Wednesday, 16 July 2025

Assuring a Short-term Research Abroad Activity is an Educative Experience: Avoiding the Boondoggle | Chapter 6 | Language, Literature and Education: Research Updates Vol. 6

 

Background: Student learning outcomes (SLOs) are typically written and decided upon by faculty in institutions at a high level and do not change rapidly or often. In contrast, the pace of globalisation, cultural knowledge, trade agreements, regional political stabilities, technology and population growth change constantly and, sometimes, at breathtaking speeds.

 

Purpose: At Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, an annual short-term, research abroad non-credit program was created in 2012 as a core component of the undergraduate research initiative that achieves learning outcomes in a meaningful way. The paper aims to discuss this issue.

 

Design/Methodology/Approach: In order to describe and analyse the short-term research abroad activity, an instrumental case study design was created. The instrumental case study was chosen as a means of allowing the facilitators/authors to communicate how they attempted to ensure that the program was educative. In order to determine if the program was, in fact, educational and that it met its goal of being an effective research experience, the authors utilised two additional research methods. The first was a document analysis of the participant’s research artefacts. Each participant was required to communicate their findings by writing a paper that was submitted for publication to an applicable research journal.

 

Findings: The study found that an experiential education as a pedagogical framework coupled with a short-term research abroad activity can lead to a substantive educative experience, where the authors described and analyzed attempts to ensure that the short-term research abroad program was educative, it also describes the educational assessment findings which describe what was found when the authors tested whether they, in fact, met this goal.

 

Research limitations/Implications: During the design phase of the short-term research abroad program, the authors turned to experiential education as a principle for how they would ensure that the program was grounded in an acceptable educational theory. Experiential education is a widely accepted educational practice used in experiences such as co-ops and internships, study abroad, undergraduate research and service learning.

 

Practical Implications: To frame the short-term cultural research abroad program as something from which students could learn, the authors utilised the National Society of Experiential Education’s (2013) list of eight principles of good practice. In order to safeguard that an activity is educative, an assessment or an evaluation of a demonstrative artefact is essential. In assessing the final artefact against a rubric or some other non-biased or less biased criteria, an educator can ensure that the student has gained new knowledge in the form of student learning outcomes (SLOs). In addition, the educator can use the results of this assessment to modify many different aspects of the experience, ranging from the timing, the modality, the pre-work, and even the learning outcomes themselves.

 

Social Implications: As the need for global citizenship and a globally developed workforce increases, the need for variants of the traditional semester abroad study will increase. While this study did set out to research the attainment of a meaningful study abroad experience based on duration, it did confirm that students did successfully attain SLOs in a structured, non-credit, short-term study abroad experience. Given the financial and curriculum inflexibility of some students, Universities and faculty could achieve attainment of research-based, program-agnostic SLOs by offering short-term study abroad alternatives to the traditional semester or year-long experiences. With graduates looking to enter the job market where businesses are more globalised and executives’ recognition of a need for more international experience, carefully constructed short-term study abroad programs are meaningful avenues to build those credentials.

 

Originality/Value: Such offerings can be constructed as customised experiences to achieve highly integrated skills across all degree programs.

 

Author(s) Details

Kelly George
Department of Social Sciences and Economics, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Florida, USA.

 

Aaron Clevenger
Department of International Programs, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Florida, USA.

 

Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/lleru/v6/2180

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