• Schülerinnen und Schüler in einem Klassenzimmer. Die Kinder sitzen auf braunen Stühlen und wenden der Kamera dem Rücken zu. Neben einem Schüler kniet die Lehrerin, um etwas zu erklären.

    Besuche in lokalen Schulen, wie etwa in den Niederlanden, ermöglicht Studierenden im Rahmen von sogenannten Lesson Studies, Schulunterricht wissenschaftlich zu beobachten und gemeinsam mit Studierenden der Partnerunis eigene Unterrichtseinheiten zu entwickeln. Foto: Pexels/ Arthur Krijgsman

Studying internationally and interculturally

Making teacher training more international and enabling future teachers to approach the issue of cultural diversity in the classroom is at the heart of the programme Lehramt.International. The project runs until the end of 2024.

Making teacher training more international and enabling future teachers to approach the issue of cultural diversity in the classroom is at the heart of the programme Lehramt.International. The project at the University of Oldenburg is now being extended until the end of 2024.

As one of the first model universities across Germany, the University of Oldenburg has been represented in the programme with its own project since 2019. The Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) has now decided to extend funding for the university’s project "Dimensions of Diversity. A multilateral Conversation" until the end of 2024 with around 300,000 euros.

In addition to the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (Netherlands) and the Nelson Mandela University (South Africa), which have already been involved as partners since 2019, the second round of funding involves the NHL Stenden University of Applied Science, another Dutch partner with a focus on teacher education.

"In order to prepare our student teachers well for their everyday professional life, we want to offer as many as possible the chance to gain international experience and to learn how to address diversity in the classroom," says Prof. Dr. Karsten Speck, the University's Vice President for Studies, Teaching and International Affairs. The project contributes to this, for example, by not only promoting stays abroad, but also by enabling intercultural learning and international encounters at the home university.

During the first phase of the project, around 400 students took advantage of international learning opportunities - for example, at the annual summer or winter schools, through language tandems and during stays abroad in South Africa and the Netherlands. Virtual guest lectureships promoted exchange between teachers.

International experience for all

The goal of the second funding phase is to develop an international certificate programme encompassing joint courses offered by all partner institutions. Online courses, for example, allows students to gain international experience even if they cannot spend time abroad themselves.

In addition, the project partners are expanding the actual exchange in the teacher training programmes: In future, there will also be scholarships for shorter stays abroad, for example in the context of summer schools or shorter visits to local schools, for example in the so-called Lesson Studies. These offer the opportunity to observe school lessons and jointly develop own teaching units.  

Teacher training has played an important role at the University of Oldenburg since its foundation. A good third of the students are currently enrolled in a teacher training programme. The university is constantly working to improve teacher training. The project continues this development and aims to anchor internationalisation permanently in all teacher training programmes.

Leading the project from Oldenburg are Prof. Dr Ulla Licandro, special education teacher, Prof. Dr Martin Butler, American studies teacher, Prof. Dr. Karsten Speck, education scientist, Jenka Schmidt, head of the International Office, and Tina Grummel, project coordinator.

This might also be of interest to you:

The picture shows a model of a bomber in a large museum hall. The aircraft's bomb bay is open and some bombs are falling out. The frieze fragment mentioned in the text can be seen in the background. Some visitors are standing in the hall and look at the exhibition.
Campus Life Material Culture History

Between emotions and reason – war in museums

Museum researcher Christopher Sommer studies how museums represent wars and how this is perceived by visitors. His research reveals that there is…

more
The picture shows Ann Kathrin Schubert. She is standing in a university café, with the bar in the background. She is gesturing slightly with her hands. She looks at the interviewer and smiles.
Alumni Campus Life

"Alumni work is a marathon"

After ten years in Berlin, Ann Kathrin Schubert has moved back to the village where she grew up near Bremen in Lower Saxony. Since last September she…

more
An oblique view of a photovoltaic module that looks much chunkier than today's panels.
Research Energy Campus Life

Still going strong after 40 years

First-generation solar modules built back in the 1970s are still generating electricity today. In a new study, the output of some of the modules was…

more
Presse & Kommunikation (Changed: 07 Feb 2025)  Kurz-URL:Shortlink: https://uol.de/p82n6545en
Zum Seitananfang scrollen Scroll to the top of the page