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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2004 Articles >> Academic

    Patricia McLean, Laurie Ransom

    Abstract:  Ideally, the student experience of internationalisation in higher education is to become part of an intellectual environment which values diversity, fosters mutual understanding and respect and is responsive to diverse needs. From the perspective of higher education institutions across the world, international success depends on an institution’s ability to develop globally competent citizens who are comfortable with diversity both at home and abroad (Gilbert, 1995). This chapter focuses on student…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2004 Articles >> Academic

    J. Kapnoullas, N Love, J Reidy

    Abstract: Many people involved in Higher Education in Australia are currently discussing the many issues related to the quality of the large and complex field known as ‘international education’. This is not surprising, given that in 2003, a total of 136, 807 international students were studying onshore in Australia with another 73, 590 students enrolled offshore (Morris, 2004). Of particular importance to the students and their families, as…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Student Support

    Felicity Fallon

    Abstract: The Confucian-heritage background, the country of origin and the age of the students in this study have all been found to contribute to the problems experienced by these students, the sources of help they use, and how they relate to these problems. These things must then be considered in providing support services for these students. In particular, the importance of these students’ friends in the help-seeking process must be noted…

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  • 03:21 - 17.01.2009 Articles >> Cross-cultural Communication

    Dr Stanley Winter Theron and Clark Liu Wengang

    Abstract: This paper critically assesses the general problems enhancing international student communication, “Global
    Village” general problem!
    As in all human communication, interaction between local and “foreign” students can be problematic on a
    variety of real or perceived levels, and includes factors such as “host and guest cultures”, age and interest
    levels as well as cultural switching between including “host and guest cultures”

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Academic

    Alan McWilliams & Fiona Henderson

    Abstract: This paper reports on the development of a problem based learning (PBL) approach to lectures in a large first-year subject in an undergraduate business degree. The PBL approach was adopted as a means of encouraging students to engage with the formal discourse of the subject discipline and to ground the theories presented in the subject in an authentic simulation of business practice. The first-year undergraduate subject Management and Organisation…

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  • 00:00 - 30.11.2007 Articles >> Cross-cultural Communication

    Ms Kim Edmunds

    Abstract: This paper examines gender and the social change impact of an overseas education for a group of Indonesian graduates of Australian universities. Twenty five respondents participated in this research, the majority being Australian Development Scholarship (ADS) recipients from the University of Newcastle. Data collected by survey questionnaire and interview are analysed in relation to the impact of an overseas education on gender relations and social change in the family, community and…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2004 Articles >> Study Abroad

    Chika Anyanwu

    Abstract:  The Federal Government funding cuts since the 1990s have forced many (if not all) Australian universities to find alternative means to subsidise such shortfalls, one of these being increased international enrolment. One of the consequences of this new economic direction is the influx of international students with new kinds of expectations and overwhlmed academic and administrative staff who have not fully appreciated or undertood the full import of such dramatic academic cultural…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Academic

    Prof Ross Lehman

    Introduction: The paper explains the inception and continuing development of an Academic Professional Development Seminar series for the teaching staff at what appears to be the institution, in Australia with the largest number of international students. There is an explanation about the business venture followed by information about the initiation and on-going provision of the program. A brief report is included which indicates a summary of the participants’ recommendations, about teaching…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2005 Articles >> Cross-cultural Communication

    Diana Collett

    Abstract: International students invest large sums of money when choosing to study in English speaking Universities. They are hoping for opportunities to immerse themselves in English language and Western style culture. Local students attending the same university have completely different expectations. Frequently a cultural divide occurs between the two groups typified by awkward silences, unmet expectations and stereotyping. This widely documented phenomenon has inspired Academic staff to devise clever strategies as desperate attempts…

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  • 00:00 - 30.11.2007 Articles >> Student Support

    Chris Nyland, Helen Forbes-Mewett, Simon Marginson, Gaby Ramia, Erlenawati Sawir, Sharon Smith

    Abstract: The growth of the international education market has generated a community of student-workers that is vulnerable, growing and under-researched. Drawing on interviews with 200 international students, we show that a very high proportion of these students are employed and that this workforce is segmented and that while all student workforces are segmented, many international students must accept forms of work and levels…

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  • 04:55 - 18.01.2009 Articles >> Study Abroad

    Michael A. Tarrant and Laura Sessions

    Abstract:  Most institutions of higher education in the U.S. acknowledge that the future workforce of America depends on a
    citizenry that is sensitive to, and aware of, global issues. The broad assumption in academia is that studying
    abroad promotes such a worldview, yet there is a lack of theoretical applications supporting this assertion. We
    propose a conceptual framework (based on the value-belief-norm models of behavior) for…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2005 Articles >> Cross-cultural Communication

