Discovering OIL: the role of online international learning and international field trips in enhancing student engagement and performance
Authors
Taylor, AaronAffiliation
Coventry UniversityIssue Date
2017-03Subjects
online intentional learninginternationalisation of the curriculum
cultural awareness
best-practice assessment
international field trips
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Online International Learning (OIL) is an innovative teaching paradigm that facilitates intercultural competence via meaningful online discussions between higher education practitioners and students in distant locations (de Wit 2013). OIL has been elucidated as a collaborative form of pedagogy that enhances ‘virtual mobility’, collaborative learning and the student experience (ibid). Similarly, international field trips allow students the opportunity to enhance their cultural awareness by active learning and immersion in new, dynamic and exciting learning environments (Jakubowski 2003). Piggott (2012) argues higher education students revel in experiencing real situations that can often bring what is taught in the classroom ‘to life’. The case study integrated OIL and international field trips as a combined pedagogical strategy with the intention to deliver a best practice policy in assessment. This platform provided the opportunity to share ideas and views, discuss good business practices, explore cultural differences and encourage debate on current global affairs. It is contended that this practice not only fills a ‘gap’ but is in fact a unique strategy that has not been identifiable in any literature to date and is much deeper than the OIL-only strategy conducted by Villar-Onrubia and Rajpal (2015).Citation
Tayor, A. (2017) 'Discovering OIL: the role of online international learning and international field trips in enhancing student engagement and performance'. Journal of pedagogic development 7 (1) 21-28Publisher
University of BedfordshireJournal
Journal of pedagogic developmentAdditional Links
https://journals.beds.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/jpd/issue/viewIssue/29/7Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2047-3265Collections
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- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/


