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Aimee Haley; Sintayehu Kassaye Alemu; Zenawi Zerihun; Liisa Uusimäki – Educational Review, 2024
Universities engage in international collaboration for a number of reasons. In the global North, which is characterised by wealth and power, universities increasingly use international collaboration for competitiveness and marketisation. In contrast, the global South engages in collaboration to strengthen research and build knowledge capacity.…
Descriptors: Universities, International Cooperation, Institutional Cooperation, Developing Nations
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Aishwarya Ramachandran; Klara Abdi; Amanda Giang; Derek Gladwin; Naoko Ellis – Educational Review, 2024
This paper documents a case study examining collaborative transdisciplinary (TD) and interdisciplinary (ID) graduate programmes at the University of British Columbia (a large, public, research-intensive university in Canada) -- serving as a model for other universities globally. TD and ID programmes in higher education can ultimately create a new…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Research Training, Graduate Students, Student Attitudes
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Tracy X. P. Zou; Gray Kochhar-Lindgren; Andrew Pau Hoang; Kristy Lam; Tom J. Barry; Lily Y. Y. Leung – Educational Review, 2024
Students as partners (SaP) has become an impactful practice in higher education as it enables students to take ownership of their learning and exercise agency. However, the implementation of SaP, particularly in Asia, has encountered many challenges, including concerns about a large power distance between students and teachers. Despite the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Student Participation, Student Projects
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Fu, Guopeng; Clarke, Anthony – Educational Review, 2022
Teacher education programmes are embedded in both higher and K-12 education contexts. This study explores how collective teacher agency is developed and manifested within two online teacher education courses in a Canadian university and a Chinese university, respectively, under the Covid-19 pandemic context. Employing a digital ethnographic…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Cooperation, COVID-19, Pandemics