Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship

Traditionally the university sector was charged with the public duty of educating professionals to serve the very community investing in them. University service played a vital role in community development throughout the 19th and 20th centuries; however the 21st century higher education sector is a...

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Main Authors: Goddard, Trevor, Sinclair, Kit
Other Authors: Office of Teaching and Learning
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Office of Teaching and Learning, Curtin University 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://otl.curtin.edu.au/tlf/tlf2008/refereed/goddard.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14900
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author Goddard, Trevor
Sinclair, Kit
author2 Office of Teaching and Learning
author_facet Office of Teaching and Learning
Goddard, Trevor
Sinclair, Kit
author_sort Goddard, Trevor
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Traditionally the university sector was charged with the public duty of educating professionals to serve the very community investing in them. University service played a vital role in community development throughout the 19th and 20th centuries; however the 21st century higher education sector is a different beast. This paper identifies the current challenges presented to university service by globalisation and rationalism that sees a shift towards a student as customer focus in education and demise in university community engagement. The authors propose service is a vital component of education, and indeed research and leadership, in preparing graduates for global citizenship and reconnecting universities with communities. The Curtin University China Occupational Therapy abroad program is restructuring curriculum around a service learning model to prepare for graduates of 2015. This paper identifies how the program meets evolving global demands and addresses Morin's complex lessons for education. Global citizenship is critiqued within Bell's model of reflective practice, with the Oxfam global citizenship ladder and the internationalised curricula and service learning literature demonstrating the outcomes service learning can deliver. Rejuvenation of the service function should form an integral component of curricula, enhancing the political and social awareness of students to graduate more informed and competent global citizens. Engagement with international issues such as human rights through the United Nations Global Compact enables students to develop into future community leaders. This paper presents the descriptive theoretical background to further research identifying the capacity of international service learning to enhance graduate global citizenry.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-149002017-01-30T11:46:39Z Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship Goddard, Trevor Sinclair, Kit Office of Teaching and Learning human rights united nationals global compact global citizenship professional education international service learning university service Traditionally the university sector was charged with the public duty of educating professionals to serve the very community investing in them. University service played a vital role in community development throughout the 19th and 20th centuries; however the 21st century higher education sector is a different beast. This paper identifies the current challenges presented to university service by globalisation and rationalism that sees a shift towards a student as customer focus in education and demise in university community engagement. The authors propose service is a vital component of education, and indeed research and leadership, in preparing graduates for global citizenship and reconnecting universities with communities. The Curtin University China Occupational Therapy abroad program is restructuring curriculum around a service learning model to prepare for graduates of 2015. This paper identifies how the program meets evolving global demands and addresses Morin's complex lessons for education. Global citizenship is critiqued within Bell's model of reflective practice, with the Oxfam global citizenship ladder and the internationalised curricula and service learning literature demonstrating the outcomes service learning can deliver. Rejuvenation of the service function should form an integral component of curricula, enhancing the political and social awareness of students to graduate more informed and competent global citizens. Engagement with international issues such as human rights through the United Nations Global Compact enables students to develop into future community leaders. This paper presents the descriptive theoretical background to further research identifying the capacity of international service learning to enhance graduate global citizenry. 2008 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14900 http://otl.curtin.edu.au/tlf/tlf2008/refereed/goddard.html Office of Teaching and Learning, Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle human rights
united nationals global compact
global citizenship
professional education
international service learning
university service
Goddard, Trevor
Sinclair, Kit
Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship
title Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship
title_full Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship
title_fullStr Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship
title_full_unstemmed Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship
title_short Transforming professional education: The lost art of service and global citizenship
title_sort transforming professional education: the lost art of service and global citizenship
topic human rights
united nationals global compact
global citizenship
professional education
international service learning
university service
url http://otl.curtin.edu.au/tlf/tlf2008/refereed/goddard.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14900