Friday, September 18, 2009

Checking In

Hello and I hope you are all well and had a relaxing and restorative summer!

I am working on the paper for Madrid. As I said earlier it was in fact accepted and I plan to go to Madrid to present it. I know at the same time you are having your conference so it is not likely that I can attend that one or even if everything fell into place (funding and visas) you would be able to go to Madrid.

I do hope to come to Bosnia some time this year and I will work with Mr. Kulovic to coordinate that so it is also the best time for you, the group you, to be available. I really look forward to meeting you in person. And, I think once we have met it will be easier to have these virtual conversations.

But I also wanted to share with you the section of the paper that is about our collaboration, meager as it has been, to date. The text below is a draft of what I would like to say. Please send me some feedback to see if I have captured the essence of our conversations. Ellen

Introduction
International exchanges have been a significant part of higher education for some time. The idea that through these exchanges the host institution can internationalize their curriculum, give local students an opportunity to interact with students from around the globe, and/or begin to change perceptions of Americans abroad are just a few of the reasons that international exchanges are an important part of the educational experience. International students gain through this academic experience, learning in a new environment, and there is considerable serendipitous learning, beyond the classroom, throughout any exchange.

However while these may be important reasons for pursuing international exchanges, what international students hope to gain from these experiences is not as well articulated in the list of benefits. This paper preliminary case study in exchanges and collaboration will provide insights into what a small group of students from Poland and Bosnia gained and hope to gain from international exchanges. It should be noted that while the Polish students had the opportunity to study in the US for a year, the Bosnian students merely discussed topics of interest using technology. Their international exchanges were to countries more geographically close. This was due not only to specific exchange opportunities but also funding and visa restrictions. This initial conversation on student interest and desired outcomes for international exchanges and collaboration is just the first step.

Student Perceptions

The Bosnian students participated in a virtual conversation with Dr. Ellen McMahon, who was a Fulbright Teaching Scholar at the Univeristy of Sarajevo, Faculty of Economics 2005-2006. Through blogs, texting and email correspondence with a varied number of participants students talked about their academic and professional aspirations. They were most concerned with how this sort of collaboration might support future academic or professional work. This very preliminary but engaging correspondence focused on leadership and management concepts, as well as discussions on professional development opportunities.

According to one student participant, Bosnian students are quite specific and focused on finishing school and finding a job. There are very few students who are able to participate in any form of exchange of even collaboration due to this focus on speed to completion of education and immediate employment. There are very high barriers to participation in these sorts of activies. Visa restrictions and the complications of gaining a visa make exchanges very difficult. Funding is another very significant barrier to any exchange. Even short term exchanges require visas and substantial funding so they are also unlikely.

While there are many barriers to participating in exchanges, this student summarizing the thoughts of his colleagues says there are many “invisible” benefits to exchanges and even virtual collaboration. The creation of a virtual network of resources beyond your borders can assist when the actual opportunity for travel arises. Online forums can be a first step in this process, once language and technology issues are addressed. Those students participating in the virtual collaboration felt that “talking” to foreign professors or addressing management topics of interest are valuable as participants can practice language and critical thinking skills. These virtual communication options provide an opportunity to learn other perspectives on a topics, become familiar with current best practices, practice engaging in conversations with divergent opinions and create connections building an understanding of the current situation on both sides of the conversation. Students hope that this reference to some international collaboration, either face to face or virtual, can be leveraged to improve job opportunities.

International experience is important to employers, according to our Bosnian students, but there is also a potential “negative connotation”. Given the economic situation in the country there are very few families who can affort do send their children to study abroad or to send their children to private universities to earn an international diploma. For those students who do not have this priviledge they feel they are at a distinct disadavantage. Some students think that this priviledge does not mean they are the best person for the job. So while as a whole the students who participated in the collaborative effort thought international experience was important and beneficial to finding a good job, they were also ambivalent about this fact.

Students also thought it would be important to see how this virtual collaboration could be used to their advantage to support their job prospects.

