Showing posts with label Exchange Students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Exchange Students. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Open Global Education Advisor position at Columbia College Chicago


UPDATE - Position filled as of May 1st


Columbia College Chicago is an acclaimed undergraduate and graduate institution that provides a comprehensive education in the arts, communications and public relations. We constantly aim to reach our full potential as an educational innovator, incubator of new creative practice and generator of real-world success for young creatives. We are located in the heart of Chicago, across the street from historic Grant Park, and housed in some of the most iconic buildings in the South Loop. Columbia College Chicago a private urban institution of over 6,000 undergraduate and graduate students, four-year College offering a distinctive curriculum that blends liberal arts, creative and media arts and business is currently searching for a Global Education Advisor.

POSITION SUMMARY

Under the direct supervision of the Assistant Provost for Global Education, the Global Education Advisor is a student-facing role focusing on assisting Columbia College Chicago CCC students involved in study abroad and study away programs, as well as providing support for international exchange students studying at Columbia College. The Global Education Advisor contributes to the development and implementation of policies and processes that facilitate student participation in our exchange, approved provider, and faculty-led travel experiences. This position also works directly with students and internal and external partners to advise students on the educational, procedural, and financial implications of their choice to participate in study abroad and study away experiences. A Flexible Work Arrangement may be available for this position in mutual agreement with the Assistant Provost of Global Education. 

For more information and to apply please visit: https://about.colum.edu/human-resources/employment

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

French Fries, French Dressing, French Bread and to drink, Peru


Just thought I would share this short clip from the 1985 movie "Better Off Dead" when the American mother prepares a meal for the French exchange student [young girl in the scene] who moved in next door.  This clip ties into my April 2009 IHEC Blog post "Portrayal of Exchange Students in Movies and on TV in the U.S."  Thanks to my good friend Katie for reminding me about this scene in the movie.



Monday, October 25, 2010

The Middle, episode: “Foreign Exchange” (s02e05)

The following guest post on IHEC Blog is by Sarah McNitt from the Office of International Education at Miami University Ohio.  In this post, Sarah reviews the most recent episode of the ABC television [U.S.] comedy The Middle entitled “Foreign Exchange". The Following video is a snippet from the episode:



Mother Frankie Heck is frustrated by her family’s constant fighting over chores and family duties.  She is told by a neighbor at church that hosting a foreign exchange student is a rewarding experience and that “being immersed with someone from another culture gives them this global experience and makes them more tolerant and mature”.  This (especially the parts about being tolerant and mature) appeals to Frankie, who hopes that hosting an exchange student will “fix” her family or at least inspire them to be on their best behavior during the time their guest is there.  Takayuki, their Japanese exchange student arrives and the family introduces him into their everyday routine: eating fast food and watching reality television.  The different members of the family take different approaches to Takayuki during his visit:

·     - Axl, the oldest son, takes Takayuki to high school with him and tries to use Takayuki to meet girls

·     - Brick, the youngest son, studies up on Japan and repeats the trivia facts he’s gleaned back to Takayuki, who is not impressed.  Brick also tries and fails to bond with Takayuki over anime and manga.  Brick says of the exchange student: “He’s like a cat.  You show him affection and he doesn’t return it.”

·     - Sue, the middle child, learns from Brick that karaoke is the “national pastime” in Japan and sings karaoke to an unresponsive Takayuki for three hours.

·    -  Mike, the father, lectures Takayuki about the basics of US government and takes him fishing.  Takayuki does not appear to be impressed.

·    -  Frankie wants the family to be on their best behavior and make a good impression and ends up paying two of the children not to fight in front of Takayuki.  Frankie wants the family to be “ambassadors” who will make a good impression on their exchange student, who will tell people back home about how much he likes Indiana, “and pretty soon, America’s popular again.”

All in all, Takayuki is mostly expressionless and unresponsive to the Hecks.  While some of the Hecks’ approaches to their exchange student could be interpreted as exploitative or ignorant, Takayuki also seems to have little interest in learning about the Hecks or America or sharing his home culture with them.

Frankie meets her neighbor’s outgoing and enthusiastic exchange student Esteban, and hears about the fun another family has been having with their Japanese student.  She comes to agree with the rest of the family that their exchange student is a “dud”.  “I wanted a cultural exchange,” she complains, “And instead I get another sullen teen.  I mean, what’s with his parents sending him over here?  I would never saddle some poor Japanese family with Axl.”

Minutes later, however, she reverses this stance and decides that it’s the Hecks, as hosts, who are the “duds”.  Her neighbor reveals that Esteban was quite shy when he arrived and that his host family brought him out of his shell by sharing the “hot spots” of Orson, taking him on trips and introducing him to exciting American foods like kettle corn.  “They didn’t fly halfway around the world just to sit in front of a TV,” points out the neighbor. 

