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Ubuntu in adult vocational education: theoretical discussion and implications for teaching international students

journal contribution
posted on 2019-08-01, 00:00 authored by Ly TranLy Tran, Tony Wall
Evidence now calls into question the efficacy and appropriateness of pedagogical practices that force international students to adapt to Eurocentric expectations when they enrol in tertiary education outside their home country and cultural environment. In response to calls for alternative perspectives, this article introduces the educational philosophy of ubuntu, an African worldview prioritising “humanness”
and interconnectedness, and utilises it as a conceptual lens to examine the key tenets of engaging pedagogical practices in teaching international students. Based on a research project in Australia, the aim of which was to analyse teachers’ adaptation of pedagogical practices in accommodating international students, the authors’ findings point to three main ways in which the ubuntu principle can manifest in teaching
international students: (1) humanness; (2) interconnectedness; and (3) situatedness. This article offers new insights into how an under-researched, non-Western philosophy – ubuntu – can serve to conceptualise international education practice. In doing
so, it contributes to theory building and at the same time provokes consideration of an alternative pedagogical lens. In particular, this article draws on ubuntu as a critical framework to challenge conventional ways of viewing international students as the “other” in “our” educational system.

History

Journal

International review of education

Volume

65

Issue

4

Pagination

557 - 578

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

0020-8566

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning and Springer Nature B.V