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This paper aims to survey language teaching MOOCs that promote intercultural competence (IC). Specifically, the survey aims to identify the keywords most relevant to MOOCs with IC components, the languages taught, the offering countries, and the embedded soft skills. The selection of keywords is important because they can indicate connection between different disciplines. After trialing a broader set of keywords in several rounds of initial search, we identified five keywords that are the most relevant to language education with IC components on MOOCs: culture, intercultural, cross culture, multi culture, and society. Then courses with these five keywords on language learning are selected for further analysis. The results are summarized as follows: (1) Most language teaching MOOCs are found under the keyword "culture," indicating a strong connection between language education and intercultural communication; (2) In terms of the target languages and the offering countries, it is found that English, Chinese, and Spanish are the major languages widely taught in the context of intercultural competence; China, United States, and Ireland are the three countries which offer the highest numbers of MOOCs in this respect; United States, United Kingdom, and Australia are the three countries which offer the highest numbers of MOOCs of different languages. The results indicate that a limited number of languages and offering countries dominate the language learning MOOCs. The study calls for a plurality of languages and cultures to be taught through MOOCs, making more diversified knowledge systems accessible to global audiences. (3) The language teaching MOOCs not only focus on language but also aim to foster five types of soft skills (language learning skills, communication skills, business and entrepreneurship skills, career development skills, and cultural development skills), suggesting that intercultural competence and its related soft skills are usually important components embedded in such MOOCs courses.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1219478 | DOI Listing |
Gen Hosp Psychiatry
August 2025
Consorcio Latinoamericano de Investigación (CLATI), Las nieves 727, 4801076 Temuco, Chile; Departamento de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de la Costa, Cl. 58 #55-66, 080002 Barranquilla, Colombia; Escuela de Kinesiología, Facultad de Salud, Universidad Santo Tomas, Manuel Rodríguez 060, 4801076 T
J Wound Care
September 2025
Department of Nursing, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona. Spain.
Objective: To assess the effectiveness of ad hoc designed, mixed methodology training on the prevention, classification and categorisation of dependence-related skin lesions (DRSL) among nursing professionals at a public general hospital in Spain.
Method: A quasi-experimental study comprising a single group with 'pre-test' and 'post-test' measurements and measurements at 15 months involving nursing professionals from two hospitalisation units. The data were analysed considering the scores obtained in the measuring instrument, applied before, after and 15 months subsequent to a five-week blended training programme.
J Psycholinguist Res
September 2025
College of Technology and Art, Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute, Jingdezhen, China.
The study describes the semiotic analysis of the solar symbolism of Chinese ceramics and its cross-cultural transition to the Middle East. The study aims to show how these borrowings and other symbols complement each other intersemiotically to achieve their communicative goal. The relevance of this research focuses on the use of semiotics as an artistic methodology to explain and interpret solar symbolism on ceramics in Chinese culture in the Neolithic period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Transl Sci
June 2025
Colorado Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, Workforce Development, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Introduction: Effective interdisciplinary collaboration is essential for addressing complex clinical and translational research challenges. This paper presents and evaluates a structured team science training program developed by the Colorado Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CCTSI), while also introducing and validating a novel assessment tool used to measure changes in key teaming competencies.
Methods: We evaluated the effectiveness of this program between 2020 and 2022 using pre- and post-program surveys ( = 221).
Philos Technol
August 2025
Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Critical reflection on the material, environmental, and social conditions underlying technology remains peripheral to the field of technology ethics. In this commentary, I underwrite the diagnosis by Vandemeulebroucke et al. (2025) that the field suffers from an "extractivist blindspot", but propose a somewhat different cure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF