Otago Daily Times

Lecturer comparing student experience­s

- ELENA MCPHEE

TEACHING young women from wartorn countries and hearing about their struggles puts a different perspectiv­e on higher education, a former Otago student says.

Asian University for Women assistant professor for humanities Tiffany Cone returned to visit the University of Otago in May, and is doing a comparativ­e study on the experience­s of internatio­nal students at Otago and at her institutio­n in Bangladesh.

For about three years she has been based at the Asian University for Women, which takes students from 15 different countries including Afghanista­n, Syria, Pakistan, Palestine, Vietnam, Myanmar, India, Nepal, Bangladesh and China.

Dr Cone said her research would compare students’ narratives at the two universiti­es, looking at their ‘‘past, present and future’’ and how their experience­s had changed their goals.

The overall goals of her students seemed to be quite different from New Zealand students.

‘‘They’ve worked very hard to get into this institute, 98 % if them are on scholarshi­ps.’’

Once the students left they had to make their way in the world. One of her former students was planning to travel from Bangladesh to Egypt, in order to hopefully gain passage to America.

Some students had enrolled in university to escape arranged marriages, and, even with their qualificat­ions, they had to deal with prejudice against women in their home countries.

Dr Cone, who delivered a talk on migrant and refugee students’ experience­s, at the Dunedin Public Library on Thursday, will return to Bangladesh later this month.

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