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There is an
inverse relationship between the rapidly inc reasing importance of other
world regions and cultures to the economic prosperity and national security
of the United States and how much most high school graduates know about
the 90% of the world outside our borders. We are at the brink of a new
epoch: just as schools had to adapt from the Agricultural Age to the
Industrial Age to the Information Age, so too do schools now need to
adapt to the Global Age. In this article, we provide an overview of
approaches to international education that some schools and states are
taking and explore what state and national policies are needed to build
capacity.
The International
Knowledge Gap
Recent surveys suggest the extent of the knowledge gap in the U.S. regarding
international issues. In June 2001, the National Commission on Asia
in the Schools issued its re p o rt, which concluded that “young Americans
are dangerously uninformed about international matters, especially Asia,
home to more than 60% of the world’s population.” Research conducted
for the report found that:
- Levels
of student knowledge of the rest of the world are less than rudimentary.
For example, 25% of college-bound high school students did not know
the name of the ocean that separates the United States from Asia.
Eighty percent did not know that India is the world’s largest democracy.
- Most teachers
are not being prepared to help students close the international knowledge
gap. For example, of the top 50 U.S. colleges and universities that
train teachers, only a handful require any coursework in non-Western
history for their students preparing to teach history.
- Language
instruction does not reflect today’s realities. For example, while
one million students in U.S. schools study French, a language spoken
by 80 million people worldwide, fewer than 40,000 students study Chinese,
a language spoken by almost 1.3 billion people. [1]
One year later,
in 2002, a National Geographic/ Roper survey of young adults in nine
countries found that U.S. students lagged behind their peers in other
countries in their knowledge of geography and current affairs. The great
majority— 83%— could not find Afghanistan or Israel on a world map but
knew that the island featured in the last season’s TV show “Survivor”
was in the South Pacific. [2] These
statistics, obviously simple indicators, show that we have a great deal
of work to do. How are we to address our need for international knowledge
and skills?
Addressing
the Need for Global Knowledge
There has been some progress in recent years toward increasing international
content in our schools. Many states are beginning to include knowledge
of Asia, Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and global issues in
their social studies standards. Geography and economics have been incorporated
into the standards of some states. Guidelines on how to teach about
religion in constitutionally permissible ways have made it easier for
schools to include world religions in their curricula. The new Ad vanced
Pl a c e m e n t course in world history is popular, and the decision
by the College Board to add the first new AP language courses in 40
years— in Chinese, Japanese, Russian, and Italian — will give an important
boost to our need for capacity in world languages. [3]
But as a nation, we have not yet made developing international knowledge
and skills a significant policy priority, nor have we built the capacity
needed to get high-quality international teaching and learning into
our nation’s classrooms.
Goals for
International Education
If we are to prepare our students with the skills needed to lead and
succeed in the 21st century, we will have to continue to improve performance
in reading, math, and science, as well as give students a solid grounding
in American history and democratic institutions. But in today’s world,
for the reasons cited by Hunt and Engler, international knowledge and
skills are also crucial. Policies on international education should
address four broad goals:
- To develop
a citizenry and work force knowledgeable about world regions, cultures,
and international issues;
- To prepare
experts and leaders in business, politics, and all major professional
fields who are capable of addressing international opportunities and
challenges;
- To increase
our ability to communicate in languages other than English; and
- To connect
young people in the U.S. directly with young people in other countries
so that they can learn to build their common future.
To accomplish
these ambitious goals, we will need action at eve ry leve l — local,
state, and national. There are already promising developments on which
to build.
Local Communities
Lead the Way
In classrooms around the country, individual teachers, many of whom
have had some international experience or professional development,
are integrating international content into their teaching, exposing
their students to some of the world’s vast heritage of knowledge and
giving their students historical context for understanding world events
that affect them. Typically, these teachers are doing this without active
support from principals or superintendents.
