Globalization in higher education: the evolution and trend.
Higher education is said to be an essential foundation for personal, social and economic success in a globalized economy. The 21st century is the age of globalization. With dynamic processes of increasing interdependence, growing competition, communication technologies and changing skill requireme...
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Format: | Conference or Workshop Item |
Language: | English |
Published: |
International school. Vietnam national university, Hanoi
2020
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Online Access: | http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/96342 |
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Institution: | Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Higher education is said to be an essential foundation for personal, social and economic success in a
globalized economy. The 21st century is the age of globalization. With dynamic processes of increasing
interdependence, growing competition, communication technologies and changing skill requirements in
the labor market, globalization has its impact on the life of higher education. The paper provides an
overall view on the evolution of and the trend in the globalization of higher education. The first wave of
higher education globalization mostly meant the movements of students across borders when students in
one country moving overseas for their university education. Over the past decades, the number of
international students enrolled outside their country of citizenship has risen dramatically, from 0.8 million
worldwide in 1975 to double at 1.7 million in 1995 and double again at 3.7 million in 2009 and this number
is forecasted to reach about 5.8 million by 2020. There is a clear tendency of international student
movement from developing to developed countries. Asia formed the largest group of sending students to
overseas study, account for more than 50% of the world mobile students and North America and Western
Europe is the predominant destination that receives international students, account for nearly 60% of the
world mobile students. The new wave of higher education globalization includes the movements of
teachers, programs and institutions across borders and has grown rapidly over the last decade. This form
enables students to take degree offered by a foreign university without leaving their home country.
International mobility in programs and institutions poses many opportunities and challenges to institutions
in developing countries as it creates both collaboration and competition between foreign and domestic
institutions. In one hand, international mobility of programs opens up many opportunities for collaboration
and development for higher education institutions in foreign developed and domestic developing
countries. The various forms of program mobility present the variety of models for collaboration between
foreign and domestic institutions and bring ample benefits to both sides. In the other hand, international
institution mobility increases competition among foreign and domestic institutions since physical presence
of foreign providers forces domestic providers to have more incentive for innovation and improvement of
their quality in courses, management and governance. The ever-growing demand for higher education in
developing countries plus the speed up of globalization in higher education opens a perspective for
collaboration and development between foreign and domestic institutions that help to build the countries’
domestic capacity to provide good quality higher education. |
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