Cross-cultural learning and international collaboration: evaluation of a study tour to Thailand


Autoria(s): Allen, Jacqui; Sitthimongkol, Yajai; Kent, Bridie; Sriyuktasuth, Aurawamon; Sujijantararat, Rachanee; Green, Barbara
Data(s)

01/01/2012

Resumo

<b>Purpose</b>: <br />To evaluate cross-cultural learning among Thai staff and host students from the Faculty of Nursing, Mahidol University (MU) and Australian guest students from the School of Nursing and Midwifery, Deakin University (DU), who participated in a study tour.<br /><br /><b>Design</b>: <br />Descriptive exploratory evaluation.<br /><br /><b>Methods</b>: <br />Key stakeholders were invited to participate resulting in a convenience sample of seven MU staff, five MU and 22 DU students. Data were collected using mixed methods. Qualitative data were theme analysed and quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics.<br /><br /><b>Main findings</b>: <br />The semi-structured interviews with MU staff, focus group with MU students and free response questions in the online survey with DU students indicated the themes of enhanced and valuable cross-cultural learning and relationship building, the challenges of different social behaviours and the importance of tolerance and acceptance. In the online survey, over 77% (n = 17) of DU students reported high satisfaction with their cross-cultural learning on the study tour. The online survey included the validated Miville-Guzman Universality-Diversity scale short form (M-GUD-S). All Australian students reported seeking diversity of contact (X ± SD = 23.1 ± 4.4), relativistic appreciation (X ± SD = 24.7 ± 3.9), and comfort with differences (X ± SD = 26.2 ± 3.0), indicating high levels of openness to cultural diversity and similarity on the M-GUD-S. <br /><br /><b>Conclusion and recommendations</b>: <br />This study provides an example of an evaluated study tour emphasising cross-cultural relationship building. Findings indicate that nursing education should include opportunities for intercultural exchange among nursing students. Nurses require excellent skills in cross-cultural nursing and relating to meet the future global challenges to health care over the next millennium.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30056361

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Mahidol University

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30056361/allen-crosscultural-2012.pdf

http://www.ns.mahidol.ac.th/english/journal_NS/vol30/vol30_Issue2.html

Palavras-Chave #cross-cultural learning #evaluation #nursing education #study tour
Tipo

Journal Article