This book explores how international undergraduate and graduate students navigate their higher educational institutional (HEI) experiences and employability prospects in both Global North and Global South universities. The chapter authors examine how students from the Global South use their agency to apply their HEI experiences to meet their needs, gain skills, and envision alternative pathways to adapt to economic, environmental, and political changes.
Through diverse student voices, the book sheds light on the challenges faced by these international students in the job market. It highlights the importance of promoting diversity and equity in higher education. The book emphasizes the need to consider the cultural circumstances of global south students to enhance their employability.
The book contributes to a deeper understanding of the challenges and opportunities faced by Global South international students in the job market. It offers effective strategies foreducators, policymakers, and employers to support these students.
Innehållsförteckning
Introduction: Trends, Practices and Resources; Raby, Bista & Singh.- Part I Student Agency: Perceptions on Employability.- Gaining Capitals to Enhance Employment Opportunities; Michael Atkinson.- Strategies in Securing Future Employment: Perspectives of Students from The Global South; Kelly Benati.- Global South students studying in South Korea: Perceptions of the value of the job-hunting process; Jiabin Zhu.- Competitiveness of University Degrees from an Emerging Educational Power: International Students’ Perception; Catherine Gao.- The Impacts of International Experience on Self-Perceived Employability Among Cambodian Students in China; Muytieng Tek.- Self-Perceived Employability of Ethiopian Prospective Graduate Students: A Case Study; Ashenafi Aboye.- The Local/Global Interplay in the Pursuit of Professional Identity; Afra Al-Khulaifi.- Transition to Work: Strategy and Policy Supports for Border-Crossing Learners; Joseph Corrigan.- Part II Role of HEI: University personnel & curriculum.- In Malaysia to Engender International Student Graduates’ Employability; Shamima Raihan Manzoor.- International Experience and Graduate Employability: Employer, Teacher and Student Perspectives; Xin Zhao.- The Impact of the Science Without Borders on the Employability of Doctoral Graduates; Kelber Tozini.- The Role of Doctoral Advisors in the Employability of International Students: A Critical Autoethnography; Susan Namalefe.- Part III Challenges of employability in the Global North.- International Students from the Global South Studying in Japan; Shingo Hanada.- Fitting the Canadian Work Experience: International Student Graduate Employability in Canada; Everton Ellis.- Negotiating Employability in TVET sector from the Global South; Simon Ellis.- Challenges in Providing Social Work Education for International Students in Australia; Helen Cleak and Bella Ross.- The Dilemma of Preparing Graduates for the Workplace in the Twenty First Century in Africa; Bothwell Manyonga.- Comparative Perspectives: Employability Perceptions between International Students and Their Domestic Global North Peers?; Dawn Bennett.- A Reciprocal Approach to Regional Development? International Student Opportunities in South Africa Post-Higher Education; Faith Mkwananzi.- Part IV Role of internationalization in employability.- Enabling Employability through International Mobility: Student Experiences in the Global South; Anoo Bhopti.- South American International Students: A Resource for Cultural Responsiveness in the Classroom in Times of Covid-19; Melisa Valentin.- The Journey from Higher Education to Employment Among Lao International Graduates; Soubin Sisavath.- Where Does Graduate Employability Stand Within the Context of International; Doria Abdullah.- Is It All As It Seems? Students From the Global South in a Private South Korean University; Kattie Lussier.- Employability Perceptions and Experiences of International Students from the Global South; Hilal Büyükgöze & Nihan Demirkasımoğlu.- CONCLUDING CHAPTER.- Employability and Access: Serving all Students; Raby, Bista, & Singh.
Om författaren
Jasvir Kaur Nachatar Singh is an award-winning Lecturer at the Department of Management, Sport and Tourism, La Trobe Business School, La Trobe University, Australia. In 2020, Dr Singh received an international teaching recognition from Advance HE, UK as a Fellow (FHEA). In 2018, Dr Singh received two La Trobe University Teaching Awards and Best Presenter Award at the Global Higher Education Forum, Malaysia. Dr Singh’s research expertise is in higher education discipline with a particular interest exploring international students’ current issues such as their academic success, lived experiences, employability, career aspirations as well as learning experiences in a blended learning environment. In addition, Dr Singh also explores lived experiences of international academics and Dr Singh’s recent work is on international academics with leadership positions. Dr Singh has published several articles in high impact journals and has presented at numerous national and international higher education conferences in Malaysia, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Thailand, Hawaii, Japan and Australia. In 2020, Dr Singh was appointed as the Associate Editor for Higher Education Research and Development journal. In 2018, Dr Singh was appointed as a Research Fellow at the Malaysian National Higher Education Research Institute.
Rosalind Latiner Raby, Ph.D., is a Senior Lecturer at California State University, Northridge in the Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Department of the College of Education. Dr. Raby is also the Editor-in-Chief, Journal of International & Comparative Higher Education. She is also an Affiliate Faculty, Centre for Higher Education Internationalisation (CHEI), Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano. Since 1984, Dr. Raby has worked with community college faculty and administrators to help them internationalize their curriculum, their college programs and college mission statements. Among her many publicationson the topic of international education and community colleges are: Unintended Consequences of Internationalization in Higher Education: Comparative International Perspectives on the Impacts of Policy and Practice (co-edited with Shahrzad Kamyab) (Routledge, 2023); Study Abroad Opportunities for Community College Students and Strategies for Global Learning (co-edited with Gregory Malvaux) (IGI-Global, 2018); and Handbook of Comparative Studies on Community Colleges and Global Counterparts (co-edited with Edward Valeau) (Springer, 2016); International Education at Community Colleges (co-edited with Edward Valeau) (Springer, 2017).
Krishna Bista is a Professor in the Department of Advanced Studies, Leadership and Policy at Morgan State University, Maryland (USA). His research focuses on online teaching, global student mobility, internationalization, and artificial intelligence in academic research. Previously, Dr. Bista served as the Director of Global Education at the University of Louisiana at Monroe, where he was Chase Endowed Professor of Education in the School of Education. Dr. Bista is the founding editor of the Journal of International Students, a quarterly publication in international education. He is also the founding chair of the Study Abroad and International Students SIG at the Comparative and International Education Society (CIES).