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TEACHING & LEARNING

Blended Mobility

Toolkit Introduction Virtual Mobility Virtual Exchange Blended Mobility

Blended mobility combines physical and virtual components and can thus enrich students’ learning experience by leveraging the strengths of both in-person and online interactions. Blended mobility courses, often run as Erasmus+ Blended Intensive Programmes (E+ BIPs), are an opportunity to bring together students and academics from ENLIGHT partner institutions to collaborate on disciplinary or interdisciplinary topics and engage in an intercultural exchange. A short, intensive on-site phase at one ENLIGHT university is often combined with online lectures, discussions, and/or digital learning materials. Especially in the physical component, you can anchor the course topic in the local context, invite local stakeholders to share their perspectives and create knowledge together with your students, e.g. through project work, challenge-based education or community-based research. Blended courses can give students who would otherwise not be able to travel the chance to spend time abroad and earn credits towards their degree in an international learning format.    

The sections below provide guidance on integrating blended mobility into the curriculum, designing pedagogically meaningful activities, and understanding administrative requirements. 

Curriculum Design

Integrate your Blended Mobility course into your local curriculum   

Blended mobility courses combine online learning with an on-site phase where the students and teachers meet in person. As such, they are important means of fostering international and intercultural learning for students across the ENLIGHT network. 

The most prominent ENLIGHT blended mobility format refers to the Erasmus+ funding line “Blended Intensive Programme (BIP) that will help you acquire funding for this type of courses. Thus, the programme requirements will impact the process of designing the course. Due to the relevance of E+ BIPs in the ENLIGHT network, we primarily refer to this format. Of course, seasonal schools can also be run in a blended format. 

If you are interested in creating a blended mobility/BIP for students, we recommend not to treat it as a one-off learning opportunity. In some cases, it might be helpful to discuss with your co-teachers, whether the course can be iterated in the future (with an alternating host). To achieve this goal, a BIP should be integrated into the study programme at each contributing university.  

How to initiate the integration of blended mobility as a part of the curriculum? 

If you are taking first steps, you might want to choose between  

  1. adjusting the design of an existing course so that a blended mobility can be included  
  1. developing a new blended mobility course within your study programme    

While both approaches take time and effort, the possibility of an Erasmus+ budget can be of use to support both the development and the implementation of the course.   

Please consider that it is necessary to develop an ENLIGHT BIP in close collaboration with at least two partner academics

With your co-teachers, you can decide whether the course is continuously offered at your institution, or whether it rotates annually so that partners take turns in hosting and organising the on-site component. The former will lead to a more regular routine when it comes to organising and implementing the BIP within your institution. In this case, all students of your study programme can benefit from an international experience over time. The latter means, that each year, students from different universities can be mobile.

For example, you might start out by hosting the blended mobility course at your university during the first iteration. Your students will not travel, but exchange intensively with your partners’ students “at home,” on your campus. In subsequent iterations, your co-teachers take over the responsibility of hosting the course and you and your students have the possibility of traveling for the on-site phase. Such a rotation scheme can help you divide the workload, internationalise the curriculum at home for your students – especially for students who cannot travel – and sustain this learning offer.  

Where to integrate Blended Mobility into the curriculum?  

Ideally, opportunities for blended mobility are integrated into the curriculum, i.e. as one of the regular course offerings that your students can choose. This will help you to integrate blended mobility into your regular teaching load. As the student intake is limited and mobility is part of this type of course, they cannot be a mandatory part of the study programme. However, you should avoid “adding-on” blended mobility courses to the curriculum with little connections to students’ study paths. Instead, you can situate your blended mobility course in modules or study phases where students will be able to value intensive intercultural exchange and immersion into your course topic and joint approach.   

Please also think about how the blended mobility in this course can help your students achieve the learning outcomes for their study programme. We recommend that you develop the learning outcomes in collaboration with your co-teachers as they need to be aligned with their curricula as well

Shaping students’ learning pathway   

For some of your students, this might be the first international experience in their study programme and they might be inspired to continue an international orientation with other “Stepping Stones” in the ENLIGHT network.

Considerations for Curriculum Development  

The following overview illustrates potential corner stones of blended mobility formats. Not all of them can be implemented in a single course or immediately in the first trial run of a blended mobility course, but they can serve as source of inspiration:   

  • Cross-curricular approach: a BIP fosters the engagement, so that you can follow your teaching interests together with at least two other colleagues from different institutions and/or disciplines. With a shared theme and specific learning outcomes in mind, you jointly create a course that allows your students to explore a topic from diverse perspectives, often mirroring the complexity and interconnected nature when working on real-world challenges.  

  • Exchange opportunities: A BIP can offer a low-threshold and more inclusive opportunity for students to participate in a short-term exchange when a full semester exchange might not be feasible. 

  • Action orientation: Blended Intensive Programmes lend itself to work on real-life challenges together with your students. Collaborative work, joit student projects or the integration of external actors allows them to understand the impact of diverse local/national/global perspectives and develop a sense of responsibility towards solving challenges of the 21st century as part of an interconnected world. During the on-site phase, students often get the chance to interact directly with local stakeholders.