Category Archives: News

Following the Signs: You’ll always make the right choice.

I applied to a program in Valparaiso, Chile. It offered both Spanish and Sociology classes which is perfect because I just added my secondary Sociology major in the spring of my sophomore year and really need to play catch-up. While Argentina also offered these courses, the Valparaiso program cost less and sounded more colorful, interesting, and suitable for me.

Unfortunately, things took a turn after the long process of running around getting approval from this person and that person and after turning in this document and that document. I was accepted into the program, turned in my housing and course information, and paid what I needed to pay after my financial aid award. Then I began to hear of trouble brewing in Chile. Thanks to the weekly assignments in my Spanish Speaking World Prep program class (Spanish 394Pl) to read a Latin American newspaper story and write about it, I kept a close eye on Chile. With a slight increase in metro prices after an increase in electricity costs a month before, the country blew up in nationwide protests. Continue reading

Changing my definition of activism after studying abroad in Santiago de Chile

Everyday it seems more and more difficult for me to think optimistically about the United States. I won’t delve into the numerous problems I have with the country that I am supposed to call “mine,” but I will say this: just as I’ve learned to critique the United States, I’ve learned through my first semester being back from studying abroad in Latin America that it is equally important to notice its intricacies in all forms. It’s much easier for me nowadays to make assumptions about people in the U.S., especially concerning how they think in regards to certain political topics. For example, I make the assumption daily most U.S. Americans know nothing or close to nothing about politics or current affairs in Latin America, or even beyond. Obviously that is not true, I’m literally enveloped in a community of students that are capable of proving me wrong. But the point I am trying to make is that recently I made the realization that I was conditioned to “dislike” people that disagree with me and immediately dismiss them instead of engaging them within a productive and civil discussion. Continue reading

State Department to promote more student exchanges with Latin America

Today I found this story about the State Department intending to promote more student exchanges between Latin America and the United States. As the story points out, the government has determined that it is important for us to promote much more student exchanges between the two regions as we are geographically, politically and economically linked. The article also points out that at this time these exchanges are quite limited in relation to our actual relations. As a long-time professor at UMass, this doesn’t come as a surprise to me, and I must confess that I am disappointed by the limited scope of this relationship. My experience is that many more of my students, for one reason or another, tend to prefer Spain over Latin America as a study destination. The irony, however, is that often the interest in Spanish is because of the geographical proximity to our southern neighbors (and the increased Latin American population in the US), but the choice of a place to study the language is dictated by other reasons. A few years back I read this interesting article about the history of Spanish studies in the United States which in a way addresses some of the reasons behind this contradiction.
Beyond this, I’d also like to point out that I find another interesting aspect to this story: the fact that much of the $1,000,000 (a small amount if you really consider it) is going to be dedicated to make Latin American universities better cater to US students. On the surface, a good proposition, but I wonder to what degree specifically catering to US students and creating special programs for them defeats part of the purpose of going abroad – to learn the way in which other societies function.
Any thoughts?

“Tracking Charity” on PRI’s The World

Today I ran into this very interesting project. Amy Costello will follow what The World identifies as “the multibillion-dollar international aid industry”. It will certainly look at “charity” from a critical perspective. At this point the site has posted four stories: on Malaria in Africa, medical volunteers in Haiti, international adoptions, and the TOMS shoe company. I think it is a very valuable resource for those of you interesting in continuing on the track of community engagement and service-learning.

Transforming communication “scapes” in the Americas

Communication pictures

Yesterday I ran into this very interesting article in Sinopsis México introducing us to a new communal cell phone network developed by the Zapotec community of Telea de Castro in the Oaxaca highlands. The article immediately reminded my of a documentary aired last year by Al Jazeera called “The Internet Indians” about the Ashaninka, who in the middle of the Amazonian rainforest use the internet to protect their lands. It also reminded me of the work of Cineminga engaging in communal video production in many parts of the world. Continue reading

The role of social media in the dissemination of news

At several times during the semester I mentioned that social media are becoming more and more valid sources of news. I talked about my personal experience discovering Twitter as an important source and encouraged you to pursue this channel as you tried to learn about your future host countries. What happened last night in Texas not only showed the new relevance of social media, it also presented the way in which in many important instances it has even overtaken the traditional role of cable news networks.

Federal District Court decision regarding unpaid internships

A few weeks back I ran into this other article from the New York Times announcing a Manhattan Federal District Court’s decision with important implications for all university students and other prospective interns: “Judge Rules That Movie Studio Should Have Been Paying Interns.” The ruling was the conclusion of a lawsuit brought by two interns who demanded to be paid by Fox Searchlight Pictures for their work in the movie “Black Swan”. In his decision, Judge William H. Pauly III “noted that these internships did not foster an educational environment and that the studio received the benefits of the work.” Continue reading