Description: In this timely new contribution, Koehn and Rosenau develop their transnational-competence framework and demonstrate the promise of its application across six critical professions: teacher education, engineering, business management, social work, sustainable-development, and medicine/health
Review Quotes:
"The visionary educational themes developed in Transnational Competence will have appeal between and beyond U.S. shores. Transnational partnerships and joint-degree programs that aim to prepare technically qualified professionals who are globally competent will be enhanced by the analytic, emotional, creative, communicative, and functional insights contributed here."
--Peter McPherson, President, Association of Public and Land Grant Universities, from the Foreword
--Allan E. Goodman, President & CEO, Institute of International Education "Drawing upon powerful social scientific insights, Koehn and Rosenau offer compelling practical measures for developing the orientations and skills necessary for successfully engaging an ever-more dynamic and interconnected world."
--Steven Vertovec, Director, Max-Planck Institute for the Study of Ethnic and Religious Diversity, Göttingen, Germany "To be successful in their own careers and to contribute most effectively to broader society goals of security, prosperity, and peace will require these graduates to have more fully developed transnational competencies. This book...will be a useful tool for leaders in international academic affairs and in professional schools and colleges throughout universities all over the world, not only in North America."
--Earl Kellogg, Professor & Associate Provost for International Affairs (Emeritus), University of Illinois "Koehn and Rosenau offer refreshingly detailed suggestions on how to prepare graduating practitioners with the skills needed to manage cross-border challenges. Transnational Competence should be read by anyone interested in international and global studies who is looking for cutting-edge professional preparation for our globalized world."
--Xiao-huang Yin, Professor and Director of Global Studies in the Arts and Humanities, Michigan State University