Unit rationale, description and aim
International Development work requires a high level of intercultural sensitivity, collaboration, and understanding. This unit prepares students for the International Development overseas experience in the Bachelor of International Development Studies program. It prepares students for a structured experience of learning about development in the field that is community-based, applied, reflective and engaged. The unit aims to enhance the experience of intercultural communication.
The unit highlights the importance of development work that collaborates with and empowers local communities using the strengths of those communities. Students will also learn how to work safely with vulnerable people, children and young people in their destination country. Practical travel and health requirements will be discussed as well as the location-specific adjustments students may be required to make. The unit aims to improve students’ cultural competence and explores cultural humility and exchange, power and privilege and, reciprocity and reflective practice. The aim of the unit is to facilitate students’ appreciation of context, culture and development, while also preparing them for their International Development Overseas Experience.
Campus offering
No unit offerings are currently available for this unit.Learning outcomes
To successfully complete this unit you will be able to demonstrate you have achieved the learning outcomes (LO) detailed in the below table.
Each outcome is informed by a number of graduate capabilities (GC) to ensure your work in this, and every unit, is part of a larger goal of graduating from ACU with the attributes of insight, empathy, imagination and impact.
Explore the graduate capabilities.
Describe diversity and global citizenship and refl...
Learning Outcome 01
Analyse and identify ways of collaborating with lo...
Learning Outcome 02
Apply the practice of cultural humility and reflex...
Learning Outcome 03
Effectively prepare for the International Developm...
Learning Outcome 04
Content
Topics will include:
- Defining community Based – global learning
- Seeking global citizenship
- Reflection/critical reflection
- Power, self as a cultural being, cultural humility and intercultural communication
- Community driven partnerships
- Planning for community-based immersive global learning
- Staying safe, healthy and happy during your International Development Overseas Experience
Assessment strategy and rationale
The assessments in this unit encourage students to develop their understanding of cultural humility (reflective essay), to engage with the scholarship surrounding their destination location, its history, demography and the development priorities and challenges of the people (research paper), and to prepare a plan for their International Development Overseas Experience that identifies approaches that they may need for a successful engagement. (Plan)
The schedule provides scaffolded learning with opportunities for students to monitor their own progress, practise their skills and receive feedback. Assessment tasks will be the same, whether the unit is taught in intensive mode or over a semester.
Overview of assessments
Assessment Task 1: Reflective Essay Students will...
Assessment Task 1: Reflective Essay
Students will take part in an activity that challenges them to learn more about themselves and others who may have different social identities and experiences than their own.
30%
Assessment Task 2: Research Paper Students will e...
Assessment Task 2: Research Paper
Students will engage with the scholarship surrounding their destination location, its history, demography and the development priorities and challenges of the people.
40%
Assessment Task 3: International Development Over...
Assessment Task 3: International Development Overseas Experience Plan
Students will prepare a plan for their overseas experience that identifies approaches that they may need for a successful engagement.
30%
Hurdle Task: Child Safe online module Online mult...
Hurdle Task: Child Safe online module
Online multiple-choice or short answer questions in 4 sub-modules. Students will need to attain a mark of 75% or more in each sub-module before progressing to the next sub-module.
Learning and teaching strategy and rationale
This unit engages students in active learning activities, such as reading, writing, discussion and problem-solving to promote analysis, synthesis and evaluation that pertain to undertaking their International Development Overseas Experience. The unit will be taught in intensive mode or over a semester using lectures and tutorials supplemented with readings, online activities and resources. Lectures will be used to introduce theoretical concepts and illustrate practice. Readings and online resources, like videos or podcasts, are made available on the online learning platform or in recommended texts. Ideas from lectures, readings and other resources are explored, reflected on and discussed in tutorials to prepare students for a structured experience of learning about development in the field that is community-based, applied, reflective and engaged.
This unit comprises a significant portion of the formal pre-departure preparation that students will need to undertake for their International Development Overseas Experience. As part of their Overseas Experience, students will cross borders - political, cultural, socioeconomic, environmental, or national. They may undergo disruptive experiences that trigger a revaluation of closely held assumptions and understanding. A comprehensive pre-departure preparation enables students to be better prepared both emotionally and mentally for their International Development Overseas Experience.
This preparation for learning will be applied and reflective with a focus on knowledge and awareness of their own cultural lens, cultural humility and intercultural understanding to enable students to see one another’s worldviews and experiences.
The class will be locally contextualized, historically informed, and theoretically grounded. Students’ preparation includes logistics of the International Development Overseas Experience and information about and reflections on, emotional, academic and physical challenges that students may experience while participating in the program. As such, lectures and tutorials will adopt both informative and reflective styles, with reflections being undertaken either individually or in small groups.
The unit may be taught in intensive mode or over a semester. In both cases the unit will comprise 150 hours in total with a normal expectation of 36 hours of directed study and the total contact hours should not exceed 36 hours. Directed study might include lectures, tutorials, online activities, webinars, videos, podcasts etc. The balance of the hours becomes private study to complete unit readings, assessments and prepare for directed activities.