There has been a rapid growth in the number of UK universities establishing ‘international branch campuses’ around the world. The University of Nottingham provides the best-known example, with successful satellite campuses in Semenyih (Malaysia) and Ningbo (China). Liverpool, Southampton, Reading, Newcastle, Middlesex and Heriot-Watt all boast growing offshore campuses.
Managing an international branch campus brings a raft of new challenges. For the senior staff seconded from the UK to set up and nurture branch campuses, they have to deal with the growing pains of any start-up venture, with small numbers of staff having to juggle multiple roles until critical mass is achieved. In most cases, the organisational structure exposes them to the difficulties of running a joint-venture, juggling the demands of the home campus and the local partner. In every case, they have to negotiate the conflicting legislative environments of their home and host countries, often working across language and cultural divides.
This presentation is based on a qualitative study of the challenges facing the managers of UK international branch campuses. Senior managers at a number of UK campuses in Malaysia, China and the United Arab Emirates were interviewed and the results analysed to identify the key issues and problems they face and the coping strategies that they have developed. It offers an insight into the world of the new breed of expatriate academic manager.
Managing an international branch campus dispatches from the front line
1. Managing an international branch
campus: dispatches from the front line
Professor Nigel Healey
Pro-Vice-Chancellor
(International)
Nottingham Trent University
1 April 2015
2. Structure
• What is transnational education (and why should we care)?
• How big is transnational education?
• What is an international branch campus (IBC)?
• How many IBCs? How many students?
• Research study into managing IBCs: approach
• The results:
– The three dimensions of an IBC
– The stakeholders of an IBC
• Lessons for UK universities
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3. What is transnational education?
• TNE is ‘any teaching or learning activity in which the students are in
a different country to that in which the institutional providing the
education is based’ (Global Alliance for Transnational Education
1997, p.1).
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The principle of transnationality
4. …and why should we care?
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1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
Global tertiary enrolments (m) 51.2 60.3 68.7 81.7 99.9 139.0 178.0
Internationally-mobile (m) 1.1 1.1 1.3 1.7 2.1 3.0 4.1
Internationally mobile as %
total
2.1% 1.8% 1.9% 2.1% 2.1% 2.2% 2.3%
Global and internationally-mobile tertiary enrolments
Source: UNESCO 1998, n.d., OECD 2013
10. What is an international branch campus?
• Observatory on Borderless Higher Education (OBHE) 2012
definition: an IBC is:
• ‘a higher education institution that is located in another
country from the institution which either originated it or
operates it, with some physical presence in the host country;
• and which awards at least one degree in the host country
that is accredited in the country of the originating institution’
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11. How many IBCs? How many students?
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Higher education institution HE aggregate offshore students at
overseas campus of reporting HEI
University of Nottingham 9,220
Heriot-Watt University 3,735
Middlesex University 3,050
University College Birmingham 320
University of Kent 280
London Business School 275
University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne 250
University College London 220
University of Exeter 70
University of Wales Trinity Saint David 45
University of Wolverhampton 30
University of Southampton 20
University of Chichester 10
Total 17,525
Enrolments at UK international branch campuses by institution, 2012/13
Source: HEIDI
12. How many IBCs again?
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HESA C-BERT OBHE
Aberystwyth University √
City University √ √
De Montfort University √
Glasgow Caledonian University √ √
Heriot-Watt University √ √ √
Leeds Metropolitan University √
London Business School √ √ √
Middlesex University √ √ √
Queen Margaret University √
University London College √ √
University of Bolton √ √
University of Bradford √
University of Central Lancashire √
University of Chichester √
University College Birmingham √
University College London √ √ √
University of Exeter √ √
University of Kent √
University of Lancaster √
University of Liverpool √
University of London √
University of Manchester √ √
University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne √ √ √
University of Nottingham √ √ √
University of Southampton √
University of Strathclyde √
University of Surrey √ √
University of Wales Trinity Saint David √
University of Westminster √
University of Wolverhampton √ √
Total No. of UK universities with IBCs 13 20 17
13. The challenge of managing an overseas
subsidiary: to localise or not to localise?
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14. Research study
• Research questions:
1. What are the key dimensions of the IBC that managers feel
under pressure to localise?
2. What are the main factors that influence their chosen
degree of localisation for each dimension?
3. How do these factors, and so the optimal degree of
localisation, change over time?
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15. Sample set
• Nine IBCs in United Arab Emirates, Malaysia, China
• 14 senior managers
• 5 experts (for background information)
• Interviews carried out in country, April-September 2014
• 90-120 minutes in length, transcribed and coded
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16. The host markets: UAE
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Nationality Male Female Total
Emirati 5.8% 5.7% 11.5%
Expatriate 68.8% 19.8% 88.5%
Total 74.6% 25.4% 100.0%
United Arab Emirate population by nationality and gender, mid-2010
17. The host markets: Malaysia
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Malay 50.1%
Chinese 22.6%
Indigenous 11.8%
Indian 6.7%,
Other 0.7%
Expatriates 8.2%
Ethnic composition of Malaysian population, 2010
18. The markets: China (1)
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Per capita GDP (constant
prices)
Gross tertiary enrolment
rate (% 18-22 yo)
20. The results: preliminary observations
• IBCs are amazingly diverse in scale, organisational form
• IBCs are not ‘branch campuses’ as commonly understood –
they are private companies/universities in which the UK
university often has a minority stake
• Some IBCs (not the ones in the study) are just offices
• IBCs are subject to QAA and regulation by host government
• UK universities often lack administrative expertise to manage
an IBC
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21. The results: what dimensions to localise (1)?
• Academic staff
– Local staff
– International staff
– Seconded staff
• The trade-off of localising
staff:
– Academic culture
– vs
– Cost of provision
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22. The results: what dimensions to localise (2)?
• Curriculum
– Content
– Pedagogy
– Assessment
– Internal quality assurance
• The trade-off of localising
curriculum:
– Global equivalence
– vs
– Local relevance
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23. The results: what dimensions to localise (3)?
• Research
– Topics studied
• The trade-off of localising
research:
– International excellence
– vs
– Local impact
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26. The results: what stakeholders influence the
degree of localisation?
• Internal stakeholders:
– Home university – senior
management and staff
– Joint venture partner
• External stakeholders:
– Host country – government,
regulator, employers
– Competitors
– Students
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28. Lessons for UK universities from the study
• Prepare and train managers of IBCs
• Rotate academic and professional seconded staff
• Upskill professional services staff at home
• Design systems that can be globalised
• Be prepared for ontological shock!
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29. Conclusions
• Transnational education is a growth area
• IBCs are the highest profile form of transnational education
• IBCs vary hugely, but all expose UK university to potential
financial and reputational risk
• Research suggests that to succeed, IBCs must localise their
staff base, curriculum and research
• The degree of localisation depends on the objectives and
relative power of the main stakeholders
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30. Nothing new under the sun: what do these
universities have in common?
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University of Peradeniya University of the West Indies
University of Zimbabwe
University of Nottingham
31. For more information:
• E-mail: nigel.healey@ntu.ac.uk
• Website: http://nottinghamtrent.academia.edu/NigelHealey
• Website includes conferences presentations, papers and
resources on TNE developed for the Higher Education
Academy
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