Frankie confronts her family.  “All we’ve done is work, eat dinner and sit and watch ‘The Bachelor’.  No wonder he’s sullen.  We haven’t done anything fun with him.”  “In our defense,” counters her husband, “We don’t do anything fun with our own kids.”

So the Hecks pile into the car to take Takayuki to see “Americana” at a place where he can visit an old-timey pioneer village.  When their car breaks down, however, the family breaks down and they “stop being polite and start getting real” (as The Real World would say).  It comes to light that the kids are still fighting, that Frankie has been paying them to behave, and that they are not the perfect family that Frankie has been trying to portray them as.  “This is an American family,” she says, “We yell and fight, we eat bad food, we watch too much TV and we bribe our kids.”

At this point, Takayuki, who has said very little throughout the episode, reveals that he can fix the family car.  He takes it upon himself to fix several other things around the house and may actually have enjoyed his time in Indiana.  At the end of the episode, we see Takayuki return to his family in Japan, where it is revealed that he may have had more in common with the Heck family than he let on[1], as he sits on his family’s couch in only his underwear (like Axl does), whines like the average teenager (Axl and Sue) and even whispers things to himself under his breath (Brick’s signature quirk).  It appears that Frankie was right when she suggested that his family was “saddling” the Hecks with another sullen teenager, and it also suggests that teenagers are the same, all around the world. 

A few additional notes:

·     - Brick is under the impression that, because they are popular in Japan and have crossed-over to the US, all Japanese will like manga, anime and karaoke.  These are the kinds of cultural assumptions that are common in real life and in these movies/TV shows about intercultural interaction.  Takayuki does not like any of these things (but on the other hand, he doesn’t seem to like much of anything).
·        
-     - “I don’t know if you’re a hugger, but you’re getting one!”  Multiple times in the episode, Frankie expresses this sentiment.  Hugging seems like such a quintessentially American greeting/show of affection, which some people come to love about America and some people (including Americans) are distinctly uncomfortable with.
·         
      - The exchange seems to have lasted about two weeks.  I don’t know of any exchange programs that work on such a short basis, but short exchanges like these seem quite common in US movies and TV, where these exchange students will either appear in one episode or be permanent recurring characters.  On the other end of the spectrum, you have That 70’s Show’s foreign exchange student Fes, who appears to never leave.  What kind of visa is that kid on, anyway?

Have you seen the episode?  If not, You can watch the entire episode here. What are your thoughts?



[1] I think (I hope) we’re supposed to assume that he was like them all along, and not that he took away the worst/strangest parts of the Hecks’
personalities and adapted them to his life in Japan.

Related IHEC Blog posts:




Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Exchange Students and Bicycle safety in the Wisconsin Dells

Recently I was going through all of the Google Alerts I receive and came across a very interesting, scary and sad story from the Wisconsin Dells that I thought I would share here on IHEC Blog. 

The headline from September 11th on WisconsinWatch.org reads “Russian student’s death highlights lack of public transit in the Dells”.  I occasionally see such headlines in my Google Alerts and don’t investigate further but I know the Wisconsin Dells (my family and I vacationed there for a few days in summer 2009) so I decided to open the link and read the article.

 

The story is sad.  On July 9th an 18 year old exchange student from Russia named Maria Kolesova was struck and killed by a garbage truck while legally riding her bicycle on a sidewalk.

 

What I further learned from reading the article and find shocking is that “of the 21 bicycle-vehicle crashes reported in Wisconsin Dells and Lake Delton since 2008, police reports indicate 19 involved international student riders.”  This statistic is staggering to me!  According to the article, approximately 2,000 international students come to the Wisconsin Dells to work during the busy summer season.  I noticed this during our family vacation and wanted to post to IHEC Blog about this but time got the best of me and I never got around to it.

 

I won’t summarize the article further but I think it’s a good and informative read about a serious problem.  I did some additional research on this and didn’t come up with more information on bicycle safety and international students in the Wisconsin Dells but did come across an article entitled “Some foreign workers find frustration in Wisconsin Dells” also from the September 11th WisconsinWatch.org which is also an interesting read.


Monday, September 13, 2010

Reuniting with an Exchange Student and/or Host Family from your Past

Have you ever reunited with an exchange student you hosted or a family that hosted you while you were an exchange student or studied abroad?  What was that experience like for you?  Please leave a comment with details below!

