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Internationalization Collaborative

Contents

Overview of Internationalization Efforts

  1. Vision and Goals for Internationalization
  2. Progress
  3. Successful Strategies
  4. Future Plans

Community Colleges

University of Hawai’i Kapi’olani Community College

Kapi’olani Community College (KCC), one of 10 campuses in the University of Hawai’i (UH) system, offers comprehensive programs leading to the Associate of Arts degree in liberal arts and Associate of Science degrees in various 21st century career fields, as well as university transfer and certificates. Kapi’olani is located in Honolulu on the island of O’ahu, more than 2,300 miles from the west coast of the United States. A bridge community between Asia and the Americas, Honolulu boasts an incredibly diverse citizenry, including a mixture of Native Hawaiians, Euro-Americans, Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Filipinos, Samoans, Micronesians, and Southeast Asians.

The demography of the Kapi’olani student body mirrors this diversity. In fall 2001, the college enrolled 7,203 students (4,405 FTE)—more lower-division students than any other campus in the University of Hawai’i system.

In line with its location and demographic profile, Kapi’olani’s educational focus is decidedly international. Key components of this focus include:

  • A curricular emphasis on the Asia-Pacific region that is thoroughly integrated into classroom pedagogies and designed to develop socially responsible and economically productive local, national, and global citizens.
  • A series of innovative co-curricular programs.
  • Community- and Internet-based learning opportunities, as well as study abroad.

KCC’s commitment to multicultural and international education is popular among students, many of whom indicate it was a deciding factor in their choice of college.

Notable Kapi’olani offerings include the largest number of liberal arts and transfer programs in the University of Hawai’i system; the state’s only nursing and health sciences training center; and high-quality training programs in hotel operations, tour and travel, business education, and legal assisting. Further, the college’s culinary arts program, modeled on the Culinary Institute of America, attracts and trains chefs from throughout the Asia-Pacific region, and will soon be expanded with $2.5 million from a University of Hawai’i Foundation fund-raising drive.

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Overview of Internationalization Efforts

Kapi'olani Community College was one of eight institutions selected for the ACE Promising Practices Project: Spotlighting Excellence in Comprehensive Internationalization.

I. Vision and Goals for Internationalization

Hawai’i is at once both a place of assimilation and enduring commitment to traditional beliefs and values. These opposing but compatible sentiments have resulted in the creation of an island community that John F. Kennedy once described as "what the rest of the world is trying to become."

To learn from and integrate the forces of culture past and present, Kapi’olani, in 1986, launched a comprehensive cross-curricular initiative focusing on Hawai’i’s connections to Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas—the ancestral homelands of Hawai’i’s contemporary multiethnic population. Three years later, informed by a landmark American Association of Community Colleges publication, Building Community, that directed community colleges to play a vastly expanded role in international education, KCC unveiled a new initiative, the Kapi’olani Asia-Pacific Emphasis (KAPE), through which it began to develop curricula and programs rooted in the experiences of local students and that address issues of the wider Asia-Pacific region.

Throughout the 1990s, Kapi’olani continued to internationalize, working to expand its curricular and professional development bridge between Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas. In doing so, its goal has been to provide national leadership in promoting educational outcomes that prepare students for lives as socially responsible and economically productive local, national, and global citizens. At the heart of this charge is KCC’s vision that internationalization must:

  • Build on and support the languages, cultures, and histories of Hawai’i’s people.
  • Develop students’ capacity to understand and respect diverse cultures.
  • Build strong educational and economic partnerships in Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas.

These beliefs complement specific objectives in the Kapi’olani Strategic Plan, 1997–2007, designed to champion diversity:

  • Strengthen KCC as a premier resource in Hawaiian, Pacific Island, and Asian programs.
  • Enrich the curriculum with an intercultural emphasis on Hawai’i, the Pacific Islands, and Asia.
  • Become a major site for the development of instructional resources and languages of Hawai’i, the Pacific Islands, and Asia.
  • Shape a campus environment that reflects the Hawaiian, Pacific Island, and Asian diversity of the local community.
  • Recruit and retain students, faculty, staff, and administrators, especially Hawaiians, from under-represented groups.
  • Promote a respect for differences.

