Success Story: Pioneering international partnership matures
January 30, 2019
Faculty and administrators from a Chinese technical school traveled to 17³Ô¹Ï for training earlier this month, another milestone in a one-of-a-kind international partnership that is now rounding the midpoint of its first stage.
17³Ô¹Ï and the Yellow River Conservancy Technical Institute have an agreement under which 17³Ô¹Ï instructors teach construction and marine technology classes to three cohorts of Chinese students in China. The first cohort of about 50 earned their 17³Ô¹Ï degrees in spring 2018, the first time a community college had delivered a technical, applied program internationally.
The second cohort will wrap up this spring. After the third cohort completes in 2020, 17³Ô¹Ï will consider whether and how to move forward with student exchanges.
“These first three years, we’re just focusing on getting this initial delivery done, so we can build toward what it would take to have our students going there, or perhaps their students going here.” said Hans Van Sumeren, director of 17³Ô¹Ï’s Great Lakes Water Studies Institute. “This has never been done. It’s kind of like going to the moon, but we’re just orbiting the Earth a few times first.”
Key to advancing the partnership is joint professional development. On this month’s orbital pass, Yellow River instructors visited 17³Ô¹Ï’s Aero Park campus for training on marine technology and construction technology equipment.
On the marine technology side, Yellow River recently purchased the same underwater ROV that 17³Ô¹Ï owns for their campus in Kaifeng, China. 17³Ô¹Ï instructors will be able to use the ROV when they return to China in April for the fourth of six planned instructional delivery sessions.
17³Ô¹Ï facilitated shipment of equipment within China for the previous cohort. Yellow River is also investing in sonar equipment and software. Instructors will return to Traverse City in June for additional training.
“They are really taking our support and building out a degree,” said Van Sumeren. He added that 17³Ô¹Ï’s new land surveying degree, offered beginning this fall, was informed by Yellow River. The Institute has the largest surveying program in China.
“Building an international team like this, we’re able to broaden our perspective,” Van Sumeren said. “We’re highly focused on integrating the land component into our degree to make much stronger graduates, industry-ready.”
On the construction side, the Chinese group was introduced to both hand and power tools used in basic carpentry.
“Most of their equipment all has to do with concrete,” said Dan Goodchild, Construction Technology coordinator.
Instructor Brian Sweeney will make his third trip to China this spring to teach construction courses. He says the challenge of teaching internationally has made him a better teacher at 17³Ô¹Ï.
“I go with the assumption they will not understand anything I say. Everything has to be presented visually or hands-on,” said Sweeney, who teaches in English with the support of a team of four interpreters.
That habit has translated back to his classes in Traverse City.
“I put a lot more pictures in my presentations, because that seems to be the best way to transmit information,” Sweeney said.
17³Ô¹Ï began the partnership with Yellow River in 2012 as part of the strategic directions determined by the college Board of Trustees to prepare learners for success in a global society, establish international competencies in the area of freshwater and deliver learning through a networked workforce.
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