An international curriculum Duration: 3 minutes : 5 seconds Christopher Barnatt (Nottingham University Business School), William Bowden (School of Humanities), Peter Cartwright (School of Law), Andreas Fulda (School of Contemporary Chinese Studies), Katharina Lorenz (School of Humanities). Chris Barnatt: And that inevitably means when you put courses together you actually make sure you look at international resources more. Katharina Lorenz: One of the things I have done automatically by being me and being from a different context, is to raise some awareness of that there is scholarship done outside the English language which is interesting. And that actually it might be valuable to be able to access it. Will Bowden: If they come from, for example, North American, they will very often have quite similar perceptions of ancient Rome to British students. European students will have, rather, sometimes quite different views on the ancient world. And then international students, for example, from China or Asia will have, I think, rather different impressions of it. Peter Cartwright: Andreas Fulda: I do think that this is actually a very typical British trademark that people in Britain learn how to develop a good argument, how to debate, to disagree with people without being disagreeable. These are very good values, things that we should definitely uphold. |
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