International Student Mobility Program Video
International Student Mobility Program Video
International Student Mobility Program Video
MOBILITY PROGRAM
Prepared by: Aira Marie B. Apuyan
I. OVERVIEW OF THE PROGRAM
• Student mobility is not at all new to many of us. Students and scholars
leaving their homes on a quest for educational and knowledge is not a new
phenomenon. Student mobility even dates back to the medieval times in
European nations when a few scholars are sent out of their country to
pursue knowledge simple because there were no institutions of higher
learning have blossomed and massified across those nations, still students
and their families continue to support the expansion of student mobility
for myriads of reasons.
• One of the main and important reasons for staggering the number of
foreign students across borders is globalization. Globalization, in general,
is the flow of technology, knowledge, people, values, ideas, capital goods,
and service across national borders, and affects each country in a different
way due to the nations individual history, tradition, culture and priorities
(Knight 2004), Economics define globalization more specifically as the
integration of commodity, capital and labor markets.
II. OBJECTIVES, MANDATES, AND THRUSTS OF THE PROGRAM
Objectives
• Student mobility programs are aimed at exposing students to global and
cross- border issues through their visits to other countries. These programs
have given students an advantage in their overall knowledge and soft
skills. It is only vital that we develop our country’s intellectual capital, not
only in enhancing their communication and mental skills. It also enables
the exchange scholar to possess multicultural skills, knowledge and
competency in specific fields not usually found in the country of origin.
Mandates
• In total, the international student flows from and into the
country accounted for less than half a per cent of total
international student movements in 2008. This
insignificant level of participation is not for lack of an
articulated national desire to participate actively.
Mandates
While the government encourages and supports outbound and inbound student
mobility, much still has to be done to streamline bureaucratic processes
needed to legalize the entry of foreign students (e.g. student visas and study
permits) and exit of Filipino students to study abroad (e.g. clearance needed
from CHED and immigration). The Commission on Higher Education
(CHED) was mandated to regulate and develop higher education institutions
(HEIs) in the Philippines, however they seem to be stuck and remain fixated
on their regulatory role at the expense of the their developmental role.
The recognition process of HEIs’ international
programmes (e.g. Transnational Education) is both
tedious and takes a long time with very slow support
system for HEIs to acquire the capacity to send and
accept foreign students.
IV. IMPACT OF THE PROGRAM ON NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
• Macha, M., Mackie, C., Magaziner, J. (2018, March 6). Education in the Philippines.
Retrieved from https://wenr.wes.org/2018/03/education-in-the-philippines
• Bernardo, A.B.I 2003International Higher Education: Models, Conditions & Issues.
Tullao, T. (ed.) Education & Globalization. Makati City, Philippines, Philippine
APEC Study Center Network (PASCN) and the Philippine Institute for Development
Studies (PIDS).
• Caoili, O. and Valenzuela, E.A. 2000. Internationalization of Higher Education:
Patterns, Trends, Status and Directions. Valisno, M.D. (ed.) The Reform and
Development of Higher Education in the Philippines. Manila, UNESCO, pp.153–186.
THANK YOU
AND
GOD BLESS!