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Mission & Roles

The mission of the Center for Intercultural and International Programs and international education in general is to provide structured learning contexts in which students experience and observe values, beliefs, and ways of behaving that are different from their own.These experiences will help prepare Xavier students to assume roles of leadership and service in a global society.

To succeed in this mission, CIIP provides leaderships in the following areas:

  1. Advising students on study abroad
  2. Internationalizing the curriculum
  3. Faculty international development
  4. Campus intercultural and international activities
  5. Recruiting and advising foreign students and scholars
  6. Advising multicultural student organizations
  7. Advising on International Education Scholarship & Awards
  8. Coordinating campus study abroad application process and procedure
  9. Serving as the clearinghouse for all Xavier International Activities

*Guided, reflective, global experiences facilitate the understanding and clarification of a student’s own values and permit evaluation of stereotypes and misperceptions as well as the discovery of similarities between diverse populations. Students who have these experiences are better prepared to work effectively in multicultural and global environments.



Global engagement and intercultural education occur throughclassroom instruction(via the curriculum, research, or with interactions with international students); through participation instudy abroadandoff-campus programs(faculty-led, short-term programs, semester, yearlong programs, domestic urban/rural programs); through participation inservice, volunteer or internship programslocally and abroad (refugees, missionary, disaster relief programs, etc.); and throughlocal engagement with multi-ethnic populationsin the larger community.

Although often seen as occurring only internationally, domestic interactions can also be a catalyst for intercultural engagement as students reflect on positive and negative affective and cognitive change that result from comparing their own values and beliefs with those encountered. Successful intercultural engagement completedlocally results incompetenceswhich are relevant to international encounters.

Knowledgeable:

  • Students will develop cross-cultural competencies in their academic field and be aware of the impact global pressures have on local communities.
  • Students will learn intercultural skills locally which can be applied in broader, international settings.

Multi-literate:

  • Students will develop proficiency in other cultures (including language) and will build skills to integrate and apply concepts and practices across cognitive, affective, academic, and cultural boundaries.

Engaged:

  • Students will interact with diverse people in the local and international communities to develop and hone transferable intercultural skills through the application of academic theories and practical skills.

Responsible:

  • Students will become global citizens by giving to the local and international communities in which they live through service and volunteerism.

Inquisitive:

  • Students will learn to see ambiguity and difference as opportunities for learning when in multicultural settings.

*Statements acquired from the Center for International Education and Global Engagement at Otterbein University.