Internationalization of higher education and the global citizenship of graduate students at Makerere University.
Abstract
Globalization has created an evident need for global citizens – people with attributes of crosscultural
and global perspectives to underpin their personal and professional lives in a globally
connected and competitive world. Internationalization of higher education (IoHE) has been
identified as a pathway to achieve such a desired graduate. Nonetheless, the extent to which
IoHE impacts on the global citizenship (GC) of graduate students in the context of the Global
South appears to be unclear. To address such an issue, this study explored the effect of IoHE
on the GC of graduate students at Makerere University in Uganda. Specifically, the study
sought the views of graduate students on the internationalization of academic staff, curriculum,
and the student community and how these affected their GC. Premised on the transformative
value of higher education, this study was anchored on Mezirow’s theory of transformative
learning and undertaken within the pragmatic research paradigm using the sequential
explanatory study design. Multiple methods including survey, focused interviews, and
document checks were used to gather data from a sample of 180 graduate students. The
quantitative data were analyzed using appropriate descriptive and inferential statistics, while
the qualitative ones were transcribed and analyzed by use of the thematic content analysis
technique. The study findings showed, among others, that the IoHE in terms of academic staff
(R = 0.236; R2=0.056; p = 0.001), the curriculum (R = 0.250; R2 = 0.062; p = 0.001), and
student community (R = 0.202; R2 = 0.041; p = 0.007), all had statistically significant positive
effects on the GC of graduate students. These findings reinforced the earlier belief that the
more internationalized a university is, the more likely its graduate students would become
global citizens; thus, significant efforts need to be made to internationalize these, and other
aspects of university operations. Indeed, this work presents to university management aspects
of IoHE that greatly impinge on the GC of graduate students. No earlier works had similar
results in the context of the global South where IoHE has not yet taken root.