Abstract

Internationalization-at-home activities present relevant opportunities for innovation in the teaching-learning process. These activities provide a very broad set of advantages, including the development of soft skills and increased motivation of students. This article aims to contribute to the debate on internationalization of higher education institutions by exploring students’ perceptions and experiences after participating in an international collaboration project involving 153 students in 5 universities in Germany, Mexico, Portugal, Scotland and the United States of America during the Fall/Winter semester 2017. The focus of this study is students’ satisfaction and perceptions. Results demonstrate that although students found the idea of collaborating with peers from other universities very appealing, high levels of satisfaction depended on commitment, both their own and that of their peers. The feelings during the project were predominantly positive, although students recognized that they should have communicated more with their partners and put more effort in the collaboration. This article provides useful evidence for instructors that are considering an international collaboration activity for their students. It demonstrates the deliverables of such initiatives as well as the clear advantage gained by receiving students’ feedback. Hopefully it will inspire other instructors and contribute to the diffusion of international collaboration as a teaching-learning practice.

Highlights

  • Internationalization of Higher Education Institutions (HEI) has been a recurrent discussion topic in the past decades

  • Robert Gordon students (M = 2.60) felt significantly more lonely than the students from Colima (M = 1.10) and Pfeiffer (M = 1.19), F(4,92) = 3,470, p = .011. These quantitative results provide very interesting insights into the impact of the project on students, with clear signals of the project being perceived as valuable and relevant, and marked by positive feelings. These findings provide empirical support to both research hypotheses formulated for this study (RH1 and RH2), demonstrating that the associations of satisfaction with emotions and commitment are rich, as evidenced by the interesting differences found

  • Internationalization at Home (IaH) initiatives such as the one analysed in this article provide affordable and more democratic means to develop intercultural competencies, innovate, and develop a wider set of skills besides the ones directly related to the syllabus

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Summary

Introduction

Internationalization of HEI has been a recurrent discussion topic in the past decades. Aiming at preparing students for a globalized world, HEI have been adopting several strategies including international mobility of students, instructors, and staff, international projects, intercultural curricula, double degrees, just to name a few. HEI internationalization encompasses the integration of international and intercultural dimensions in the teaching process (Knight, 1997; 2004) by developing culture, attitudes and practices that foster the adoption of cross-cultural approaches into their various intervention areas (Jones, 2013a). Internationalization should be seen as a process, the goal being the improvement of the quality of education and research (De Wit, 2011) and a vehicle for achieving wider goals (Jones, 2013a). Knight (2012) suggests that HEI internationalization is organized into two interdependent types of strategies: at home and abroad initiatives. Students’ and instructors’ mobility is quite well known and has been the object of continuous investment by national and international organizations, such as the Erasmus+ European Pro-

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