The Wider Benefits of International Higher Education in the UK
developing new satellite operations for existing businesses using their international
experience;
Alumni who had worked before overseas study but on return changed career sector
and entered organisations and occupations, in many cases roles in which they had
great personal passion, which would presumably result in high professional impact.
In all of these scenarios, employers and the home country’s economy
stood to benefit from
employment of an international graduate who had acquired a combination of cutting-edge
academic or technical expertise as well as a powerful range of enhanced personal (or
‘soft’) skills derived from study abroad.
For the employers and economies, amongst the most significant of these ‘employee-
derived’ benefits are almost certainly the additional global outlook, international credibility
and greater intercultural sensitivity that the international graduates offer, in addition to
more industry-specific and technical capabilities. In an increasingly global economy, the
ability to develop trade internationally is important for more and more enterprises. In
support of this, many of the alumni also now had their own contacts with fellow alumni in
other countries with whom they had studied, and might in some cases develop business.
In the same way that participation in global professional networks is of potential value to
the UK, this too is the case for home country.
Many of the alumni interviewed also reflected that they now thought more strategically,
and could bring a more widely informed and critical
view than they had previously; again
this will be of value to their employer in the senior business or management roles that they
typically now entered.
There was evidence too for a large number of alumni returning to take up technical roles in
key industry sectors, both knowledge-based and infrastructural or developmental.
Although relatively few alumni had been sponsored by their employer, there seemed to be
many cases where a returning graduate entered employment in one of these key sectors
readily and then progressed quickly, presumably indicating that they were injecting key
technical skills of high value into these organisations.
Some of the most memorable and inspiring interview conversations were with alumni who
had personal commitments to capacity building and societal development in their home
country. Many demonstrated this
commitment through employment, or in some cases their
intended employment, some relating to a career change. These were mostly but not
exclusively alumni of the Chevening, especially, and Commonwealth scholarship
schemes. Examples included:
Commonwealth Scholarship alumnus I18, from a humble background in Malawi, who
studied nutrition at Glasgow and was completing a PhD in Finland. His career aim was
to change government policy and broaden understanding of nutrition in Malawi, and he
had already been working on a nutrition syllabus for schools with the University of
Malawi where he would soon be based. On return he expected also to resume work
with the President’s Office, to
develop partnerships with NGOs, volunteers and
communities to disseminate good practice. He wished to ‘pay back’ for his personal UK
HE experience by making Malawi a better and more self-sufficient place, ultimately
reducing its dependency on the UK and other aid providers.
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The Wider Benefits of International Higher Education in the UK
Interviewee I38 worked in a teaching hospital back in Nigeria, running her own lab and
raising scientific standards, having been inspired by her biomedical science degree at
Roehampton. Determined to make a difference in her own country rather than forging a
comfortable career abroad, she was trying to set up organisations facilitating
students
to undertake volunteering (almost unknown in Nigeria) and promoting environmental
awareness:
“If I’m lucky enough, get a PhD because I want to go to the university and
bring back my experience from the UK and impart it on to the students here in Nigeria.
At least give them a chance, if they’re not able to seek that sort of knowledge and or be
taught in the way they’re supposed to be taught. So I can bring it back to them and
teach them the way I think they should be taught, and give them the attention I think
they should be getting, and expose them to resources they would otherwise not be
exposed to.”
Visually impaired graduate I61 was completing a PhD at the Institute of Education,
London, having come to London for a Masters and then worked for the RNIB for 2
years. Her aim was to influence policymakers in her native Lebanon to improve access
to education and opportunities
for visually impaired people, and to advise and support
the mostly unqualified care workforce who support those with disability. She had built a
wide international network and set up a partnership between her HEI and a Lebanese
university, and travelled widely to international conferences despite her complete
blindness.
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