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[ecrea] Transitions: Journal of Transient Migration 1.2
Tue Apr 11 13:19:27 GMT 2017
Intellect is thrilled to announce that the much anticipated new issue of
/Transitions: Journal of Transient Migration (1.2) /is now available.
For more information about this issue please click here
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3270/> or email
(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com)>.
Articles within this issue include (partial list):
International students and social exclusion in the age of social media
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23490/>
*Authors: *Xinyu Zhao
Page Start: 163
This article considers the changing nature of international students’
lived experiences of disadvantage in Australia in the context of their
daily practices of social media. Specifically, it first engages with the
extant empirical research on social media practices in the migration
context which points to the contingent impacts of digital technologies
on migrants’ everyday lives. This body of literature suggests the
possibility to probe into the lived experiences of migrants and their
everyday strategies through a close examination of their activities
around social media. Further, this article attends to studies in the
Australian international student literature which highlights the
interplays of digital technologies and international student agency.
Exploring the elusive shape of service outcomes: Reflections on
evaluating academic language and learning support services
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23493/>
*Authors: *Xiaodan Gao and Kirsten Reid
Page Start: 219
Student Learning Te Taiako at Victoria University of Wellington (New
Zealand) provides academic learning support for tertiary students at
undergraduate and postgraduate levels. As part of good practice and for
the purpose of continual improvement of service quality, service and
programme evaluations are regularly conducted. These evaluations include
the end of year Student Learning Survey and bi-annual peer observations
and tend to focus on student satisfaction and/or perceptions of the
services and programmes offered. More recently, in response to the New
Zealand government’s call for tertiary education institutions (TEIs) to
report on their services and the outcomes of these services, Student
Learning has been looking at ways in which evaluations can be carried
out over and above student numbers and satisfaction. The purpose of this
article is to reflect on and redefine evaluations at Student Learning Te
Taiako. The article argues that, instead of chasing evidence to show
direct contribution to student outcomes, a more structured approach to
evaluation should be taken and a comprehensive set of evidence/data
provided to demonstrate the contribution of academic learning advising
to the overall student learning experience.
A flowing culture: Images of early Gujarati Indian-Islamic migrants in
Aotearoa New Zealand
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23495/>
*Authors: *Rafik Patel
Page Start: 251
Salman Rushdie’s Haroun and the /Sea of Stories/ (1990) sets up an
imaginative tale of a father and son’s journey in search of happiness.
In this fictional reality the ocean is filled with a sea of stories that
manifest the hope of a new beginning. This story also takes the reader
on a whimsical journey that is non-linear. It sways back and forth like
the currents of the ocean, and its allegory transcends the ocean as a
vessel that contains important narratives and knowledge, and as a
spatial medium to cross borders and boundaries. Considering this
allegory, this article presents an auto-ethnography in relation to
migration of the first Gujarati Indian families to arrive in Aotearoa
New Zealand, in the early 1900s. It discusses how these families
integrated and began to construct and grow a new community within. Thus,
this article attempts to uncover stories and a history of migration of
the author’s own family that flowed from South Asia to the Pacific,
transferring a rich culture of Indian-Muslim faith, practice and
architecture.
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