical analysis of the ranking showed students associated internationalization most\r\nfrequently with preparing for employment in a globalized world, followed by putting students\r\nfrom different backgrounds together and studying international content in the discipline.\r\nThematic analysis of answers to the open-ended question revealed students held multi-layered conceptions and engaged with the intercultural and epistemic aspects of Leask's definition of IoC (2015).
KW - English-medium instruction
KW - Global learning
KW - Internationalization of higher education
KW - Internationalization of the curriculum
KW - Psychology
KW - Students' perceptions
KW - English-medium instruction
KW - Global learning
KW - Internationalization of higher education
KW - Internationalization of the curriculum
KW - Psychology
KW - Students' perceptions
UR - https://publicatt.unicatt.it/handle/10807/306617
U2 - 10.5296/ijl.v16i7.22572
DO - 10.5296/ijl.v16i7.22572
M3 - Article
SN - 1948-5425
VL - 16
SP - 224
EP - 244
JO - INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LINGUISTICS
JF - INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LINGUISTICS
IS - 7
ER -