PaCIE
THE PENNSYLVANIA COUNCIL FOR INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION |
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PaCIE: A History
In 1969, PaCIE was founded on the campus of Pennsylvania
State University by four research universities (University of Pennsylvania,
Pennsylvania State University, University of Pittsburgh, and Temple
University) and several four-year colleges as an institutional member
organization for four-year colleges and universities.
PaCIE was conceived from the outset as a statewide
consortium and advocate for international education. The founding of
PaCIE coincided with new initiatives in federal funding for innovative
national programs in international education. Thus, the earliest activities
of PaCIE focused primarily on seeking federal funding for its members
by way of an annual conference as a networking forum for PaCIE members
to meet with federal officials, and to exchange information on college
and university funding needs.
Through the 1970s, PaCIE created an annual newsletter
on international education grants and statewide activities. In addition,
a directory of summer and semester study abroad programs designed and
implemented by the State Systems of Higher Education universities was
prepared and printed to encourage state university students to study
overseas. Program cooperation among the state universities, discounted
academic costs, and diverse program sites were the benefits of the directory.
By the early 1980s, PaCIE launched three initiatives
for the benefit of Pennsylvania’s colleges and universities, school
districts, and their high school students:
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In 1982, two faculty members at
the University of Pennsylvania successfully applied for a series US
Department of Education grant to distribute PENN/PaCIE funds to assist
Pennsylvania colleges and universities in the planning and implementing
of offices of international studies across the State; the funding
assisted twenty-five colleges with the PENN/PaCIE grants from 1983
to 1988. From 1988 to 1992, PaCIE repeated the same granting format
with PENN/PaCIE grants to 20 colleges and universities for the enhancement
of geography and international education.
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In 1984, PaCIE in close association
with Governor Thornburgh’s office and the Pennsylvania Department
of Education [PDE], founded the Pennsylvania Governor’s School
for International Studies at the University of Pittsburgh.
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In 1987, PaCIE and the PDE established
nine statewide collaboratives of school, college, and university language
and social studies faculty sometimes on their own, and sometimes in
cooperation with community leaders and businesses to promote joint
conferences, surveys, research projects, and ongoing networks to promote
language studies, the humanities and area studies throughout the State.
In the 1980s, PaCIE also began the publication of the International
Review and the PaCIE Directory to serve the Pennsylvania academic
community with reviews of international education books, and the institutional
membership and representatives in PaCIE.
From 1992 to the present, PaCIE has focused its attention on four initiatives
in addition to the annual September conference and the publication of
PaCIE News four times annually, and its institutional collaborative
projects, such as continued federal funding for languages, humanities
and area studies in Pennsylvania’s K to 16 schools, colleges and
universities:
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PaCIE revised its By-laws to include
two-year colleges as a membership priority and long-term presence
on the Board of Directors; at the same time, PaCIE began further cooperation
with statewide organizations and school districts with its inauguration
of a permanent Board of Directors position open to a representative
from the Pennsylvania State Modern Language Association [PSMLA].
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In 2004, PaCIE extended membership
to K-12 teachers, administrators and schools involved in international
education – that is, language study, social studies, and area
studies that include an international component.
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PaCIE sought to include an ongoing
panel in the annual conference devoted to “international education
and technology”, presented an interactive compressed video session
with the International University of Monterey, Mexico in its 1997
annual conference, and instituted a members-only electronic bulletin
board [PaCIE-L], later replaced by a web page site www.pacie.org presently
operated by Dickinson College’s Office of Global Studies.
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Lastly, PaCIE initiated a series
of advocacy projects. As part of the annual PaCIE conference in Harrisburg
beginning in 1999, visits have been made to key government international
business and education offices and cooperative presentations were
done with the Harrisburg Mayor’s Office. In addition, plans
were made to seek federal, state, and local funds to survey Pennsylvania’s
school, college and university languages, and area and international
studies resources for Pennsylvania’s local communities and businesses.
PACIE has also been active in the battle to achieve World Language
Standards for Pennsylvania K-12 schools.
Over the past several years, PaCIE college and university members have
been honored by national awards for recognition of outstanding international
education projects and programs. In 2000, the American Council on Education
awarded Arcadia University and Dickinson College its “Promising
Practices” award. In 2001 and again in 2002, the Institute for
International Education awarded its Andrew Heiskell Award first to Juniata
College (Huntingdon) for its “Languages in Motion” project,
and then to Chatham College (Pittsburgh) for its “Communities
of Islam” project. In 2003, NAFSA: Association of International
Educators awarded Dickinson College, Community College of Philadelphia,
and University of Pittsburgh its “Exemplary International Programs”
award. In honoring its own Pennsylvania outstanding international educators,
in 1998, PaCIE initiated two awards to be given at its annual conferences;
that is, the LaMarr Kopp Life Achievement in International Education
and the David Portlock Outstanding International Educator awards
PaCIE is administered by an Executive Director (Christina Good, Arcadia
University), and annually elects a 13-member Board made up of PaCIE
members.
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college/university-K-12 collaborative project for PaCIE's annual
"Bringing the World to Pennsylvania"
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