I have reunited a few times over the years with my host families from Rosenheim, Germany.  I was fortunate enough to be an exchange student twice during high/seconday school for a month during the summers after my sophompre (2nd) and senior (4th) years of high school.  I stayed with two different families during these exchange experiences and on my second exchange I was able to visit my first host family.  During my junior (3rd) year of studies at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire I studied abroad for a semester in Valladolid, Spain (my wife and I met on this program!) and after my stidies I backpacked Europe and stayed with my second host family again for about 4 or 5 days and visited my first host family again as well.  I have remained very close friends with my second host brother (he was actually an exchange student at my high school the year before my summer stay with him as our high schools have had an exchnage program for the past 20 years and you can read a brief history of this exchange program here).  During the fall of 2008 my good friend Christian came to visit me and my family in Chicago for three weeks and it was so great to reconnect with him in person.  We even made it up to Milwaukee to visit one of our good friends from high school who participated with me on the same two exchanges (see photo above).  The following year, in late summer 2009, Christian returned to visit and stay with us again for three weeks but this time he brought his wife and two sons!  It was great meeitng his family and my two older children frequently refer to their visit and playing with Christian's children.  I look forward to the next time our paths cross in person.  I think my family and I owe him a visit to Rosenheim!

Christian and I have stayed in touch and communicted frequently over the past 23 years via letters and post cards from our various travels and then via e-mail and now via Facebook but it was really great to see him in person again!

Do you have a story to share?

Photo credit:  http://davidcomp.wordpress.com/

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Is it a Good Thing to Limit the Number of Foreign Exchange Students?


The Killeen Daily Herald (Texas) posted an article yesterday entitled “CCISD board considering foreign exchange student limit” which, of course, caught my attention. In the article, the Copperas Cove Independent School District board is considering to institute a “three-year limit of six foreign exchange students in the district in order to prevent exchange students from taking up too much of a campus' resources.” You can link to the article here.
Here are some links to additional documents on this issue:
1) CCISD Regular Meeting Agenda Packet for Tuesday, December 8, 2009 where you can link to the "
Action Sheet" and the "Foreign Exchange Student Waiver" in order to “Consider and Act to Approve Foreign Exchange Student Waiver for The 2010-2011, 2011-2012 and 2012-2013 School Years”
2) The
Texas Education AgencyForeign Exchange Student Waiver Guidelines
3) The Texas Education Agency “
Foreign Exchange Students Frequently Asked Questions

Finally, according to TEC §25.001 (e) (1) (2) (3), the district may only limit the number of foreign exchange students if the commissioner determines that the admission of a foreign exchange student would:
1) create a financial or staffing hardship for the district;
2) diminish the district’s ability to provide high quality educational services for the district’s domestic students; or
3) require domestic students to compete with foreign exchange students for educational resources.

I checked the Killeen Daily Herald and the CCISD websites today to see what decision, if any, came from last night’s meeting but can’t find anything. I’ll try to check from time to time to learn what the CCISD board decided on this.
What are your thoughts on this?

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Some Posts on Study Abroad, Exchange Students, International Education and Citizen Diplomacy in the Twitterverse


I’ve previously posted to IHEC Blog about study abroad and international education in the Twitterverse which you can read here. I thought I would search Twitter for posts relating to topics that I think IHEC Blog readers would find of interest (or funny) and list some of the more interesting Tweets below:

@
emmuhbeee: writing a five page thank you note to the study abroad office.

@
ryanknapp: @JoshFeinberg A pro basketball team in Spain is offering a 10wk study abroad to LA for one lucky fan who buys season tickets.

@
SunRaeShines: Off to see the gorgeous study abroad advisor, Marco about moving to Spain... Together

@
MondoChallenge: @DavidComp Where do you plan to go? What about volunteering during your gap year with GapGuru! http://bit.ly/MFpwr

@
DavidComp: Parliament of Australia, Senate Inquiry into the Welfare of International Students at http://tinyurl.com/pktmv4

@
DavidComp: List of movies/TV shows where characters go abroad is growing quickly. Know any? Add your comment here http://tinyurl.com/ql4h9g

@
MahaMojaddidi: Omg there's a fine exchange student at my house!

@
crez104: Fez is hilarious! Fun fact: Fez stands for "Foreign exchange ztudent" (OK it's "student")

@
KaylieeeRae: the gorgeous exchange student fron germany sits next to me.

@
lanemoseley: If any of you have ideas on why international education is more important now than ever before, I'm taking calls.

@
FulbrightSchlrs: International Education Administrator Awards are available to Japan, Korea and Germany. Visit http://www.cies.org/IEA/ for more information.

@
planetecole: Citizen diplomacy at work: Quote from teacher friend on her training at Oregon State U. "Americans are kind, not like the movies at all."

