Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant

Professional development offered to higher education faculty is meant to enhance pedagogy and improve practice. Inspired by a transnational partnership in Southeast Asia, this study aimed to discover how teacher education faculty perceived faculty development offered to them by university partnershi...

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Main Author: Dr. Janine Allen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georgia Southern University 2014-07-01
Series:International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol8/iss2/17
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spelling doaj-7d802bef5ffe41659a74885978227cc32020-11-24T20:43:38ZengGeorgia Southern UniversityInternational Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1931-47442014-07-018210.20429/ijsotl.2014.080217Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally RelevantDr. Janine AllenProfessional development offered to higher education faculty is meant to enhance pedagogy and improve practice. Inspired by a transnational partnership in Southeast Asia, this study aimed to discover how teacher education faculty perceived faculty development offered to them by university partnership colleagues from the United States. Survey findings indicate that certain faculty development strategies improved teaching and assessment practices and enhanced self-reflection. However, evidence also showed some negative faculty perceptions in relation to the US partner’s methodologies, and qualitative responses indicated a lack of relevancy to the Southeastern Asia context. Furthermore, negative correlations were found between faculty development workshops and teacher education faculty teaching subject area endorsement content and their praxis. Very little has been written on the impact of teacher educator professional development offered by transnational academic partnerships. Universities involved as transnational partners must be flexible, culturally sensitive and determine together areas of priority and relevance as a definition of success for partnership effectiveness.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol8/iss2/17TransnationalProfessional DevelopmentInternationalization of Higher EducationTeaching and LearningCultural IntelligenceHigher Education Partnership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dr. Janine Allen
spellingShingle Dr. Janine Allen
Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant
International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Transnational
Professional Development
Internationalization of Higher Education
Teaching and Learning
Cultural Intelligence
Higher Education Partnership
author_facet Dr. Janine Allen
author_sort Dr. Janine Allen
title Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant
title_short Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant
title_full Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant
title_fullStr Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Transnational Collaboration of Faculty Development and Learning: An Argument for Making Learning Culturally Relevant
title_sort investigating transnational collaboration of faculty development and learning: an argument for making learning culturally relevant
publisher Georgia Southern University
series International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
issn 1931-4744
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Professional development offered to higher education faculty is meant to enhance pedagogy and improve practice. Inspired by a transnational partnership in Southeast Asia, this study aimed to discover how teacher education faculty perceived faculty development offered to them by university partnership colleagues from the United States. Survey findings indicate that certain faculty development strategies improved teaching and assessment practices and enhanced self-reflection. However, evidence also showed some negative faculty perceptions in relation to the US partner’s methodologies, and qualitative responses indicated a lack of relevancy to the Southeastern Asia context. Furthermore, negative correlations were found between faculty development workshops and teacher education faculty teaching subject area endorsement content and their praxis. Very little has been written on the impact of teacher educator professional development offered by transnational academic partnerships. Universities involved as transnational partners must be flexible, culturally sensitive and determine together areas of priority and relevance as a definition of success for partnership effectiveness.
topic Transnational
Professional Development
Internationalization of Higher Education
Teaching and Learning
Cultural Intelligence
Higher Education Partnership
url https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol8/iss2/17
work_keys_str_mv AT drjanineallen investigatingtransnationalcollaborationoffacultydevelopmentandlearninganargumentformakinglearningculturallyrelevant
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