Kairos 20.1

Transnational Writing Programs:

Emergent Models of Learning, Teaching, and Administration

David S. Martins with Patrick Reed
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Tensions Anticipate Stakeholder Interests

Transnational writing programs, because they are the result of collaborative partnerships between different stakeholders, are continually pressured by changing values, desires, interests, and activities. Motivations change as situations change, sometimes in direct result of the success of the program.

For example, initially ACMT was one of the first private universities in Croatia. Because there has been significant competition for students from other institutions throughout Croatia, RIT is adding an international location in Zagreb to stay competitive.

The tensions produced by the shifting that happens when programs and activities are added, changed, or discontinued can be challenging, but they can also be productive; the changes in values and outcomes of educational activities reveal the contingent nature of transnational writing program infrastructures. In order to respond effectively to the opportunities that are revealed, writing teachers and administrators in transnational settings need to be able to anticipate stakeholders' interests.