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COTE Fellow Chat

Best Practices for Incorporating an International Collaboration into Your Course

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Page 1: Best Practices for Incorporating an International Collaboration into Your Course

COTE Fellow Chat

Page 2: Best Practices for Incorporating an International Collaboration into Your Course

Community of Practice

1  

2  

Learn  More:  h+p://commons.suny.edu/cote/    

Join:  h+p://commons.suny.edu/cote/fellowship-­‐expecta=ons/    

3   Submit  a  Proposal:    h+p://bit.ly/COTEproposal    

Page 3: Best Practices for Incorporating an International Collaboration into Your Course

Patrice Prusko & Lorette Pelletiere Calix

Open SUNY Fellow Role: Patrice:  Expert  Instruc=onal  Designer  Lore+e:  Innovator/Researcher   Topic: Best  Prac=ces  for  Incorpora=ng  an  Interna=onal  Collabora=on  into  Your  Course Theme: Global COTE NOTE: http://bit.ly/1uUo3C7

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BEST PRACTICES FOR INCORPORATING AN ONLINE COLLABORATION INTO YOUR COURSE PATRICE TORCIVIA PRUSKO

LORETTE PELLETTIERE CALIX

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POLL Is your institution discussing or implementing actions to “internationalize” the curriculum or create more global awareness? a. Yes b. No c. Not sure

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THE IMPORTANCE OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCES The Erasmus impact study (2014) shows: •  Compared to 37% in 2006, in 2013 64% of employers

consider experience abroad important. •  Students increased their soft skills: knowledge of other

countries, ability to interact and work with individuals from other countries, foreign language proficiency and communication skills.

•  Staff report an increase in good practices and skills

(70%), beneficial effects on the quality of teaching (81%), international cooperation (92%) and research (69%)

DeWit, H. (2014)

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THE REALITY

“Only a small percentage of students participate in study abroad programs and many groups are underrepresented. There is little diversity in race, gender and ethnicity nor access for non-traditional, lower socioeconomic groups, those with disabilities and first generation college students” (Fischer, 2012).

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THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK:

Promoting and assessing value

creation in communities and networks: a conceptual framework

(Etienne Wenger, et al 2011)

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VALUE CREATION

(Wenger, Trayner, & de Laat as cited in Bozarth, 2012, para. 3)

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INTERNATIONALIZING YOUR COURSE ●  Guided Reflection ●  Asynchronous Discussions ●  Synchronous Sessions ●  Guest Speakers ●  Cross Team Projects ●  Internationalization Learning

Objectives and Outcomes

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POLL How many of you have participated in an international course collaboration? a. Yes b. No

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SAMPLE COURSE COLLABORATION

Duration 2-3 weeks Initial asynchronous icebreaker 2-3 Virtual sessions Asynchronous discussion in between virtual sessions Team written assignment

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SCREEN SHOT OF A BLOG http://commons.esc.edu/globalissues/introduce-yourself/

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STEPS TO ORGANIZE A COLLABORATION ●  Find a partner ●  Start early ●  Communicate often ●  Doesn’t need to be an exact content match ●  Grading ●  Enrollment ●  Give students notice of collaboration ●  Advance notice of synchronous sessions ●  Consider timing-holidays, university schedule ●  Shared goals ●  Course pre-planning worksheet https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AmykCyZKmbWNdHprTVVxZzNncGJmelgxb2MzUnRzRVE&usp=sharing

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LESSONS LEARNED

•  Icebreaker

•  Close communication

•  Collaboration part of course grade

•  Interactive virtual sessions

•  Faculty training/student orientation

•  Advance notice of virtual meeting schedule

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THE IMPORTANCE OF VIRTUAL MEETINGS

FACULTY VIEWS ON THE IMPORTANCE OF VIRTUAL MEETINGS

Contribute to the student learning experience 100%

Increase student engagement with coursework 83%

Help instructors feel substantially more connected to the students 71%

Greater instructor satisfaction with courses including virtual meetings 83%

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STUDENT PERCEPTION OF THE GREATEST VALUE CREATED

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TAKEAWAY #1

VISUAL MATTERS

Being able to see and hear one another promoted more interaction and kept students more focused

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TAKEAWAY #2

USE MOBILE FRIENDLY TOOLS

60% of students who used mobile devices said they felt the ability to access collaboration activities via mobile devices increased the time they spent on the course (29% of all student participants).

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TAKEAWAY #3

A TEXT BOX IS IMPORTANT

•  Backchanneling •  Technical problems •  No microphone

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TAKEAWAY #4

ALWAYS HAVE A

“PLAN B”

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OTHER CONSIDERATIONS ●  Cost and lead time for textbooks ●  Video may be blocked in some parts of the

world ●  Not all resources available for download

outside of North America ●  Slow internet/electricity issues ●  Mobile may work better than Internet ●  OER

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FINAL STUDENT OBSERVATIONS Very engaging learning experience - expanded my knowledge of Panama. I like the fact that I was introduced to new tools of communication I personally enjoyed being a part of the program. I hope the school continues with it. It's an experience all students should be a part of.

In international business you can’t always be face-to-face with the person you are communicating with. Technology has really helped to

shorten the gap and make communication easier. I feel like in the classes we were constantly having problems with technology: a

microphone wouldn’t work, the video wouldn’t stream, or the internet connection was not stable. But that is the way it is. While doing my

internship I had to communicate with other countries everyday and I would have the same problems. I have learned that I need to be patient

and deal with the occasional flaw in technology because it is key to communicating with other countries.

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Patrice Torcivia Prusko [email protected]

[email protected] @profpatrice

Lorette Pellettiere Calix [email protected]

[email protected]

CONTACT INFORMATION

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MORE INFORMATION SUNY COMMONS: http://commons.suny.edu/iitg/virtual-study-abroad-student-engagement-international-interaction-using-meeting-mobile-tools/

SUNY COIL: http://coil.suny.edu/

PROJECT WEB SITE: http://commons.esc.edu/virtualtermabroad/

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THANK YOU!

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COLLABORATIONS COMPLETED

Pilot: ESC Panama – SUNY/Cortland ESC Panama – College of Westchester ESC Panama – ESC CDL http://sunyescimmigrationexperiment.blogspot.com/2013/02/guidelines-for-the-international.html ESC Panama – University of Economics in Bratislava, Slovakia http://habitatsk.wordpress.com/ ESC Panama (Market Research) – College of Westchester http://commons.esc.edu/cowcollaboration2/ ESC Panama (International Finance) – College of Westchester http://commons.esc.edu/internationalcollaboration/

http://commons.esc.edu/cowcollaboration/

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USEFUL TOOLS AND RESOURCES Zoom http://zoom.us Blue jeans http://bluejeans.com Blackboard Collaborate Skype Google Apps Wordpress (blogs) Facebook What’s App

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Thank You! Join the SUNY Learning Commons http:///commons.suny.edu for access to the COTE Community group to continue the conversation! View a Recording of today’s Fellow Chat: http://bit.ly/COTEfellowchatRECORDING View the COTE NOTE: http://bit.ly/1uUo3C7 Become an Open SUNY Fellow: http://bit.ly/11l6Khe Submit a Proposal: http://bit.ly/COTEproposal

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Next Fellow Chat Open SUNY Fellow: Lorette Pelletiere Calix, Instructor and Director of Empire State College Programs in Latin America Open SUNY Fellow Role: Innovator/Researcher Topic: Virtual Meetings and Recordings Using Zoom Date: Wednesday, December 17, 2014 12:00 PM Register: http://bit.ly/1xxEXYL