Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 16 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 97 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 269 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 516 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Julie Baer | 5 |
Natalya Andrejko | 5 |
Brooks, Rachel | 4 |
Leah Mason | 4 |
Mirka Martel | 4 |
Rajika Bhandari | 4 |
Christine Farrugia | 3 |
Doerr, Neriko Musha | 3 |
Jackson, Jane | 3 |
Nora Nemeth | 3 |
Teichler, Ulrich | 3 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
United States | 58 |
Australia | 55 |
China | 55 |
United Kingdom | 34 |
Japan | 26 |
Africa | 24 |
Germany | 24 |
Europe | 23 |
Asia | 22 |
Canada | 22 |
France | 18 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Fulbright Hays Act | 2 |
National Defense Education… | 2 |
Americans with Disabilities… | 1 |
Coronavirus Aid Relief and… | 1 |
General Agreement on Trade in… | 1 |
Higher Education Act 1965 | 1 |
Individuals with Disabilities… | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Amber Manning-Ouellette – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2024
Well-designed study abroad experiences are beneficial for college students when paired with a leadership training curriculum. Therefore, integrating leadership learning frameworks with culturally competent models of leadership is essential to build global leadership laboratories where students can test their skills abroad. As such, this article…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, College Students, Student Leadership, Leadership Training
Robin Shields; Tianqi Lu – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
The rapid growth of international student mobility has attracted much research on the many benefits it offers to students, higher education institutions, and societies in general. However, studies on the costs and potential tribulations caused by mobility are comparatively rare, despite increasing evidence of such costs inherent in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, Study Abroad, Student Mobility
Huang, Yi-Hsuan Irene; Wu, Cheng-Ta; Guo, Chao-Yu; Kang, Jia-Ling – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
While most literature examines the determinants of international student mobility on a single scale, either global, regional, or national, differences between various patterns are under-investigated. To address this gap, this article explores the determinants of international student mobility at three distinct levels: global, Asian-outward, and…
Descriptors: College Students, Global Approach, Student Mobility, Study Abroad
Veronica Boulton – Australian Journal of Music Education, 2024
There are many young people playing brass band instruments in Australia, yet there is generally an expectation in secondary education, and almost always in higher education, that students will play orchestral brass instruments. This article explores how schools and tertiary music educations in Australia are equipping students to be 21st century…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Musical Instruments, Music Education, Secondary School Students
Kieve Stone Saling – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
The paper examines preconceptions and assumptions behind common understandings of 'scholarship awards' in international higher education research, and analyses how these influence the production of knowledge on scholarship programs and their effects. The paper aims to make a major theoretical contribution by proposing an alternative approach to…
Descriptors: Scholarships, Ethics, Global Approach, Higher Education
Kelly S. McAllester – Journal of International Students, 2024
International students negotiate various intersecting identities while studying abroad. When an international student moves into the new spatial context of their host country, the student's intersectional identity is perceived with degrees of marginalization or privilege by host country nationals that conflict with the student's understanding of…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Self Concept, Social Development, Role Conflict
Kim, Stephanie K. – MIT Press, 2023
The popular image of the international student in the American imagination is one of affluence, access, and privilege, but is that image accurate? In this provocative book, higher education scholar Stephanie Kim challenges this view, arguing that universities -- not the students -- create the paths that allow students their international mobility.…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Student Recruitment, Foreign Countries, Foreign Students
Melissa Whatley; Adeline De Angelis; Casey Aldrich – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
Virtual international exchange programming increased in prominence on U.S. college campuses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Given their potential as high-impact educational practices, these programs hold great potential to improve student learning in areas like global perspective-taking and self-efficacy. However, this evaluation found that…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Educational Objectives, Study Abroad, Distance Education
Vera Spangler – Journal of International Students, 2023
In this paper, I argue that if we want to further strengthen the current direction towards more innovative and critical methodological research designs in research with international students, we must engage more deeply and meaningfully with our own positionalities as researchers. In order to build a more accurate portrayal of our participants --…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Study Abroad, Research Methodology, Student Characteristics
Mark Alan Rhodes; Kathryn L. Hannum – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2024
Intersecting pressures within higher education ask geographers to be ever-more applied, global, community-engaged, field-based, and sustainable. Particularly within the liberal arts education systems, we navigate these pressures for both students seeking geography degrees and those completing their general education. While aspirational if often…
Descriptors: Community Education, Study Abroad, Tourism, Global Approach
Melissa Whatley; Andrew Crain; Joshua Patterson – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2024
Although more students study abroad today than in decades prior, participation still lags behind national goals put forth by the Lincoln Commission. Many students plan to study abroad, yet this often does not correspond with actual participation. This gap suggests there are barriers that prevent study abroad intentions from evolving into program…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, Undergraduate Students, Student Participation, Enrollment
Neriko Musha Doerr – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2022
When a class is considered a study abroad rather than on-campus course, new criteria of learning, evaluation, and vocabulary often apply. Calling it "study abroad effects", this article examines such effects on short-term study abroad programs in the US by introducing the notion of the "mode of study abroad learning", a kind of…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, Program Length, Program Development, Program Effectiveness
Wei Liu; Xiaobing Lin – Intercultural Education, 2024
Current student development theories are mostly grounded in the experiences of domestic students in North America. The increasing portion of the international students in the post-secondary student population has created a glaring gap for a unique theory of international student development. A unique theory for international student development,…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Student Development, Self Concept, Cultural Awareness
Johnson, Martha; Larsen, Anders – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2020
This article illustrates the problematic nature of the use of intercultural, international exchange as the primary or singular mode of understanding the study abroad experience and proposes alternative ways of talking to students about their study abroad experiences. While the focus on cultural exchange may be a practical trope, it creates a clear…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, Student Experience, Cultural Influences, Identification
Katherine Angell; Alan Hertz; John Woolf – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2022
In this article, three professors teaching a liberal arts curriculum reflect on the sudden move to virtual teaching during COVID-19. This initially disrupted the location-specific nature of their courses, taught in London to international students from around the world, but in the pedagogical disorientation came a new orientation. By offering…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes