Integrating Research and Practice to Enhance Experiences and Outcomes of Study Abroad of Underrepresented Students: An Introduction
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36366/frontiers.v35i1.843Keywords:
Research-to-practice, researcher-practitioner collaboration, scholar-practitioner, underrepresented students, diversityAbstract
A team of practitioners, researchers, and scholar-practitioners collaborated to spotlight successes and to enhance areas for improvement in study abroad practices through interaction with research. The joint effort focused on study abroad students from five identity groups for which the research base was large enough to permit generation of research-to-practice briefs. Researchers first reviewed studies from the Academic Research on Education Abroad (AREA) Database and summarized research on these students’ study abroad experiences and outcomes. Practitioners—most of them with lived experience as a member of the identity group—drew on their expertise in interpreting the relevance to practice of summarized research findings and in recommending better study abroad practices. The resulting five research-to-practice briefs focus on the experiences and outcomes of five student identity groups: African American and Black students, Asian and Asian American students, first-generation students, Hispanic and Latinx students, and LGBTQ+ students. Altogether, these briefs signify working in teams of both researchers and practitioners, and they highlight some of the outstanding gaps in study abroad research and practice concerning the student groups in focus.
Abstract in SpanishUn equipo de profesionales y académicos colaboró para destacar los éxitos e identificar las áreas de mejora en las prácticas de estudios en el extranjero a través de la interacción con la investigación. El esfuerzo colaborativo se centró en la investigación ya publicada sobre estudiantes de estudios en el extranjero que provienen de cinco grupos de identidad sobre los cuales hay una base de investigación suficientemente grande para facilitar la creación de resúmenes de cómo aplicar la investigación a la práctica. Primero, los investigadores revisaron estudios incluidos en la base de datos Academic Research on Education Abroad (AREA) y resumieron la investigación sobre las experiencias de estudios en el extranjero y los resultados de participación de estos estudiantes. Luego los practicantes profesionales del campo de educación internacional–la mayoría de ellos con experiencia vivida como parte del grupo de identidad sobre el cual estaban escribiendo–aprovecharon de su experiencia para interpretar la relevancia que los resultados de la investigación y recomendar mejores prácticas. Los cinco resúmenes de investigación aplicada a la práctica que resultan se enfocan en las experiencias y aprendizajes de cinco grupos de identidad: los estudiantes negros o afro-americanos, los estudiantes asiatícos o asiático-americanos, los estudiantes de primera generación, los estudiantes hispanos o latinxs, y los estudiantes LGBTQ+. Juntos, estos resúmenes representan el trabajo colaborativo entre investigadores y profesionales y destacan algunas de las brechas sobresalientes en la investigación y la práctica de estudios en el extranjero con respecto a los grupos de estudiantes en cuestión.
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Copyright (c) 2023 Nelson Brunsting, Amelia J. Dietrich, Anas N. Almassri, W. Patrick Bingham
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