Introduction to the special issue on Study
Abroad
Jim Swan and Sandra J. Smith
|
Return to The Language
Teacher Online
"If some of the goals of education in modern times are to open up
possibilities for discovery and expand learning and the chance for mutual
acceptance and recognition in a wider world, it may be important to offer
students a perspective on their own immediate center of the world by enabling
them to participate sensitively as cross-cultural sojourners to the center
of someone else's world." (Batchelder, 1993)
"...a person's world view, self-identity,...systems of thinking,
acting, feeling, and communicating, are disrupted by a change from one culture
to another." (Brown, 1980)
This month The Language Teacher turns to study abroad, a topic
of wide-spread interest in our academic community as more and more schools
in Japan facilitate programs that allow their students to earn some of their
course credits overseas. Although high schools have begun to introduce group
study abroad programs, too, colleges and universities have led the way so
far. With this in mind, we have chosen to focus primarily on study abroad
programs and situations experienced by college and university students.
Our authors demonstrate how various colleges anticipate and buffer the "disruption"
Brown mentions, and point out ways to ease the cultural adjustment process
before, during, and after the study abroad experience, thereby assisting
development of the self- and cultural awareness necessary to "participate
sensitively...[in] the center of someone else's world."
Katharine Isbell offers a unique approach to program design: rather
than Japan-based teachers accompanying the students abroad, the program
she describes involves local facilitators and supervisors, with the students
connected to their teachers at the home campus via email. Denise Drake's
description of a more traditional accompanied trip focuses on the collaboration
between a major private Tokyo university and two well- known southern U.S.
universities and highlights ways to integrate the students into both the
academic and social communities. Kathleen Geis and Chitsuko Fukushima
also document a traditional program, but from the perspective of a smaller,
more rural women's junior college which offers both accompanied and unaccompanied
trips; the difficulty of assigning grades for work done abroad is one controversial
point they touch on. Writing in Japanese, Katsuko Asai investigates
the language acquired in a one-year study abroad program and suggests areas
of study to facilitate learning in the pre- and post-program stages.
Like bookends for our other features, Joyce Roth's "My Share"
column takes us through the steps in preparing students to embark on a study
trip abroad , while Heather Jones reports on ethnographic research
done to determine the effect of the re-entry process for sojourners abroad
returning to Japan and entering the workforce, emphasizing that support
is necessary during this critical time and planning for it should be included
well before students leave their place of study.
As one of the defining characteristics of an educated person, at the
end of the twentieth century, study abroad is rapidly taking its place as
the successor to foreign language study itself. Together, these papers present
a sampling of the possibilites open to students today and give an idea of
how much investment of teachers' effort and institutional resources are
necessary to create an experience that will serve the leaders of the future
generation. We hope these papers are stimulating and insightful to you.
References
Batchelder, Donald. (1993). The green banana, in Theodore
Gochenour (Ed.), Beyond experience: The Experiential approach to cross-cultural
education, 2nd ed. (pp. xiii-xv), Maine, U.S.A.: Intercultural Press,
Inc.
Brown, Douglas, H. (1980). Principles of language learning
and teaching. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey : Prentice-Hall.
All
articles at this site are copyright © 1997 by their respective authors.
Document URL: http://www.jalt-publications.org/tlt/files/97/nov/intro.html
Last modified: November 9, 1997
Site maintained by TLT
Online Editor
|