International education requires that everyone the world over work together to produce new knowledge, to navigate the "crossroads,and to collectively chart the directions in which the field will move into the future.
edited by Deborah N. Cohn, Hilary E. Kahn, with contributions by Michael A. McRobbie, Mary Sue Coleman, Kenneth Coleman, Patrick O'Meara, Robin Matross Helms, Elspeth Jones, Hans de Wit, Eva Egron-Polak, Jonathan Fanton, Stephen E. Hanson, Kris Olds, Zsuzsa Gille, Seung-Kyung Kim, Brian Edwards, Rosemary Geisdorfer Feal, Dan E. Davidson, Daryl Baldwin, Kim Potowski, Francisco Marmolejo, Safwan M. Masri, Caroline Levander, Kathleen Claussen, Takyiwaa Manuh, Allan E. Goodman, Dawn Michele Whitehead, Cheryl Gibbs, Anthony Koliha, General Gene Renuart
Introduction
I. Internationalization in a Global Context
1. The Importance of Increasing Our Investment in International Education
2. Internationalizing Education as We Move Deeply into the 21st Century
3. What's Happening to the World?
4. Going, Golden, Gone? Internationalization's Past, Present, and Future
5. The Globalization of Internationalization?
6. Why International Education: Recent Past, Present, and Future
7. The Broadest Possible Education
II. Legacies of Title VI, Area & Global Studies
8. In Praise of Title IV
9. The Political Economy of International Education in the United States
10. Area Studies in the Light of New Theoretical and Global Developments
11. The Future of International Studies and Area Studies
12. Global Education for Generation Z
III. Languages
13. Priorities in Language Study: Campus Trends, Future Needs
14. Ensuring U.S. National Capacity in World Languages and Cultures for the 21st Century
15. Myaamiaataweenki: The Myaamia Language
16. How and Why to Promote Multilingualism in U.S. Schools
17. International Education: Just a Fancy Idea for a Few, or a Vital Component of Higher Education and of Our Future?
VI. Internationalization in Practice
18. From International to Global: Rethinking Worldwide Engagement
19. Global Education, Educating Globally
20. Growing Global Competence in the Midwest
21. A View from Somewhere
22. Lessons from History... Made in Indiana
V. Crossroads: Agencies, Mechanisms, and a Nation
23. Reflections on Title VI from a National Perspective
24. U.S. Department of Education International and Foreign Language Education Programs
25. International Education and Exchanges Offer Effective Education Diplomacy for the United States
26. Foreign Language and International Education-A Critical Requirement: A Practitioner's View
Index
List of Contributors