Experiences of International Education

Fabrizio Trifiro

Experiences of International Education explores the varied field of international education through the lenses of individual experiences. Talking with a wide range professionals, practitioners and experts around the globe, the podcast explores individual journeys through international education, considering different interests, views, passions, concerns, rewarding experiences and memorable ones. A heartfelt thank you to Dave Soldier of EEG records who has kindly allowed us to use an extract from 'Nice Very Nice' (composed and performed with Kurt Vonnegut) as the theme for this series

  1. Borhene Chakroun (leaving no one behind through lifelong learning for all)

    01/02/2025

    Borhene Chakroun (leaving no one behind through lifelong learning for all)

    Borhene shares the story of his first involvement in international education through a teacher training program in Tunisia and how the driving force behind his career has been the commitment to ensuring no one is left behind in education. He explains how UNESCO is advancing the agenda of widening access to education, as outlined in SDG4 through a range of key initiatives. These include normative tools like conventions and recommendations, policy dialogues such as the High-Level Steering Committee that oversees SDG4 implementation, and the collection of data on education trends through resources like the Global Education Monitoring Report, which tracks progress toward SDG4 targets. Borhene highlights the importance of the Global Recognition Convention as a key instrument for fostering international cooperation, stressing the need for an integrated ecosystem involving all key stakeholders in international education, including  universities, quality assurance and qualification recognition bodies, and teachers’ associations. He also emphasized the role of the Convention in supporting lifelong learning by facilitating the recognition of learning achieved in diverse settings, including non-formal and informal contexts… and he shares his memorable involvement in the adoption of the 2015 Incheon Declaration, which for the first time included the lifelong learning agenda, as well as a project in Malawi aimed at providing foundational skills through community learning centers.

    26 min
  2. Andrew Atherton (TNE and Universities’ global social mission)

    12/19/2024

    Andrew Atherton (TNE and Universities’ global social mission)

    Professor Andrew Atherton, Vice-President International and Engagement at the University of Southampton, tells how his involvement with international education started as an undergraduate student at SOAS where he studied Chinese and economics spending his second year in Beijing. His international experience continued studying his Masters’ at Yale University where he also started his academic career, before moving back to the UK to Durham University. Andrew tells us of the University of Southampton’s strategic goal to become a global institution embracing a multi-nodal model with campuses in diverse international locations and progressing with establishing the first foreign branch campus in India under the University Grants Commission (UGC) regulations. He reflects on the broader strategic drivers behind the University's goal of establishing three branch campuses by 2030, stressing the role that TNE can play in helping institutions take their social mission to widen access to education to the global level. He shares his concerns about recent policy developments restricting international student flows in traditionally receiving anglophone countries, as well as his confidence in the future of international education where TNE will be playing a growing role in meeting growing global demand for education and training closer to home… and he shares the memorable experiences associated with achieving something collectively that you couldn't on your own.

    26 min
  3. Piet Van Hove (strengthening the fabric of global civil society)

    12/12/2024

    Piet Van Hove (strengthening the fabric of global civil society)

    Piet Van Hove, past president of the European Association for International Education (EAIE) and current program manager of the Heroes European University Alliance at the Thomas More University of Applied Sciences, tells how he was immersed in international education from a very young age, as he was born in the US whilst his father was completing his doctoral studies and moved back to the US for a year at the age of 10 where he attended an American primary school. After graduating from law school he began immediately working in international higher education. Piet shares his concerns about the current political climate in many countries, which often view international higher education negatively, and emphasizes the importance of demonstrating the positive impact of international higher education on society as a whole, specifically its role in strengthening the social fabric by offering international and intercultural experiences to all students. Piet shares his experience as president of the EAIE, reflecting on key developments, challenges, and opportunities for European higher education, including the role that European University Alliances play in promoting international collaboration across all levels of higher education institutions… and he shares the memorable experience of an Erasmus Mundus program with South Africa and China where he witnessed the transformative impact of international education on students from underrepresented backgrounds.

    19 min

About

Experiences of International Education explores the varied field of international education through the lenses of individual experiences. Talking with a wide range professionals, practitioners and experts around the globe, the podcast explores individual journeys through international education, considering different interests, views, passions, concerns, rewarding experiences and memorable ones. A heartfelt thank you to Dave Soldier of EEG records who has kindly allowed us to use an extract from 'Nice Very Nice' (composed and performed with Kurt Vonnegut) as the theme for this series