    Vivienne Anderson

    Abstract: International students in New Zealand are positioned within internationalisation and export education discourses reflecting market rather than human concerns. These discourses position international students as consumers and commodities rather than people. In order to change this, there is a need to reinstate human agency and human imagination in relation to international education and the global marketplace. Gibson-Graham’s (2003) ‘ethics of the local’ is a framework that facilitates this. It allows us to…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2005 Articles >> Cross-cultural Communication

    Taeko Sakurai

    Abstract: Previous studies have indicated that local/international students intervention programs are beneficial in order to help international students make local friends (e.g., Ward et al 2001). However, no study was found which assessed the effect of multicultural interactions such as activities for international students. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of a bus excursion on international students. Ninety six international students from 12 countries completed surveys one month…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Academic

    Heather Bigelow, Mary Kerstjens

    Abstract: At the ISANA Victorian Branch State Conference in October, 2005, Heather and Mary, together with our esteemed colleague, Lila Kemlo, presented our ‘students at risk’ project, designed to identify and provide an holistic, integrated program to enable Business Portfolio students to gain essential skills for academic and social success. A major feature of this program was the collaboration between members of academic staff of the Business Portfolio, the Learning Skills…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Student Support

    Greg Calvert

    Abstract:  The paper draws on research of 110 international fee-paying students studying Science and Engineering courses in the Schools, Vocational Education and Training, and Higher Education sectors in nine institutions in five Australian states and territories. The research identified that 68 percent of the sample had not had career advice before coming to Australia. This has implications for students’ understandings of Australian education and training, especially entry procedures into…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Academic

    Waliul Islam, Helen Borland

    Abstract: A look at the recent statistics will show that large numbers of students from South Asia
    are now undertaking postgraduate studies in Australian universities. This paper, drawn from data collected for a broader study about South Asian postgraduate coursework students’ initial understandings, expectations of Australian postgraduate studies and their gradual adaptation experiences, will limit itself to analyzing a few themes that emerge in their initial expectations and…

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  • 00:00 - 01.12.2006 Articles >> Academic

    Katerina Gauntlett

    Abstract: The Gulf States have identified educational sponsorship as one of the most powerful means of building a better qualified national work force, with a view to redressing the overrepresentation of expatriates in the private sector. Over the past five to seven years, this has created an opportunity for Australian education providers to enrol Gulf Nationals who have been identified as the elite of their high school graduating cohort and sponsored to obtain…

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  • 00:00 - 30.11.2007 Articles >> Student Support

    Lynda Lawson

    Abstract: Designed and implemented as a joint project between International student services and the Research Students Centre and overseen by the Dean of Graduate Studies, RIS offers a series of intensive classes, presentations and workshops to new international research students at QUT. The core purpose of this program is to help international research students become familiar with the linguistic and academic expectations as well as the cultural conventions required to…

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  • 05:16 - 18.01.2009 Articles >> Student Support

    Vivienne Anderson

    Abstract: International education research has long been preoccupied with the question of how to foster interaction between
    international and local students. ‘Integration’ is imagined as a desirable endpoint of interaction, where international students become part of the broader social network and local students are accepting of and open to international students. However international-ness and local-ness are problematic categories. Numerous commonalities and differences are subsumed within them, and by considering ‘interaction’ and ‘integration’…

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  • 00:00 - 30.11.2007 Articles >> Student Support

    Kay McNamara, Izabela Skorka

    Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to share the practical ways in which teachers at Kelvin Grove State College (Qld) have attempted to improve contact between international and local students using the award winning Teaching Emphases for English Proficiency Levels (TEEPL) http://www.kelvingrovesc.eq.edu.au/asp/teepl/teepl_cover.asp (presented at ISANA conference 2005).

    TEEPL is a comprehensive database of suggestions to support students both academically and socially…

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Welcome

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    WELCOME

    ISANA: International Education Association is the representative body for international education professionals in Australia and New Zealand who work in student services, advocacy, teaching, and policy development in Australia and New Zealand.

    ISANA welcomes you to the web site where new additions are constantly being added to keep your information up-to-date, to support the ISANA community and to continually build the resources on the site.
    Please refer to the Top Menu for 2010 Conference information.
    ISANA partners for the 2010 ISANA Annual Conference

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DIAC - Permission to work Print E-mail
Monday, 14 April 2008

Last Thursday at a Victorian DIAC Client Reference Group Meeting, the attendees were advised that all visas issued from April 26 will automatically come with permission to work attached.

Students will no longer need to apply for permission to work when they enrol. Students who have a visa that was issued prior April 26 will still need to apply for permission to work if they have not already done so. On April 26 the visa fee will increase from $430 to $450.

More information

Last Updated ( Monday, 14 April 2008 )
 
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