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      Virtual Exchange in Global Health: an innovative educational approach to foster socially responsible overseas collaboration

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          Abstract

          Educators who design and manage study abroad programs face a series of ethical responsibilities. Meeting these responsibilities is critical in the field of global health, where study abroad programs are often designed to provide healthcare services in under-resourced communities. Leaders in global health have thus formed working groups to study the ethical implications of overseas programming and have led the way in establishing socially responsible best practices for study abroad. Their recommendations include development of bidirectional programming that is designed for mutual and equitable benefits, focused on locally identified needs and priorities, attentive to local community costs, and structured to build local capacity to ensure sustainability. Implementation remains a key challenge, however. Sustainable, bidirectional programming is difficult and costly. In the present study, authors questioned how technology could be used to connect students of global health in distant countries to make socially responsible global health programming more accessible. Drawing on empirical research in the learning sciences and leveraging best practices in technology design, the authors developed a Virtual Exchange in Global Health to connect university students in the U.S. with counterparts in Lebanon, who worked in teams to address humanitarian problems in Syrian refugee camps. Early results demonstrate the value of this approach. At dramatically lower cost than traditional study abroad—and with essentially no carbon footprint—students recognized complementary strengths in each other through bidirectional programming, learned about local needs and priorities through Virtual Reality, and built sustaining relationships while addressing a difficult real-world problem. The authors learned that technology could effectively facilitate socially responsible global health programming and do so at low cost. The program has important implications for teaching and learning during the COVID-19 crisis and beyond.

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          A meta-analytic test of intergroup contact theory.

          The present article presents a meta-analytic test of intergroup contact theory. With 713 independent samples from 515 studies, the meta-analysis finds that intergroup contact typically reduces intergroup prejudice. Multiple tests indicate that this finding appears not to result from either participant selection or publication biases, and the more rigorous studies yield larger mean effects. These contact effects typically generalize to the entire outgroup, and they emerge across a broad range of outgroup targets and contact settings. Similar patterns also emerge for samples with racial or ethnic targets and samples with other targets. This result suggests that contact theory, devised originally for racial and ethnic encounters, can be extended to other groups. A global indicator of Allport's optimal contact conditions demonstrates that contact under these conditions typically leads to even greater reduction in prejudice. Closer examination demonstrates that these conditions are best conceptualized as an interrelated bundle rather than as independent factors. Further, the meta-analytic findings indicate that these conditions are not essential for prejudice reduction. Hence, future work should focus on negative factors that prevent intergroup contact from diminishing prejudice as well as the development of a more comprehensive theory of intergroup contact. Copyright 2006 APA.
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            Ethics and Best Practice Guidelines for Training Experiences in Global Health

            Academic global health programs are growing rapidly in scale and number. Students of many disciplines increasingly desire global health content in their curricula. Global health curricula often include field experiences that involve crossing international and socio-cultural borders. Although global health training experiences offer potential benefits to trainees and to sending institutions, these experiences are sometimes problematic and raise ethical challenges. The Working Group on Ethics Guidelines for Global Health Training (WEIGHT) developed a set of guidelines for institutions, trainees, and sponsors of field-based global health training on ethics and best practices in this setting. Because only limited data have been collected within the context of existing global health training, the guidelines were informed by the published literature and the experience of WEIGHT members. The Working Group on Ethics Guidelines for Global Health Training encourages efforts to develop and implement a means of assessing the potential benefits and harms of global health training programs.
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              The core of ‘design thinking’ and its application

              Kees Dorst (2011)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                kbowen@stanford.edu
                michele.barry@stanford.edu
                ajowell@stanford.edu
                dmaddah@mubs.edu.lb
                nael.alami@mubs.edu.lb
                Journal
                Int J Educ Technol High Educ
                International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
                Springer International Publishing (Cham )
                2365-9440
                10 June 2021
                10 June 2021
                2021
                : 18
                : 1
                : 32
                Affiliations
                [1 ]GRID grid.168010.e, ISNI 0000000419368956, Learning Sciences & Technology Design Program at Stanford University, ; Stanford, USA
                [2 ]GRID grid.168010.e, ISNI 0000000419368956, Medicine and Tropical Diseases, Center for Innovation in Global Health, , Global Health at Stanford University, ; Stanford, USA
                [3 ]GRID grid.168010.e, ISNI 0000000419368956, Stanford University School of Medicine, ; Stanford, USA
                [4 ]GRID grid.444428.a, ISNI 0000 0004 0508 3124, School of Health Sciences at the Modern University for Business & Science, ; Beirut, Lebanon
                [5 ]GRID grid.444428.a, ISNI 0000 0004 0508 3124, Modern University for Business & Science, ; Beirut, Lebanon
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8767-6553
                Article
                266
                10.1186/s41239-021-00266-x
                8189728
                34778528
                71bdd1de-7c50-4944-8344-c6e867966402
                © The Author(s) 2021

                Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 29 January 2021
                : 26 April 2021
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2021

                global health,refugees,ethics,sustainability,virtual exchange,collaborative learning,virtual reality

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