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II. Progress

Since 1987, KCC has offered a thorough, competency-based curriculum in its liberal arts and career programs that emphasizes learning outcomes—that is, the actual abilities that students should acquire in classes and programs of study. (Competence is defined as the ability to make conscious and informed use of knowledge, skills, and attitudes relevant to a particular situation.) The practice of identifying explicit competencies for each course, degree, program, and department ensures a solid curricular foundation, and provides a basis for developing new courses. The college has used this framework to internationalize its curriculum through the Asia-Pacific emphasis. The success in implementing KAPE in a short period of time is remarkable. To date, nearly 50 percent of faculty have participated in planning and developments related to KAPE, and approximately 50 percent of all courses include Hawaiian, Pacific, and/or Asian content.

Faculty curriculum development efforts are enhanced through overseas travel opportunities supported primarily by external funds. For example, the college has received two Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminar abroad grants for study in Asia, as well as support from The Ford Foundation for travel in the Pacific Islands. The college’s numerous institutional partnerships have supported both administrative and faculty travel to Asia, and the college’s role in providing service learning and technical training has drawn funding for faculty travel to the Pacific Islands.

Ongoing curriculum development efforts focus on integrating indigenous, multicultural, and international content across the liberal arts and career programs. To provide a more visible curricular structure, the college has created two Academic Subject Certificates in Hawaiian-Pacific studies and Asian studies. The certificates require students to complete approximately 24 credits in general education courses with substantial indigenous, multicultural, or international content, and 14 credits of Hawaiian or a foreign language (Japanese, Mandarin, Korean, Tagalog, Samoan, Spanish, or French), all of which meet Associate of Arts and baccalaureate requirements.

KCC’s campus environment reflects the college’s commitment to international diversity, with architecture, sculpture, and landscape all managed in ways that symbolically value multicultural and international understanding and respect. For example, the campus’s main library is named after the Lama plant, which Hawaiians used to provide light in the darkness, and other campus buildings bear the names of plants indigenous to the tropical Polynesia and Southeast Asia region, providing a metaphorical link to the KAPE program. Service-learning students in ethnobotany courses cultivate and maintain such plantings, thus underscoring the link between people and places.

Outside the classroom, KCC offers a wealth of programs and activities in support of its international orientation. An especially popular event is the college’s Asia-Pacific Festival. Held each March, the festival runs for an entire week and explores and celebrates Hawai’i’s Pacific and Asian past, present, and future. The festival brings together performing artists, craftspersons, scholars, community-based supporters, and hundreds of students and local residents, forming an experience rich with the sounds, sights, smells, tastes, and feelings of various Asian and Pacific cultures. Always favored by attendees are the numerous traditional demonstrations sponsored by KCC’s international student clubs. Another popular annual event, India Night, is sponsored by a local Indian family and brings together the costumes and customs of India, along with culinary delights prepared by Asia-Pacific master chefs affiliated with KCC’s culinary program.

Located in the Honda International Center, KCC’s International Café is an informal gathering place where local and international students meet for cultural and language exchanges. Language tutoring is one of the most popular features of the International Café. Students enrolled in Japanese 101, for example, can find ample native Japanese speakers with whom to converse in exchange for help on homework or the like. Many students from KCC’s overflowing ESL classes spend time in the International Café practicing their English, learning the local dialect (called "pidgin"), and learning about American pop culture from local students. International Café participants also are encouraged to prepare cultural presentations for their fellow students. For example, two women from Micronesia conducted a presentation on life in Kosrae and the Marshall Islands; another student gave a multimedia presentation on the family’s four-generation practice of Japanese arrow making; and an Egyptian student presented information to the entire campus on Egyptian history and culture, including Egyptian food and belly dancing.

Student clubs focus on the languages and cultures, as well as current events, of specific national and ethnic groups. Clubs welcome members of these groups as well as other students interested in their cultures and contemporary issues. Throughout the year, these clubs and their faculty advisers invite internationally renowned guest speakers to campus. These noted experts are sponsored by the Pacific and Asian Affairs Council, the East-West Center, and the School of Hawaiian, Asian, and Pacific Studies at University of Hawai’i, Manoa.