But not all
teachers are acting in isolation. More and more groups of teachers or
whole schools are making an effort to infuse international content across
different curriculum areas. For example, the John Stanford International
School in Seattle and other language- and culture-immersion schools
are showing how to develop youngsters who are confident and proficient
language learners. Evanston Township High School in suburban Chicago
introduced an international studies requirement for graduation 10 years
ago. The school’s teachers subsequently designed courses in Asian, African,
Latin American, and Middle Eastern history to help students meet the
requirement. This school has demonstrated that the study of other cultures
and global challenges can teach perspective-taking and other higher-order
thinking skills and improve achievement more generally.
Through its
20-year-long partnership with the Jingshan School in Beijing, China,
the schools in Newton, Massachusetts, have extended students’ learning
far beyond textbooks and built lasting relationships. Newton is now
helping other schools to follow suit. The International School of the
Americas in San Antonio and the Snowden International High School in
Boston are small learning communities that give their low-income students
opportunities for internships with internationally oriented corporations
and nonprofit organizations. Glastonbury, Connecticut, has shown how
to get 95% of students to take a foreign language and how this focus
attracts new parents to the district.
Some schools
are broadening their definition of civic education to include service
with internationally oriented humanitarian and cultural organizations.
And many others are using widely available programs — such as the International
Baccalaureate curriculum, Model United Nations, Capitol Choices, and
Worldquest — or international school-to-school linkages, such as those
organized through iEARN (International Education and Resource Network),
to begin to integrate serious international content into their curricula.
These schools
and their approaches to international education were unknown to most
educators until recently, when the Goldman Sachs Foundation Prizes for
Excellence in International Education were created to recognize and
document pioneering schools. In the first 18 months of the program,
nearly 400 schools and organizations applied for recognition. The schools
are of a wide variety — rural and urban; public, private, parochial,
and charter; neighborhood and magnet — and represent some 44 states.
Driven by new demographic diversity in their communities, by September
11 and its aftermath, by the desire to help their students succeed in
the new global economy, or by the recognition that, as citizens, their
students will be voting and acting on issues that can no longer be neatly
divided along domestic and international lines, these schools are demonstrating
ways in which schools can use “teaching the world” to engage students,
improve achievement, and meet state standards. Often starting their
international focus on a small scale and expanding it over time, these
schools are the leading edge of a grassroots movement for change. We
need to find ways to share with other schools their creative and practical
approaches to curriculum, pedagogy, and professional development.
However, these
pioneering schools are, in the words of Gerald Tirozzi, president of
the National Association of Secondary School Principals, only small
“victory gardens” when we need “amber waves of grain.” [4]
The more typical picture in U.S. schools is one of instructional insularity
from the world or an unchallenging emphasis on “fun, food, and festivals.”
If we are to make knowledge of other world regions, other cultures,
and international affairs available on a wider scale and to all our
students, we will need state and national policies to support the effort.
States
Must Prepare for Globalization
States are in the forefront both of education reform and of managing
the challenges of globalization. States need to develop an internationally
competent work force and citizenry that can understand and respond to
global events. While every state will have a distinct process for advancing
international education in the schools, the following steps may provide
some useful guidance:
- Mobilize
leaders. A task force of business, political, community, and education
leaders should be formed to assess the state’s trade, economic, and
cultural relationships with other parts of the world and to report
to the governor, legislature, and the general public on needed economic
and educational policy responses.
- Assess
and strengthen standards. Every major subject area should be examined
and strengthened to include clear and specific standards for international
knowledge, coupled with aligned curriculum materials and specific
assessments.
- Review
high school graduation requirements. Students should be required to
take courses in international studies and to achieve proficiency in
a world language other than English.
- Enhance
preservice teacher education requirements. All prospective teachers
should be required to take a course on another world region or culture
or to become knowledgeable about the international dimension of their
subject.
- Provide
opportunities and incentives for teachers. States or districts should
enter into partnerships with the international resources of the region
(universities, cultural institutions, and corporations) to offer teachers
professional development programs dealing with international affairs.
- Create
a state plan to develop an effective K-16 pipeline in major world
languages. Such a plan might include state high school graduation
or college-entrance language requirements, incentives to introduce
foreign language instruction before age 9, and the use of technology
and distance education.
