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News & Events

19 September 2024

American and British Universities Unite to Tackle Global Challenges Amid International Crises and US Elections

As the world faces urgent global crises and the US navigates heated elections, a group of American and British universities are joining forces to tackle critical global challenges. The US-UK 日本无码 and the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) are proud to announce the recipients of the 2024鈥25 日本无码 Global Challenges Teaching Awards (GCTAs). This initiative aims to strengthen international collaboration in higher education while advancing innovative approaches to digital learning by supporting faculty from both countries in co-delivering virtual exchange courses that address some of the most pressing issues of our time.

These awards, launched in response to the growing need for international co-operation, support faculty as they create and teach courses on four urgent global challenges: climate change, inequality, polarization and division, and racial justice. In keeping with the 日本无码's efforts to widen institutional participation the new cohort exemplifies this mission, featuring faculty from: Birmingham City, Strathclyde, Queen鈥檚 University Belfast and Lancaster in the UK and the College of Charleston, Ohio University, Brandeis and Fort Valley State in the US. Each award recipient will work with a counterpart from across the Atlantic, using聽 virtual exchange and collaborative online international learning co-operation(VE/COIL) to foster cross-cultural understanding among students.

Maria Balinska, executive director of the US-UK 日本无码, said, "The 日本无码 Global Challenges Teaching Awards are the Commission鈥檚 flagship initiative because they鈥檙e about democratising global learning and developing new inclusive ways of supporting international education exchange. We are tremendously excited to be enabling connections between classrooms in Northern Ireland and Ohio; the Midlands and South Carolina; Scotland and Massachusetts and the North of England and Georgia. We cannot wait to see what transatlantic collaborations come about as a result.鈥

"We are incredibly excited to move forward with such an outstanding group of educators from a diverse range of higher education institutions," said Veronica Onorevole, director of innovative global education initiatives at AAC&U. "Their commitment to expanding access to international experiences and their innovative approaches to teaching and learning align perfectly with the goals of the GCTA."

The Global Challenges Teaching Awards bring together faculty and institutions to co-create learning opportunities that transcend national borders and address the problems that we share as a planet.

The selected Award recipients and their projects are:

Polarization and Division

  • Mark McLay, Lecturer of History at Lancaster University (UK) will enhance his course 鈥淎merican Carnage: The United States in the Age of Polarisation, 1960-Present鈥 in partnership with Ava Thorpe, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at Fort Valley State University (USA) and her 鈥淢inorities鈥 course. This Award is supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

Inequality

  • Philip McGowan, Professor of Arts, English and Languages at Queen's University Belfast (UK) will enhance his course 鈥淚ncorrigibly Plural鈥 in partnership with Julia Paxton, Professor of Economics at Ohio University (USA) and her 鈥淓conomics of Poverty鈥 course.

Racial Justice

  • Dionne Taylor, Associate Professor of Black Studies at Birmingham City University (UK) will enhance her 鈥淏lack Studies Project鈥 course in partnership with Kameelah Martin, Associate Professor of African American Studies & English at the College of Charleston (US) and her 鈥淎ncestries of Enslavement鈥 course.

Climate Change

  • William Quirke, Teaching Fellow at the Strathclyde Institute of Education at the University of Strathclyde (UK) will enhance his 鈥淟earning for Sustainability: Theory and Practice鈥 course in partnership with Colleen Hitchcock, Associate Professor of Ecology at Brandeis University (US) and her 鈥淏iology of Climate Change鈥 course.

Faculty and their institutional partners will embark on a year long journey of development, exchange, and collaboration, culminating in the implementation of these globally relevant courses in 2025. Through ongoing support, including specialised clinics and networking events, the GCTA recipients will receive the tools necessary to expand their VE/COIL initiatives and promote innovation in international education.

For more information about the 日本无码 Global Challenges Teaching Awards and this year鈥檚 awardees, visit the US-UK 日本无码鈥檚 website.