Hannah Wagner
I fell in love with the strange city of Tokyo while studying abroad, and I
didn’t want to leave. I stayed for longer than the program length, and I got
back just in time for classes to start here at Nova [with the fall semester]. My
time abroad caused me to change and grow so much. It was extremely difficult to
live in Tokyo due to the language barrier and cultural differences, but I felt
like the challenge made me a better person.
Amy Richards
I spent the beginning of this summer in Central America. I was volunteering
through WWOOF (Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms) at two sites in Costa
Rica for a few weeks. I missed my flight back, so I decided to travel through
Panama for 10 days and then back to Costa Rica. After returning to the states, I
went to Kentucky for the Henry Clay Center for Statesmanship, where I acted as
the PA state representative. There, we debated and formed a report for the 10
most critical global threats of our generation, in addition to taking classes at
Transylvania Univ. and Univ. of Kentucky. Aside from this, I spent some time
with family and friends at home.
Roland Kennedy
I would say that the summer program in Prague has truly challenged the way
that I view the world and has opened my eyes to new insights. Everyday was a
challenge for me, but I pressed forward and was able to put into practice my new
research knowledge. The best thing that I could have done this summer in
choosing a summer program was participating in a program that was outside of a
western, modernized country. That aspect helped enhance my learning experience.
I spent the second half of my summer in Prague, Czech Republic. The objective of
the program’s course of study was to research the effects and observe how high
tech industry is operated and developed in the Czech Republic. My time there was
not just limited to Prague. The group also conducted research throughout the
entire country and also in neighboring countries such as Austria and Hungary.
The true test of how the program’s research was conducted was not simply limited
to the business model of the high tech industry, but also included studying the
immigration policy in the country, social construct, government funding,
education, and culture. I think the way in which my summer activities related
most to global studies was the overall experience of the traveling process ad
the way in which I lived within a culture that was completely on the other end
of the spectrum for me. Despite these differences, I could still relate on the
basis that the world that we live in has become much more accessible through
technological advancements and other commonalities that we all share today.
Olivia Albright
“You are welcome, obruni! You are welcome!” Walking down the dusty path from
my lodging alongside the second largest mountain peak in Ghana to the school
where I teach the Junior Secondary students, villagers walking to the community
farm greet me. I am clearly an outsider, my white skin shining under the blazing
sun. But they welcome me nonetheless; extremely grateful for the little work I
am doing to help their children learn English, their national language. While
the students are far more fluent in their tribal language, Ewe, they love to
learn English, the many phrases and cultural aspects of this language and my
American lifestyle entertaining them to no end. The relief I felt in this
country was totally unexpected. Here, people are not concerned with being
invited to some great party or whether or not they can persuade their parents to
buy them some designer sunglasses. Instead, they worry about this season’s crop.
What I found most surprising in this community- so sparse compared to the first
world luxuries which usually surround me- was the total lack of sadness and
discontent among the villagers. These people knew only this life, and they found
total happiness in its simplicity. This summer, I had the opportunity to take a
deep breath, enjoy the natural world around me, talk with people who have never
seen the things I call normal, and delve totally and completely into one sector
of the global community. While I went there to help, I came back having realized
that these people, who we see on the news and pity, don’t need our sympathy.
They need honest and pure help, not from some might benevolent American, but
instead from an equal, a member of the human race, who gives aid now but might
need it later.
|