- Create
school-to-school partnerships, both real and “virtual.” Schools in
the state or district can partner with schools around the world to
pursue joint projects and set up exchanges so that students can learn
“with” and not just “about” one another.
- Incorporate
international knowledge into other ma - jor school improvement initiatives.
High school reform, technology or distance-learning initiatives, literacy
or after-school programs can all include an international dimension.
Achieving
these changes to ensure that our students graduate with the international
knowledge they need is a long-term effort, but states around the country
are beginning to act. Some states are creating gubernatorial or legislative
task forces, others are bringing together a diverse cross section of
leadership in statewide “summits” on international education, and many
are beginning to put in place new policies and programs, albeit mostly
on a small scale so far.
A Federal
Leadership Role
State action is essential to take international education to scale,
and states are beginning to assess what policy and program changes they
will need to make. But the scale and speed of change in the world require
a national leadership role as well. For 50 years, the federal government
has played a critical role in fostering foreign language and area studies
expertise at the higher education level through Title VI of the Higher
Education Act. But given the rapid changes in the world today, international
knowledge and skills are no longer just for experts. A similar federal
commitment now needs to be extended to K-12 education as an urgent priority.
There are
a number of ways in which federal leadership could aid in the expansion
of international education.
- Enhancing
teacher capacity and quality. Teachers cannot teach what they do not
know. In the Sputnik era, our nation made a substantial commitment
to science and math education via the National Science Foundation.
A similar national commitment to prepare teachers to promote international
knowledge and language skills is now needed. The Higher Education
Act, due to be reauthorized next year, provides an important vehicle
for modernizing teacher preparation and building teachers’ international
knowledge and skills. Title II funds could be used to create K-16
partnerships to foster teaching excellence in international education.
Those funds could also support world-class professional development
opportunities, including study abroad and online courses, for teachers
and school leaders.
- Stimulating
a K-16 pipeline in major world lan - guages. In the longer term, our
education policies should encourage all students to learn a second
language, as students in other industrial countries do. In the shorter
term, our diplomatic and defense communities urgently need a K-16
pipeline to produce proficient speakers of critical languages, including
Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, Farsi, and Russian. To increase
our capacity to communicate in languages other than English, there
should be serious federal incentives to introduce foreign languages
earlier (elementary school), to promote the innovative use of technology,
to identify and develop more intensive and effective approaches to
language learning, to build on the language resources in our heritage
communities, and to recruit and train teachers in less commonly taught
languages.
- Incorporating
an international focus into existing federal programs.Making the development
of international knowledge and skills a priority for a range of domestic
and international federal programs (e.g., vocational education/high
school reform, after-school programs, leadership development, research)
would provide needed resources for local innovation and for research,
data collection, and assessment of knowledge and progress. Using innovation
funds to stimulate partnerships between academic experts, virtual
high schools, and public television stations could create “international
learning channels” to reach out to students.
- Offering
governors incentive grants to assess their states’ international readiness.
Federal planning grants would encourage states to identify their existing
human and material resources for teaching and learning about the world
and to create five-year plans to ensure that international education
is available to children in all jurisdictions.
As former
Gov. James Hunt said, “Our children are growing up in a whole new world,
and . . . we have a responsibility to see that they understand that
world.” [5] Individual teachers,
groups of teachers, schools, districts, and states are beginning to
make international education a priority. It will take leadership at
every level to ensure that our high school graduates have acquired the
competencies they need for global citizenship in the 21st century.
TED
SANDERS is the president of the Education Commission of the States,
Denver, CO. VIVIEN STEWART is the vice president for education, Asia
Society, New York, NY.
1
Asia in the Schools: Preparing Young Americans for Today’s Interconnected
World (New York: Asia Society, 2001).
2
National Geographic--Roper 2002 Global Geographic Literacy Survey,
November 2002.
3
“Chinese Officials and College Board Announce Advanced Placement Course
in Chinese Language and Culture,” press release, College Board, 5 December
2003.
4 Rima Shore, “National Coalition on Asia and International
Studies in the Schools: Meeting Report, 29 May 2002” (Asia Society,
August 2002), 13.
5
Ibid., 4.
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