Global Competence: Prepare Youth to Engage with the World

The world of tomorrow is being shaped in our classrooms today. Are our students gaining the knowledge and skills they need? (Grady Reese)

The world of tomorrow is being shaped in our classrooms today. Are our students gaining the knowledge and skills they need? (Grady Reese)

By Anthony Jackson

In matters of national security, environmental sustainability, and economic development, what we do as a nation and in our everyday lives is inextricably intertwined with what governments, businesses, and individuals do beyond our borders.

This new reality helps us more clearly define the role that education must play in preparing all students for success in an interconnected world. The United States have invested unprecedented resources in education, betting that our outmoded, factory-age system can be fundamentally transformed to prepare students for the rigors of a global economy.  They have challenged states and school districts to set clearer, higher standards and assess student progress in more creative ways, prepare more productive teachers, and provide effective intervention in failing schools.

These are necessary strategies for change, but insufficient to create the citizens, workers and leaders our nation needs in the 21st century.  Missing in this formula for a world-class education is an urgent call for schools to produce students that actually know something about the world--its cultures, languages and how its economic, environmental and social systems work. 

The concept of global competence articulates the knowledge and skills students need in the 21st century. 

 


Download the new book: Educating for Global Competence by Veronica Boix-Mansilla and Tony Jackson (4 MG PDF)

 




Globally competent students must have the knowledge and skills to: 

Investigate the World.  Global competence starts by being aware, curious, and interested in learning about the world and how it works.  Globally competent students ask and explore critical questions and "researchable" problems - problems for which there may not be one right answer, but can be systematically engaged intellectually and emotionally.  Their questions are globally significant, questions that address important phenomena and events that are relevant world wide - in their own community and in communities across the globe.

Globally competent students can articulate the significance of their questions and know how to respond to these questions by identifying, collecting, and analyzing credible information from a variety of local, national and international sources, including those in multiple languages. They can connect the local to the global, for example, by explaining how a local issue like their school recycling program exemplifies a global process far beyond their backyards.  

From analysis to synthesis to evaluation, they can weigh and integrate evidence to create a coherent response that considers multiple perspectives and draws defensible conclusions --be it an essay, a problem or design solution, a scientific explanation or a work of art.

Weigh Perspectives. Globally competent students recognize that they have a particular perspective, and that others may or may not share it.  They are able to articulate and explain the perspectives of other people, groups, or schools of thought and identify influences on these perspectives, including how differential access to knowledge, technology, and resources can affect people's views.  Their understanding of others' perspectives is deeply informed by historical knowledge about other cultures as well as contemporary events.  They can compare and contrast their perspective with others, and integrate their own and others' viewpoints to construct a new one, when needed.

Communicate Ideas. Globally competent students understand that audiences differ on the basis of culture, geography, faith, ideology, wealth, and other factors and that they may perceive different meanings from the same information.  They can effectively communicate, verbally and non-verbally, with diverse audiences.  Because it is increasingly the world's common language for commerce and communication, globally competent students in the US and elsewhere are proficient in English as well as in at least one other world language.

Communicating ideas occurs in a variety of culturally diverse settings, and especially within collaborative teams.  Globally competent students are able to situate themselves in a variety of cultural contexts, organize and participate in diverse groups, and work effectively toward a common goal.

Globally competent students are media and artistically savvy; they know how to choose and effectively use appropriate technology and media to communicate with diverse audiences, including through respectful online social networking.  In short, they are technology and media literate within a global communications environment. 

Take Action. What skills and knowledge will it take to go from learning about the world to making a difference in the world?  First, it takes seeing oneself as capable of making a difference.  Globally competent students see themselves as players, not bystanders.  They're keenly able to recognize opportunities from targeted human rights advocacy to creating the next out-of-the-box, must-have business product we didn't know we needed.  Alone or with others, ethically and creatively, globally competent students can envision and weigh options for action based on evidence and insight; they can assess their potential impact, taking into account varied perspectives and potential consequences for others; and they show courage to act and reflect on their actions.

Apply Disciplinary and Interdisciplinary Expertise. Is global competence all skills and no knowledge?  Hardly.  As true now as at any other time, learning content matters.  Global competence requires that the capacities described above be both applied within academic disciplines and contextualized within each discipline's methods of inquiry and production of knowledge.  Globally competent students learn to think like historians and scientists and artists by using the tools and methods of inquiry of the disciplines.

Global competence also requires the ability to understand prevailing world conditions, issues, and trends through an interdisciplinary lens as well, in order to understand the interconnectedness of the issue and its broad themes as well as subtle nuances.  A competitive advantage will go to those students in San Francisco or São Paulo who know what's going on in the world, can comprehend the interconnectedness of environmental, financial, social, and other systems, and understand how the relative balance of power between societies and cultures has significant short-and long-term consequences. Educating students for global competence requires substantive, developmentally appropriate engagement over time with the world's complexities.

Learning about and with the world occurs within and outside of school, and it is the work of a lifetime.  Globally competent students are life long learners.  They are able to adapt and contribute knowledge and understanding to a world that is constantly, rapidly evolving.  

