Summers at Enlace Project are the busiest time of the year!
During a 10-week period from May to July, twenty-nine students participated in three
different study abroad classes facilitated by Enlace Project. The students and
staff worked towards a greater understanding of Nicaragua in a local and
global context, and applied these lessons to their specific studies—while
having a great time, of course! Groups also spent time traveling, visiting
sites such as Los Altos de Ocotal, León, Granada, and Masaya.
With the arrival of the enthusiastic and animated Humanities
II students, from the State University of New York at Geneseo, the busy months
began. Led by long-time Enlace Project friend Wes Kennison and Dr. Kristina
Hannam (a Biology professor who is also creating a sustainability course in
Nicaragua for 2014), the students studied influential Western texts from the
seventeenth to the twentieth centuries. Participants connect the themes of
these texts—from slave trade and colonialism, to the evolution of Catholic and
Marxist ideology—to the historical and modern culture across Nicaragua. In the
group of 16 students, Senior Topher Pike was sponsored by a Geneseo Student
Ambassador grant which focused on increasing Enlace Project’s fundraising and
sustainability efforts. Keep on the lookout for updates on Topher's work! Another student, Christian
Perfas, created promotional materials for increased enrollment in the Humanities course.
View Christian’s video here (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V48qmW792GY) on
Enlace’s new YouTube Page!
The Service Learning group gathers behind the office for a reflection session. |
With the departure of the Service Learning crew, Enlace
Project welcomed its final group for the summer—a collection of four medical
students, a nurse practitioner, and an undergraduate respiratory therapy major
from SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse. The relatively new program is
in its second year, yet it is developing a positive reputation at the school—all
the participants had heard positive feedback from last year’s visitors! Similar
to the medical campaign of the Service Learning students, Upstate Medical
ventured to rural outposts. However, their work also included visiting local
clinics and attended house visits in town. With translators to assist the
group, the students received hands-on learning experience and learned about the
medical system of Nicaragua.
Upstate Medical students board the truck after a weekend in Ocotal For more information on trips, visit: http://www.enlaceproject.org/#!educators/c1pwr |
In addition to working hard, students and Enlace Project staff alike spent the weekends traveling to some of Nicaragua’s most interesting locations. A weekend in Ocotal demonstrated rural life in Nicaragua—complete with coffee farm tours, a basket-making workshop, and tortilla-making tutorials. Groups took trips to León, Granada, and Selva Negra in Matagalpa, and activities varied from the extreme sport of volcano boarding, to hiking through a cloud forest, and touring the Isletas of Granada.
While the groups have since left and returned to their homes in the U.S., we know that they have left a mark on El Sauce, and hope that El Sauce has left a mark on them as well.
--Written by: Sean Conner, Enlace Project Intern
Student quotes:
“Nicaragua is an experience I will never forget. I met
people I can now call my friends, saw places I never thought I would and made
memories that will last forever. I drove up mountains, slid down a volcano,
worked with people in rural areas who need help and overall feel changed as a
person from being exposed to such a beautiful culture. I went for the service
aspect of study abroad but came out with much more knowledge of the learning
aspect.”
-Richelle Patricia, Service Learning participant.
“After two months of amazing adventures, new friends, and
new members of my family I am leaving on a plane. This experience could not
have been more exciting, eye-opening, and wonderful. Tomorrow I will instead of
goodbye say see you later, because greatness deserves more than one moment.”
-Patrick McCormick, Humanities II and Service Learning participant.
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