@
CitizenDiplomat: New US Center blog post: Three Fulbright Scholars from Ukraine/Russia looking for housing in the DC Area - http://bit.ly/mg5cz

As you can see, some posts are interesting, funny or informative. Think about how Twitter can benefit you! If you want to follow me on Twitter you can find me here.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Exchange Participants as Citizen Diplomats: Best Practices

My University of Chicago colleague Erika Mercer and I will be presenting on this topic at the upcoming NAFSA: Association of International Educators conference in Los Angeles on May 28th at 9:15am. Actually, Erika and I will be doing brief introductions to the topic and then moderating what we hope will be a lively discussion on this topic for the remainder of the session. We will be basing our discussion off the excellent document that Erika prepared for the session which you can download here.

Erika has previously posted to IHEC Blog as a guest blogger and you can access her post entitled “Unintended Consequences of Internationalization” here.

While I'm on the topic of Citizen Diplomats...if you haven't already taken 30 seconds to sign the Global Citizen Diplomacy Initiative petition to President Obama please visit here. The Global Citizen Diplomacy Initiative is a project of The U.S. Center for Citizen Diplomacy.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Busy Weekend for News on Exchange Students

I receive many Google Alerts in my e-mail inbox every day on a variety of topics related to international education and public diplomacy. When I opened my Google Alert for “Exchange Student” this past Saturday I was surprised to find the following three rather concerning news alerts:

Police: Foreign-exchange student shot in face
KHOU - Houston,TX,USA
HOUSTON—A foreign-exchange student studying at Rice was hospitalized Saturday after police say he was shot in the face. It happened around 12:15 am in ...
(includes video snippet from KHOU news)
Canadian exchange student 'kidnapped' in Nigeria
AFP
KANO, Nigeria (AFP) — Nigerian police said Saturday that a Canadian university exchange student had been "kidnapped", amid reports a ransom had demanded for her release. ...
Police: Endicott exchange student groped freshman - SalemNews.com ...BEVERLY — An exchange student attending Endicott College has been charged with indecent assault and battery after a freshman reported being groped by the 23-year-old earlier this month. Nicholas Baldrich, who is from Marbella, Spain, ...

Not much to say about this other than my thoughts are with the three victims of these stories…


Friday, April 17, 2009

Portrayal of Exchange Students in Movies and on TV in the U.S. – Part Deux

For my 300th IHEC Blog post…

On Monday I posted on the portrayal of exchange students in movies and on TV in the U.S. and today I learned that Matthew McConaughey is producing a new film (comedy) called Exchange Students.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, the “story revolves around two exchange students, one who ships out from the U.S. and one who comes in, who experience new environments in very different ways: One has the time of his life, the other goes off the rails”

You can read more about this new project here.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Foreign Exchange Students in U.S. High Schools and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004

My recent research efforts lead me to discover a really interesting article entitled Understanding Entitlement to Services and Protections under U.S. Special Education Law: Are Foreign Exchange High School Students Covered? which I think many IHEC Blog readers will also be interested in reading. This is a very interesting question and one I’m sure many high schools and foreign students have had to work through over the years. I’m also very interested in this question because it blends my previous professional career in human services where I attended more than my share of Individual Education Plan meetings in support of individuals with disabilities when I worked for Developmental Services of Nebraska (DSN) with my current career in international education.

I fully support international education opportunities for all students who want to challenge themselves in a foreign land regardless if they have a disability or not. We are making progress in the field of international education in serving individuals with disabilities. However, I think we have a long way to go. You can access the article here.

You can access previous IHEC Blog posts on individuals with disabilities and international education
here.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Portrayal of Exchange Students in Movies and on TV in the U.S.


This past Saturday I caught the “Gilly – Science Fair” skit on Saturday Night Live with Zach Efron (host of the show) acting as an exchange student from Germany. You can access the skit here.

As I watched the skit I immediately began thinking of past movies and how exchange students were portrayed in film and television in the United States. The first to come to mind for me was Long Duk Dong from Sixteen Candles fame. Long Duk Dong’s most memorable scenes/lines are arguably “What’s Happening Hot Stuff” and “Dong, Where is my Automobile?” (click on scene titles to view videos).

Others that come to mind include:
- Monique, the French exchange student in Better Off Dead
- Üter Zörker from The Simpsons
- Fez from That '70s Show

Most disturbing is that a simple Google search for “exchange students in movies” brought up the “Sex Crazed Exchange Students” DVD for sale on Amazon at #9.

I’m interested in knowing what IHEC Blog readers think about the portrayal of exchange students in film and if they know of other examples (both positive and negative) that they would like to share.