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‘Going Glocal’: A Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of Global Citizenship Education at a Dutch Liberal Arts and Sciences College (High Education; Vol. 72, No. 3)
Place of publication | Year of publication | Collation: 
[Cham] | 2015 | p. 323-340
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISSN 0018-1560 (print); ISSN 1573-174X (online)
Author: 
Marcin Skald; John Friedman; Eri Park; Barbara Oomen;
Corporate author: 
Springer Nature
Region: 
Europe and North America
© Springer Nature B.V.

Over the past decades, more and more institutions of higher learning have developed programs destined to educate students for global citizenship. Such efforts pose considerable challenges: conceptually, pedagogically and from the perspective of impact assessment. Conceptually, it is of utmost importance to pay attention to both structural inequalities and intercultural competencies, to emphasize both differences and similarities. In addition, there is the need to increase awareness of the dialectics between the global and the local. Pedagogically, this calls for transformative learning, with an emphasis on attitudes and skills, in addition to knowledge alone. Once objectives have been defined and translated pedagogically, such programs call for an assessment of the degree to which they have been met. In this light, this article describes the conceptualization and pedagogics of an innovative project, Going Glocal, designed at a Dutch liberal arts and sciences college on the basis of these premises and its impact on the university students concerned.

 

Resource Type: 
Research papers / journal articles
Theme: 
Civic / Citizenship / Democracy
Globalisation and social justice / International understanding
Level of education: 
Higher education