探花视频

Western Union Business SolutionsTechnology reimagines the international student experience

Technology reimagines the international student experience

Universities are working to personalise learning and entrench human interaction as the pandemic puts strain on听international students

Consumers increasingly expect services that cater to their specific needs, and higher education is no听exception. The Covid-19 pandemic has pushed universities online, forcing faculty and students to use technology to stay connected.

For international students, this digital push could help them to overcome the challenges posed by pre-pandemic university systems, according to panellists on 探花视频鈥檚 鈥淐reating smart, sustainable campuses for international students鈥 webinar, held in partnership with Western Union Business Solutions.

Students want a personalised experience that responds to their needs, said Skyler Webster, director of global product at Western Union Business Solutions. From chatbots that can translate many different languages to blended learning, technology could transform international students鈥 university experiences and address their unique problems.

鈥淲ith international students, the biggest challenge is time zones,鈥 Webster said. Travel restrictions mean that many students have been unable to leave their home countries, which has changed what they require from their lecturers and courses. 鈥淭hey want synchronous and asynchronous opportunities 鈥 they don鈥檛 want to be up at 3听o鈥檆lock in the morning [to听attend a听class].鈥 They want flexibility built into their learning experience.

International students have forced institutions to examine the limitations of technology and to find innovative ways to听address them 鈥 from the fact that people in some countries can鈥檛 access Google to the need for online security and firewalls. 鈥淥ur international students have taught us and made us much better prepared and more future-ready,鈥 Webster said.

In many ways, the move online has forced faculty to go back to the basics of teaching, said Robb Davis, director of intercultural programmes at the University of California, Davis: 鈥淵ou really thought about what it means to engage with students.鈥 Sometimes this is on a basic pedagogical level, relating to how students actually learn, he added.

The Covid-19 pandemic has created an awareness that not all learning occurs in the classroom. 鈥淟earning is a social activity,鈥 said Camille Rutherford, vice-provost international at Brock University in Canada. 鈥淭his is one of the biggest gaps that we all took for granted [when Covid-19 struck and universities migrated online]. As you鈥檙e walking out of class, you bump into people and that鈥檚 how you get to meet people and meet new friends, especially for international students.鈥

To address this, the university has been focusing on systems that allow people to connect. Through gamification software Crowdpurr, the university hosts online events and encourages remote social interaction between students. It听has also set up global peer communities using Microsoft Teams and has established a community of students in India who are now better able to engage with each other through this software. 鈥淎cross the sector, we鈥檝e got to be pragmatic about how we are building those human connections and those opportunities for students to connect with each other,鈥 Rutherford explained.

The same goes for students connecting with faculty. The pandemic has not just highlighted international students鈥 current difficulties 鈥 from technology challenges to conflicting time zones 鈥 but has also shown that many historical systems need to be improved to properly engage with the needs of these students. 鈥淚f an international [student] comes in with a regulatory issue, it鈥檚 also an opportunity to ask, 鈥榟ow are things going academically?鈥 and not just say, 鈥榶ou can now go talk to your academic adviser,鈥 Davis said.

The panellists hoped that the lessons learned during the pandemic would not be forgotten once we return to face-to-face teaching. 鈥淲e learned that trying new things would lead to some really cool innovations, could lead to better engagement with students,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淚f we鈥檝e learned anything from the past 12 months, it鈥檚 that we need to try new things.鈥

Watch the 探花视频 and WUBS webinar on-demand above or on the .

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