Ever since my first trip to Spain in 2017 with my high school exchange program, I knew I would do whatever it took to be able to return. Four years later as I began to pack my bags for my semester abroad, I was filled with anxiety. There were many factors contributing to that feeling. I was nervous about being in a new place, my Spanish not being strong enough, making friends, and being thousands of miles away from my home. But at the forefront of my mind, was how/if I was going to be able to maintain my health and fitness.
Continue readingWhat is Portuñol and how to Avoid it
I grew up speaking Spanish in my home and learning Spanish throughout school. I lived in Miami for a bit and we frequently traveled back and forth from Buenos Aires to visit family and friends. I have been able to utilize my Spanish so much while growing up in the US and I have witnessed the first hand value of having two languages, which pushed me to learn a third. Portuguese is quite similar to Spanish. With sharing so much vocabulary and having similar grammar rules, going from Spanish to Portuguese I felt like I already had a foot in the door. However, due to the close proximity in the languages I have begun speaking the hybrid of Portuñol.
Continue readingA Summer Abroad in Salamanca 2022
Ever since I was a little kid, I had always wanted to travel around the world. In high school, I had the opportunity to go on a trip during spring break to Costa Rica. I was extremely excited and thought that this was something I could not pass up. As my first time abroad in a Spanish-speaking country was wrapping up, I knew I wanted more. I had indeed gotten the travel bug, and I knew for sure that my next stop abroad would be Spain.
Fast forward to Summer 2022, and my dream was finally coming true. during the Spring semester I attended an information session for the UMass Salamanca Summer Program and knew that this was the program for me. Originally when I was searching for an abroad program to do for my Spanish major, I wanted to do a program that was not too long, and if I ended up enjoying it, I would potentially do another program for a longer duration, like a semester long program. Since the Salamanca program is only 1 month, it was an ideal choice for me and what I wanted at the time.
Continue readingWhy study a foreign language?
Many people are confused when I tell them that I chose to study Spanish as my primary major at UMass. The majority of my peers question what successful careers I could possibly qualify for through a degree in a foreign language. The answer? In comparison to some of the experiences I have heard about from my friends in other majors, the bonds that a foreign language concentration allows you to make in both academic and personal realms of life are limitless and bounding. Throughout my time studying Spanish at UMass, I have accumulated several high-demand certifications, resume-building life experiences, strong academic and personal relationships, and have been fortunate enough to travel the world.
Continue readingA Month Abroad Amidst a Pandemic
Going into UMass as a freshman, I saw myself taking a semester abroad at some point; hopefully in Central or South America. I saw myself doing a lot of things actually… then Covid. My Sophomore year was remote, and the summer before going back to campus as a junior was when I finally had the chance to study abroad. I chose to go to Salamanca because the program was brief and I wouldn’t miss an entire semester at UMass. This would be my first time traveling since the lockdown began.
Continue readingWhy I Went Abroad in the Summer
The covid pandemic hit during the end of my freshman year where we were quickly rushed home. The following two semesters of my sophomore year were completely virtual, causing me to lose a full school year of being on campus. Studying abroad was always a dream of mine since high school, I love to travel and under normal circumstances I would’ve loved to have done a full semester abroad with my original plan being in Granada, Spain. The fall of my junior year was the first semester I was on campus since two years ago. I was creating so many new friendships and I was finally able to experience Umass. I was having such a fun semester that I decided to search for programs in the summer rather than the spring semester where I stumbled across the Study in Portugal Network.
Continue readingTaking Portuguese Courses… As a Spanish Major?
Last year when I took SPAN -394PI with Luis, we had a few former UMass students join our class in a zoom meeting to talk to us about their experiences as a Spanish Major at UMass, as well as what they are currently doing for a career. The one thing that piqued my interest the most though was when one particular UMass alum talked about a Portuguese course that had been offered when they were still a student. The course being offered was PORT-246, or Intensive Intermediate Portuguese. It is a 6 credit course for students with a background in a romance language (in my case, Spanish) and meets only 3 days a week. Many of the former students had praised the course and highly recommended it, some even said that they wish they took the opportunity to take it when they had the chance. As an avid language learner, I thought this was the perfect opportunity to begin learning a new language, so, I took their word for the course and enrolled in it for the next semester.
Continue readingGrowing through Language
I first encountered Spanish when I was in fifth grade. I remember it vividly. I had just moved to a new school, and all of my classmates had started Spanish classes in kindergarten, so they were way ahead of me. At the start of my first class, my teacher walked in and began speaking Spanish, and I slouched down in my seat in the hopes that she wouldn’t notice that I was there. She did. She walked over to me and smiled gently when she saw the look of terror on my face. “You’ve never taken Spanish before, have you?” she asked. All I could do was shake my head no.
Throughout the course of that year, my teacher was a constant source of encouragement. She would pull me aside in class and help me with my vocabulary, she stayed after school to help me practice sentence structure and writing skills, and she set me up with an online language software so I could practice speaking the language. These lessons were all very helpful and appreciated, but the best thing that she ever did was start speaking only in Spanish for the second half of the school year. By the end of the year, I was able to read whole stories that I hadn’t been able to understand at all in September. This was the first time that I had ever been exposed to another language, and the first time that I had really stopped to consider what life outside of the United States might be like. This experience opened a whole new door for me. It gave me a sense of confidence in myself, it made me realize that I loved learning about languages and cultures, and it opened my eyes to the possibilities of traveling in the future. Something just “clicked” for me that year. It felt natural to speak a new language, and I knew then that I had to continue with it.
Continue readingThe Pages of Life
“To be a better writer, you have to read.” That’s what my teachers always told me growing up. But why would I want to do that? Eleven-year-old me was already so busy with school, homework, soccer practice, swim team practice, and playing an instrument. I barely had any time for myself. To me, picking up a book felt like a dreadful chore.
The house I grew up in was very close to a used bookstore. My mom loved to visit it and would sometimes take my brothers and me along for the ride. She loved to read, but I never understood why. While she would spend hours carefully looking through shelf after shelf of historical fiction books, my brothers and I would be in the movie section. One day, however, I decided to look at the books in the children’s area. My eyes scanned the spines of countless novels until they reached a book with a bright blue cover. My tiny hands removed Esperanza Rising from the shelf, and I began to read the back cover. My mom was thrilled when I asked her if I could take a book home that day instead of a DVD.
Continue readingLatinx Studies at UMass
It’s safe to say the Spanish Department at UMass Amherst wasn’t what I was expecting. I partly chose this major when I applied because this was my strong suit in High School, but I also chose it because I was inspired by my community. Growing up in the Northampton Public school system just down the road from UMass, I witnessed many levels of racism and classism beginning in elementary school: our classrooms were segregated, with myself and all my other white friends from educated families in one class, and our peers that were black, hispanic, poor, misbehaved, and any combination of these in the other class usually with the older, harsher teacher. In high school, the Spanish speaking students who had recently immigrated from Latin America were taught in one classroom removed from the rest of the student body, and I didn’t know these students’ names for quite some time. I had the honor of befriending these students when we started an after school club for Spanish learners and English learners to converse and practice together. This brought so much joy to both parties and I realized that as long as I was to be a part of a community where there were people learning “my” language, it was my duty to learn theirs.
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