Towards harmonious East-West educational partnerships: a study of cultural differences between Taiwanese and Norwegian engineering students
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Postprint version. the original publication is available at www.springerlink.com

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https://hdl.handle.net/10642/508Utgivelsesdato
2010-07Metadata
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Originalversjon
Jian, H., Sandnes, F.E., Huang, Y., Huang, Y. & Hagen, S. (2010). Towards harmonious East-West educational partnerships: a study of cultural differences between Taiwanese and Norwegian engineering students. Asia Pacific Education Review, 11 (4), 585-595 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12564-010-9114-0Sammendrag
The collaboration activities between educational
institutions in the East and the West are on the
increase as an increasingly globalized economy requires
graduates to have the skills to work across cultural divides.
Such collaborations are difficult and require patience. One
challenge is that students or teachers may have misconceptions
about aspects of the other culture that may cause
problems. This study sets out to identify what values students
in typical Eastern and Western societies associate
with a good student, good student behavior, good teachers
and good lectures with the purpose to identify discrepancies.
This study is based on the results of a pair-wise
ranking questionnaire completed by 233 Taiwanese and
Norwegian students of both engineering and non-technical
subjects. The results confirm some established beliefs
regarding culturally related differences. However, several
issues were found to be culturally neutral, and cultural
differences were identified for several issues that were
predicted to be culturally neutral. The results of this study
may be useful to educators involved in East–West
internationalization.
Utgiver
Education Research Institute, Seoul National UniversitySpringer Verlag