Study-abroad opportunities have been provided through institutional student exchange agreements, the University of Hawai’i study-abroad office, and specific partnerships, such as with Kamehameha Schools, which supported Native Hawaiian students who traveled to New Zealand to study with the Maori people. During 2000–01, 125 UHCC students went to Asia and the Pacific for study in language and culture, art, engineering, hotel management, and culinary arts.

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III. Successful Strategies

Three aspects of KCC’s many international initiatives are especially noteworthy: faculty and administrative leadership; high-quality language programs; and faculty expertise.

  • Faculty and Administrative Leadership
    The development of a faculty leadership model for the Asia-Pacific Emphasis has reaped major dividends, in terms of sustaining innovation in international education. This leadership model, which involves participation in summer curriculum development institutes as well as broad-based faculty involvement, increases both resident expertise and the sense of community and teamwork among faculty. Many faculty have had the opportunity to help manage KAPE and some have subsequently moved into supportive administrative positions. Administrative leadership, guided by sustained campus and system policies and planning documents, has effectively mobilized faculty effort and contributed to external resource and partnership development.
  • High-quality Language Programs
    KCC is the only campus in the UHCC system with a one-year Hawaiian or foreign language requirement for the Associate in Arts degree. Because the University of Hawai’i has a two-year Hawaiian/foreign language requirement for its bachelor’s degree, hundreds of students who plan to transfer complete this requirement each year choose from among KCC’s impressive range of offerings, including Hawaiian, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Tagalog, Samoan, Russian, French, and Spanish.

    KCC also educates 1,500 English as a Second Language students each year, who then enter either liberal arts or career programs. For 86 percent of these students, an East or Southeast Asian language is their first language; 9 percent speak a Micronesian or Polynesian language as their first language. The college also is home to the Gallaudet Regional Center, which supports the educational success of hearing-impaired students from the Asia-Pacific region and provides a two-year program in American Sign Language. With such robust foreign language learning opportunities, KCC has created a comprehensive language and cultural bridge for students of all ethnic backgrounds and abilities.
  • Faculty Expertise
    Over the last two decades, the college has been able to recruit and retain a large cadre of faculty with substantial Hawaiian, Pacific, and Asian expertise and commitment. Many of these faculty have completed advanced degrees at the University of Hawai’i or have conducted research at the East-West Center, and significant numbers have taken advantage of rich, ongoing opportunities for faculty development. The college has successfully cultivated both intellectual breadth and depth in its faculty.

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IV. Future Plans

Emboldened by positive feedback on the college’s shift to a more international focus, efforts are now underway for an even more ambitious international emphasis. Dubbed the integrated international education and globalization (IIEG) emphasis, this new plan for campus change will pursue curricular and co-curricular developments focusing on:

  • The cultures, histories, and languages of indigenous and multicultural Hawai’i.
  • The cultures, histories, and languages of Oceania and Asia.
  • Contemporary interactions among nations, territories, states, and indigenous peoples.
  • Evolving globalization.
  • Social and civic responsibility at the local, national, and global levels.

In implementing these five components, a first step is to identify faculty and courses in which IIEG can be emphasized. This should lead to a deeper conversation among faculty about learning outcomes for students related to these foci. Eventually, faculty should be able to explicitly answer the question, "If a student successfully completes a course in each of these five areas, what should he or she know and be able to do?"

The college is also currently addressing communications issues. As a first step, a full report of KCC’s international activities, programs, and vision will be shared with faculty, counselors, students, and administrators. Further work on the campus strategic plan by faculty appointed as IIEG leaders also will enhance communication and have a positive influence on funding for the IIEG emphasis. And a faculty retreat and summer workshop are planned to collect advice about how best to incorporate the new IIEG focus into the institution’s strategic mission.

Also pending are plans to improve and/or expand the college’s language programs, in-class and online curriculum development, service learning, study abroad, and global citizenship programming. In short, much progress has been made, but much remains to be done before realizing KCC’s goal of becoming an island college with a global reach.

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*Please contact the institution directly if you have questions about their institutional programs.

Please direct questions about this page to:
beth_burris@ace.nche.edu | Staff Contacts 
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This page last updated on: 6/16/2006

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