The difficulties in this collaboration, as voiced by students, is the time and timing factor. With the rigors of the academic schedule and the availability of free time, finding the time to read and write, it should be noted in another language, makes regular participation difficult. Given that this is an independent activity not linked to any coursework or assignment also increases the work load while not linking it to any particular recognized educational outcome. The timing issue is grounded in differing schedules. Exam schedules are quite different in Bosnia from NLU. In the Management and Business programs at NLU the use of comprensive exams to assess knowledge is not as common as the only assessment. The use of case studies, simulations, presentations and individual and team projects are more extensively and easily used based on class size and a commitment to applied learning.

The Bosnian economic situation and job market are significant variables in this situation. While it is possible that having some international collaborative relationship with a professor and students outside Bosnia is valuable, the time and energy it takes to engage in such may not be seen as cost effective. Since this is not, or has not to date, been linked to any academic requirement, students are ambivalent about the work invovlved and what they may or may not get from this relationship.

Conclusions

Thoughts to be developed further:
  • Formalizing virtual collaboration to better leverage the opportunity (link to class, have routine SKYPE conversations, work toward a joint project, bring in quest speakers, etc.)
  • Identify funding source to do some exchange, bringing Bosnian students to Chicago
  • Build institutional relationship to sustain and support exchange and collaboration
  • Identify funding source to follow up on Polish students as they reenter their final academic year
  • Identify additional funding to support publication and presentation of findings as we move forward.
  • Present a joint class to Polish, Bosnian, and American students that is recognized and credit bearing to all institutions who participate (find funding to support tuition costs)

Monday, June 29, 2009

wisteria path

This is the wisteria path leading to my back garden. I have a regular city lot in Oak Park, Illinois, just outside Chicago, but I have turned it into a series of small gardens with lots of space to sit and read or visit with family and friends, or space to just sit and think.

For some reason this year my wisteria didn't bloom. I thought I did everything right, what I do most years, and I had some help with trimming and feeding, but it just didn't have one bloom this year. I think the weather had something to do with that. It was warm and then we had a few nights of very cool weather, almost a frost, and then very warm again. So although I did what I thought was needed for a riotous sort of colorful spring, nothing happened but green sprouts all over the place. Maybe next year I need to cover the whole arbor if it gets cold at night....

I think gardening is a lot like many other things in life. We spend lots of time planning and doing the "right" thing, paying attention to details and trying to control conditions but in the end we must recognize that the environment, mother nature in this case, has a significant impact on the outcome. We must be prepared for a variety of possibilities; figure out how to make some best guesses; and ultimately making the most of the outcome and learning from the process.

If we do not give ourselves time for reflection on experience, then there is no learning and no possibility for change. Experience without reflection is just a series of events and we are often then doomed to repeat ourselves and our mistakes. But experience with time to reflect on what we have learned from the event, how we might use what we've learned should this event pop up again, and how we might even use what we've learned in other settings is the sign of significant learning. I think this is what we should all strive for.

The process of learning takes time and time is often our most valuable commodity. When your exams have finished give yourself the opportunity to take some time and reflect on what you learned this year. Think about not only the content or subjects that you studied, but also think about processes, or how you studied, and how you learn.

Take a moment and walk in a garden and see if you can't find some space to breathe and think about what you have done this year, what you learned about yourself, and what you want to do next year. Think about your environment and how you can keep it enriched and engaging enough to continue your blooming!

Monday, June 22, 2009

Hello, I hope your exams are nearing completion and you are all doing well.

I am still working on the proposal for us to present in Madrid in November (and I am still looking for funding for you to get there). So here is what I would like to suggest. Please read the abstract below and begin to think about your ideas about international collaboration.

1. Can you think of many different kinds of international collaboration for students?
2. What are the benefits of these different kinds of international collaboration?
3. What do you think this kind of collaboration would do for you personally and professionally?
4. What would you like to get out of this collaboration?
5. What sort of information or resources would you like someone to share with you?

Abstract
There is much discussion on the importance of international collaboration in higher education. As rapidly changing technology and access to travel make the world appear smaller and smaller our ability to learn from one another, to interact with one another and to do business with one another becomes more important. Yet there continue to be obstacles to overcome, from portability of courses and programs, to financial constraints, to visa restrictions, and competing professional and personal agendas.

