Philippine Academic Visit: Brief but Life-Changing
-
Joy Penman
and Bronwyn J Ellis
As one way of inculcating international perspectives in its graduates, the University of South Australia includes in its programs various opportunities for students to study abroad. It also encourages incoming short-term exchange and full-program international students. In 2001, the Discipline of Nursing and Rural Health (Whyalla Campus) sent two graduating students to a developing country in Asia, the Philippines, for a twelve-week academic experience. Despite problems causing the visit to be curtailed, much was learned. Participant and organiser insights are described, sharing valuable lessons to inform future plans and ensure better results. What could be regarded as a failed academic visit, nevertheless offered a life-changing opportunity and significant learning outcomes, reinforcing the belief that international academic experiences are extremely worthwhile for students and participating institutions. These experiences provide an important path to cultural understandings, and to personal and professional development.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Editorial
- Editorial for Volume 1, Issue 1
- Article
- Using Active Learning in Lecture: Best of "Both Worlds"
- How Different Can You Be and Still Survive? Homogeneity and Difference in Clinical Nursing Education
- Planning for Assessment of Student Learning Outcomes: A Process within Your Grasp
- Nursing Students' Perceptions of Hospital Learning Environments - an Australian Perspective
- Reflections on Undergraduate Nursing Education: A Look to the Future
- Cultural Competency Education in American Nursing Programs and the Approach of One School of Nursing
- A Case Study: The Clinical Application of Quadrangular Dialogue-A Caring in Nursing Teaching Model
- The Tyranny of Consensus: Implications for Nursing Education
- Exploring the Attributes of Critical Thinking: A Conceptual Basis
- Beyond Student Ratings: Peer Observation of Classroom and Clinical Teaching
- Finding the Way: A Model for Educational System Analysis
- Recreational Music-making: An Integrative Group Intervention for Reducing Burnout and Improving Mood States in First Year Associate Degree Nursing Students: Insights and Economic Impact
- Evaluation Framework for Nursing Education Programs: Application of the CIPP Model
- Building Communities of Scholars through a Hologogy for Online Graduate Nursing Education: Reconnecting with the Wisdom of Nursing
- Systematic Reviews of Health Care Interventions: An Essential Component of Health Sciences Graduate Programs
- A Study Abroad Experience in Guatemala: Learning First-Hand about Health, Education, and Social Welfare in a Low-Resource Country
- Using Standardized Patients to Teach and Evaluate Nurse Practitioner Students on Cultural Competency
- Outcomes of Master's Education in Nursing
- Creating Cohesion Between the Discipline and Practice of Nursing Using Problem Based Learning
- Student Experiences in Web-based Nursing Courses: Benchmarking Best Practices
- The Meaning of Participation in an International Service Experience Among Baccalaureate Nursing Students
- The Impact of an Urban Outreach Teaching Project: Developing Cultural Competence
- Use of a Human Simulator for Undergraduate Nurse Education
- Meeting the At-Risk Challenge: Empowering Nursing Students Through Mentoring
- Philippine Academic Visit: Brief but Life-Changing
- Interim Leadership in an Era of Change
- Developing Nursing Leaders Through Graduate Education in Pakistan
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- Reader Commends Banister and Schreiber, Authors of The Tyranny of Consensus: Implications for Nursing Education