Global competence is a crucial shift in our understanding of the purpose of education in a changing world.  Students everywhere deserve the opportunity to succeed in the global economy and contribute as global citizens.  We must fashion a more creative and visionary educational response to the interconnected world of the 21st century, starting now.

Download the free publication: Educating for Global Competence (4 MG PDF)
 

Anthony Jackson is vice president for Education at Asia Society.

Discussion
Do the qualities described in this article encompass what students should know and be able to do in a global economy? Please share your perspectives and experiences in the comment board below.

I remember many happy hours looking through the amazing pictures from my grandfather's National Geographic collection. Most children I work with are likewise excited to learn about different cultures - they are naturally inclined to be global. To create globally competent students, we need to fund school and classroom libraries to provide more books, magazines, atlases and dvds that children can explore. Also, in our push to emphasize Language Arts and Math in the elementary grades, we have put social studies aside - which is unfortunate. We need to work on integrating studies of the history, geography, and culture of other peoples within our Language Arts programs in the U.S.
There is a cart and there is a horse. Consciousness of a greater world is the cart, and this must precede all of the above. First the students must acknowledge that there is a world beyond electronic entertainment media, beyond Hollywood, beyond fashion, beyond narrow networking, etc.. Perhaps only a small elite group of kids will be able to bridge the chasm. The rest may choose a desparate existence on an island of blissful ignorance, as Jay Leno observed in his classic geography surveys.
The biggest problem in our world today... The lack of good role models. Take a survey and ask kids who they look up to. Can you think of any? What we influence are kids to become today is how our world will become tommorrow. Why are we teaching children the value of the dollar instead of teaching them the value of life? This life has so much more meaning to it then having the newest IPhone or the or the nicest car or a Gucci purse. What has the world come to? We even started education programs where students don't even have to work hard anymore, they can just get they're degree online in 3 months. How is a person suppose to learn the value of the rewards of hard work when all they had to do was sit behind a computer? In my opinion, your influencing the world to be lazy and teaching them quick easy ways how to get out of hard work. My advice, have teachers trained in motivational speaking and aware of the needs of the economy for the future.
Education is the most important thing for kids. We have to push better education more then we do. We deal with poverty too much do to kids not getting the best education. We have to break this trend.
I liked this article very much. I just missed a reflection on the importance of singularity and regional differences vis a vis a respect for everyone.
This article struck a very vital cord. I have been telling my parents that we need to prepare our students for globally. It is my belief that by the time a 2010 third grader reaches graduation from a college, he should know at least three languages including spanish and chinese. I am a teacher at a private christian academy in an urban environment. We are servicing children who score very high on standardized test. Some are reading on a twelfth grade level in the fourth grade. However we are constantly being threatened to close because of lack of funding and our tuition is low to accomodate this community.
I am a Mexican teacher who is quite interested in getting information concerning globalization / global citizens because I am preparing some projects about Human Rights, Tolerance and Respect, The impact of globalization on our Society, and The Importance of Understanding that we're Global Citizens. I'd like to receive information, links, sources, etc. My e-mail is alma9.9@hotmail.com Thanks.
This is wonderful. I was first introduced to the Asia Society via Yong Zhao's book Catching Up or Leading the Way. I am interested in acquiring your book on Going Global: Preparing our Students for an Interconnected World. Chapter 8 in Zhao's book emphasizes the "academic learning" of global competence. While the Asia Society includes some "transcendent learning", or what some may call "spiritualized learning" when, as indicated in this posting, students must "weigh perspectives", it seems we must delve deeper into this "higher nature" of the human being in order to ensure that the knowledge and skills of a globally competent student includes universal moral components such as team-building, cooperative problem-solving, respect and a shared understanding that all human beings belong to one human family. This will gradually diminish the high ranking goal of "competitiveness" and "material and consumerist ambition" that drives current educational trends. In this way, we will be able to leverage our diversity and appreciate the special talents and gifts that all bring to the table. My personal experience proves that this can (and should) be started early in elementary education while students are still forming their habits and biases. Once this global character building is established as a strong foundation, more academic skills sets and structures can be added in secondary and higher ed. Robert Siegel, faculty Oregon State University, Oregon, USA.
The journey of 1000 miles begins with the first steps! We have a lot to do! I'm ready to get going!
I'm currently an undergrad student trying to stay afloat in the system of education. I agree that there needs to be reform. Right now, most of my classes are geared towards learning what is covered on an exam or in a particular field rather than trying to learn and grasp the entire concept. Last year I began working in lab under Dr. Haque and I can say that I have definately learned so much in such little time due to one key fact - Dr. Haque teaches us to look at the entire picture. If something is happening, why is it happening? How are others around it being affected? Is there a way to possibly combine multiple approaches to reach a goal? These questions are usually in class simply because it is only the answer that appears to be important when it reality understanding how to arrive at an answer is equally important.

Post new comment

Your comments are welcome, please adhere to our guidelines

Be respectful. Personal attacks will not be tolerated; nor will profane, abusive or threatening posts.

Keep it short (150 words or less), Stay on topic.

Asia Society reserves the right to moderate all comments and remove or edit for guideline violations. Thank you.

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Type the characters you see in this picture. (verify using audio)
Type the characters you see in the picture above; if you can't read them, submit the form and a new image will be generated. Not case sensitive.