2015
DOI: 10.20343/teachlearninqu.3.2.71
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Learning that Makes a Difference: Pedagogy and Practice for Learning Abroad

Abstract: Society faces significant new challenges surrounding issues in human health; global security; environmental devastation; human rights violations; economic uncertainty; population explosion and regression; recognition of diversity, differ ence and special populations at home and abroad. In light of these challenges, there is a great opportunity, and a great need, for education that makes a dif ference in the way students think and interact with their world. This article has three objectives. The first is to pre… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Research indicates that there are a variety of ways to build resilience, including in educational settings (Yeager & Dweck, 2012). Higher education institutions utilize pedagogical practices to maximize student learning and growth opportunities (Rennick, 2015). One pedagogical frame often employed is experiential education.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Research indicates that there are a variety of ways to build resilience, including in educational settings (Yeager & Dweck, 2012). Higher education institutions utilize pedagogical practices to maximize student learning and growth opportunities (Rennick, 2015). One pedagogical frame often employed is experiential education.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…While often touted as a priority by international departments and university presidents (Gaudelli & Laverty, 2015; Rennick, 2015; Salyers, Carston, Dean, & London, 2015), can SAE overcome the hazards of reproducing colonizing orientations to the people and places in which they occur? Although maximizing student learning and growth opportunities are of significance to institutions (Rennick, 2015) and global learning is claimed to produce transformative learning outcomes such as increasing intercultural sensitivity (Anderson, Lawton, Rexeisen, & Hubbard, 2006), SAEs have been criticized for not moving students beyond what Lane-Zucker refers to as “passive observers” of sociocultural differences. This educational process is critically relevant for students during their identity development and value formation as emerging adults as it allows an opportunity to position themselves socially and culturally (Gaudelli & Laverty, 2015).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Many universities with the means to support such endeavors define intercultural learning around participation in study abroad opportunities. In highly successful examples, instructors design experiences centered around learning goals rather than relying merely on the presence of a student in a new place (Rennick, 2015). Often, this means taking proactive steps to integrate class with the local community and place, where the students are living (see, for example, Lamson and Boyce, 2018).…”
Section: Expanding the Sites For Intercultural Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%