From a student perspective what are the advantages and disadvantages of international collaboration? While international exchange programs may offer the real lived experience of educational and cultural student life, as well as the serendipitous opportunities that present themselves, can virtual collaboration provide an alternative to those who are unable to leave and study abroad? Can virtual or online collaboration support a students’ educational program or will it compete and conflict with an already rigorous course of study?

This paper will present the thoughts and ideas of a group of students who represent either a virtual collaboration (Bosnian students studying management in Zenica exchanging ideas with a professor in Chicago) or an international exchange (Polish students studying in Chicago). This paper will identify their thoughts on the value of international collaboration as well as the limitations of each method. Suggestions on ways institutions can better support international collaboration will be discussed.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Visitors to our Blog


I just wanted you to know that I have invited one of my international management class groups to join our blog... if they have time.

These students are part of an accelerated MBA program and are all working full time. This is a very common practice in the US. I will let those who participate introduce themselves. And I am hoping that some of them will join us.

I hope your exams went well and you now have some time to participate in our discussion. While I do enjoy reading and "talking" to Emir, I would love to have more of you join in. Let me know if there is something in particular you would like to present some information on...and do keep thinking about the international collaboration conference and if you think it is worth the effort....while I keep looking for funding for you.

The flower is a day lily from my garden and my cabin in the woods is called daylily lodge because it has so many day lilies ... they are one of the few flowing plants that the deer and other animals don't eat! EM

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Situational Leadership

Situational Leadership is an important concept, particularly in the context of international management and leadership. The following links briefly introduce Hersey and Blanchard's model of situational leadership as well as follower readiness.

http://www.chimaeraconsulting.com/sitleader.htm and
http://changingminds.org/disciplines/leadership/styles/situational_leadership_hersey_blanchard.htm

Vroom and Yetton also took the model and added to it. For an introduction to their model, including the limitations of situational leadership, see http://changingminds.org/disciplines/leadership/theories/vroom_yetton.htm.

These brief introductions to concepts will probably just be refreshers for most of you. But I wanted to include a few links for review as I think situational leadership is an interesting topic for cross cultural communication as well as international/multinational management.

Do you think that similar situations might be handled in different ways based on the cultural differences in a country? You might check out the work of Geert Hofestede http://www.geert-hofstede.com/and Fons Trompenaars http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqNI8le1bF4 to find some descriptions and discussions of differences.

What do you think? EM

Friday, May 29, 2009

an idea

At your convenience check out this link http://www.iated.org/iceri2009/. It is about a conference on international collaboration and I was thinking that it might be nice if we, this group, tried to make a short presentation. We could actually go to Spain if we could find some funding, or we could do it virtually via Skype and Centra (from my university).

Here is what I was thinking and you let me know what you think...I think there is much about international collaboration from an institutional perspective (memorandum's of understanding, joint appointments and enrollments, curricula collaboration, etc.) and from individual faculty/professors' perspective (difficulties in finding partners, institutional support, competing priorities, etc.)....BUT I think there is very little from a student perspective.

Why don't we think about international collaboration from a student perspective - what makes the international collaboration important for students (both here and abroad).
  • Why should either institution, here or abroad, make the effort?
  • Why should students try to find time for this kind of activity given the rigorous schedules they have already?
  • Why should an individual faculty member try to engage international students in conversation given their own professional and institutional priorities?
  • What is the value of this sort of exchange and is it worth the expended energy?

What do you think? I would be happy to submit an abstract but we could collaboratively write a paper and make a presentation....let me know if this is something that might be of interest.

And of course good luck on your exams. EM

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Good Morning.

I am in northern Wisconsin on Newman Lake where my family has a cabin. You can see some of the birds of the lake at this lake http://birdfreak.com/northwoods-birding-the-lakes/.

The most famous bird of the area is called the loon, only here in the Americas. You can hear what a loon sounds like at http://blog.syracuse.com/indepth/2008/07/audio_hear_the_calls_of_the_co.html.

I am interested in hearing from you. Can someone be brave enough to post a message? I think jumping right into a leadership of management conversation might be a bit too much. SO.....Why don't you tell me something about the birds or forests of Bosnia? I am not interested in your English skills, just give it a try. This could be a good practice, and maybe once you get comfortable in English we can try to work on my Bosnian!

EM

Have a good day. EM