Given the rationale for and contexts of study abroad programming, it is important to consider academic as well as non-academic learning outcomes. In addition to academic outcomes, faculty/staff should consider what they hope to achieve in terms of students' intercultural, interpersonal, personal, and/or professional learning and development. Prospective faculty/staff program leaders are encouraged to talk about desirable learning outcomes with experienced colleagues as well as with colleagues in the International Institute.
This also reflects MCC's Undergraduate Learning and Global Competency Goals by contextualizing them within education abroad. This is a work in progress and is intended to expand and change as our thinking about student learning on education abroad evolves
Study abroad can …
Students can develop personally by …
Study abroad programs can …
Our students’ international learning experiences add value to the on-campus experience by …
While skills including the ability to deal with ambiguity, be flexible, and take the perspective of a culturally different person, cut across the other three categories of student learning, they also warrant separate treatment as central to learning through education abroad.
Education abroad programs can facilitate intercultural learning by …