Smoothing the way for international students

February 10, 2015 by Elaine Smith - A&S News

With its international undergraduate student population at around 20 per cent and rising, the Faculty of Arts & Science is making a priority of ensuring these students get the most out of their university experience, both inside the classroom and beyond.

Mark McGowan with students Anastasiia Steshenko, Maira Abdukarimova and Sergio Betancourt.
Mark McGowan with students Anastasiia Steshenko, Maira Abdukarimova and Sergio Betancourt. Photo: Diana Tyszko.

Last summer, David Cameron, Arts & Science dean, created the position of senior academic advisor, international and appointed historian Mark McGowan, the former principal of St. Michael’s College, to the job. After extensive consultations with people who work with international students in various capacities – including deans, residence coordinators and staff at the Centre for International Experience (CIE) — McGowan and other members of the dean’s international team have identified six priority pathways that Arts & Science will be pursuing to enhance the academic and university life experiences of international students. They are:

  • Transition
  • Building communities
  • English language skills
  • Academic integrity
  • Mental health
  • Finance

“Within five years, we anticipate that 25 per cent of our undergraduate student body will be international students,” said McGowan. “We need to ensure that the services and support they receive are of the same high quality as the education the university provides.”

The actual numbers of students who will benefit is even higher than the 25 per cent statistic shows, McGowan noted, because there is also a group of students who have a Canadian parent and a Canadian passport, but haven’t spent much time in Canada.

Using the pathways as a starting point, McGowan and his team have launched a number of short-term initiatives to improve the international student experience while exploring longer-term options and priorities. These include:

  • Creating a pre-orientation program specifically for international students
  • More First-Year Learning Communities for international students
  • Expanding writing instruction in programs with many international students
  • Studying ways to improve understanding of U of T’s culture of academic integrity
  • Enhancing the counselling services offered in conjunction with the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work to reduce wait times
  • Offering workshops — in partnership with CIE and the Centre for Teaching Support & Innovation — that enhance faculty and staff awareness of potential mental health concerns

Certain departments attract large numbers of international students and are coming up with creative ways to support them. The Department of Statistical Sciences, for example, is designing a pilot first-year course — Introduction to Data Science — that will teach technical statistical skills in conjunction with the English language communication skills students will need for future employment. It will also offer peer-to-peer mentorship to help students feel more at home in class and as newcomers.

Statistics professor Sheldon Lin, who is a native of China, worked closely with course instructor Jeff Rosenthal and department chair James Stafford in designing the course. “Many international students feel isolated in a country with a very different education system,” said Lin. “I had similar problems when I arrived and I can relate,” he said.

McGowan and his team are working hard to answer that call, providing international students throughout the faculty access to the services and supports they need.

“We want to ensure that all of our students succeed and achieve at the level they are aiming for in a timely way,” McGowan said.