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Global Education in Action
FDU opened its doors at the start of World War II with an innovative and ambitious goal: to provide its students with an education “of and for the world.” Today, as an independent comprehensive institution of 10,000 students (1,000 of whom are international students) on two main northern New Jersey campuses, our University considers its founding mission more relevant and urgent than ever before. Our recently reaffirmed mission statement is to be “a center of academic excellence dedicated to the preparation of world citizens through global education. We strive to provide students with the multidisciplinary, intercultural, and ethical understandings necessary to participate, lead, and prosper in the global marketplace of ideas, commerce, and culture.” At FDU, we believe that global education is much more than having international campuses or exchange programs. It is also a curriculum that ensures that all of our students will be able to succeed in a world marked by interdependence, diversity and rapid change. A global education is one that provides knowledge and understanding of culture, language, geography and global perspectives. Most importantly, a global education is one that enables all students, both domestic and international, to understand the world through the eyes of others and teaches them how their actions can affect, and be affected by people throughout the world.
Transforming global education from a mission statement into a sense of mission has been a multifaceted and challenging process. While study abroad and cultural immersion remain of paramount importance in any institution dedicated to global education, the national statistics suggest that less than 5% of US students complete a semester abroad. Faced with this reality, we have decided that, while reinforcing our efforts to forge partnerships with colleges and universities abroad, we would also actively explore ways of bringing the world to our students. We believe that transforming young minds on campus through global learning that permeates both the curriculum and co-curriculum will stimulate a desire to explore the world. Among the initiatives we have been engaged in are:
In addition to all these productive initiatives, one that powerfully affects all of our students’ education is our Global Virtual Faculty (GVF) program. In this program, practitioners and scholars from around the world partner with our on-campus faculty in the delivery of online courses. Imagine, for example, a philosophy student examining how basic moral concepts are applied to forensic investigations with a former head homicide investigator from Scotland Yard, or a Contemporary World Literature student having an opportunity to interact with two faculty experts on postcolonial literature from two different continents, each with their own unique colonial and postcolonial developmental histories. Such interactions are becoming routine at Fairleigh Dickinson University, where our students are traveling on an educational odyssey throughout the globe without leaving their computers. Our Global Virtual Faculty Program opens our students’ eyes to how others in the world may approach issues in ways very different from theirs, or even from those of their US-based faculty. Creating the opportunity for all of our students to interact with and learn from global faculty is made possible through another of Fairleigh Dickinson’s recent major initiatives, our distance learning requirement. Effective with the fall 2001 semester, FDU became the first university in the country to require that all undergraduate students take one on-line course per 32 credits of study. Students’ distance learning experience begins with the freshman interdisciplinary course, The Global Challenge, which probes a variety of global issues within the context of cultural, economic, moral/ethical and scientific dimensions. Sophomores choose from on-line offerings within their respective colleges, and juniors and seniors pick from a variety of more discipline-specific courses. While many universities view distance learning largely as a tool for recruiting non-traditional students and expanding their market share, Fairleigh Dickinson’s main motivation, as part of our mission to prepare global citizens, is to use distance learning to bring the world to our students. This approach has led us to develop what we believe to be a new paradigm for distance learning and its benefits, and a new paradigm for offering a global education. |
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Office of Global Learning 1000 River Road Teaneck, NJ 07666 201-692-7360 Email: globallearning@fdu.edu |