Abstract

Internationalisation of the higher education system continues to have a strong impact on national education policies. From an international perspective, learning to teach in globally competent and culturally responsive ways is a core element of teacher education. For this purpose, academically and practice-oriented student teacher exchange programmes have been established. It is often taken for granted that corresponding internships abroad offer positive learning experiences, but research shows that these expectations are frequently not met. This paper; therefore, investigates if and how learning takes place in multi-week international internships, what shapes, enables, limits or obstructs this learning. The investigation is based on a qualitative-hermeneutic approach with data collected from group discussions and analysed according to the documentary method. The analyses led to two ‘ideal types’: the first is based on learning from contrasts and includes sub-types in which the student teachers’ perceptions and interpretations are differentiated or distanced to a greater or lesser extent. The second ideal type, in which learning takes place through challenges, is also divided into sub-types which differ in the degree of self-efficacy experienced by the students. The paper concludes with some suggestions on how pre-service teachers can be supported so that the learning potential of their internships can be exploited more fully.

Highlights

  • Internationalisation of the higher education system has had a strong impact on national education policies

  • The research question is addressed through the qualitative-hermeneutic approach of the documentary method according to Bohnsack (2010, 2013, 2014), including data collection with group discussions

  • In addition to the “formulating” and the “reflecting” interpretation, in the case of group discussions, it is insightful to investigate the way the discourse is organised among the participants, who is agreeing or disagreeing with whom and what is not being said and quietly taken for granted as it belongs to a shared implicit knowledge among the group members

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Summary

Areas and conditions of learning in an internship abroad

Internationalisation of the higher education system has had a strong impact on national education policies. International internships are regarded as intensive, horizon-expanding and competence-enhancing experiences They have gained enormously in scope and importance at universities of teacher education as part of increasing internationalisation efforts. They run the risk of primarily serving to position the universities in the tertiarised educational landscape, orienting themselves to quantitatively measurable variables such as the number of mobility activities and, in doing so, losing sight of the question of the actual qualitative gain that has been achieved (see authors 2011; Svensson & Wihlborg, 2010) It is worth asking what this gain is, to what extent experiences from international environments are being introduced and applied in the traditionally local contexts of compulsory education, and how time spent in schools abroad can help prospective teachers develop their competences.

Methodological approach: qualitative-hermeneutic
Methodology of the documentary method
Results: two ideal–typical interconnections
Ideal type ‘learning from contrasts’
Ideal type ‘learning from particular challenges’
Unused potential and support possibilities
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