A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    1/13

    A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts

    unique students to a unique programMasarah Van Eyck, Division of International Studies

    Finally, I learned to say: Okay, lets just adopt the old phrase inshallah. Whats going to happenis going to happen. And if it does? Well, then cest pas grave.

    Maren Larsen, UGB exchange student, 2007-08

    When Maren Larsen landed in Dakar,

    she had a great many expectations. I had

    always wanted to live in Africa. It was a whole

    dream of mine! she says one night last

    January over bottles of Flag beer and Perrier in

    Saint-Louis, Senegal.

    She and nine other American students

    have met up with Jim Delehanty, UWMadison faculty advisor of their exchange program, in the

    bar of the Htel la Rsidence in the former capital of the historic French colony. This year, all

    participants on the program are females, which isnt unusual, and all are enrolled at UW

    Madison (most hail from hometowns around the state). Their majors range from agriculture to

    business to literature and peace studies.

    While undoubtedly westerneven Midwesternin appearance, the women exhibit

    evidence of having lived in a remarkably different country since September. Some wear a mix of

    Old Navy capris and Senegalese headscarves wrapped four inches above their heads. Another

    arrives in a personally tailored turquoise Senegalese dress and shoulder-skimming earrings.

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    2/13

    Most wear locally made wooden-soled, leather

    sandals, their white toes and painted toenails

    crusted with the brown sand that covers

    everything.

    And then I got here, Larsen continues,

    and for a long time it was just really hardthe

    cold showers, the holes instead of toilets. It

    wasnt necessarily bad, she hastens to add, it was just a lot to take in. The students n

    recognition.

    od in

    Still, when I was down, I kept thinking: this is my dream! Why arent I loving this?

    Delehanty annually travels the

    approximately15 hours it takes to provide mid-

    year support to the 10 American students enrolled

    at the Universit Gaston Berger (UGB). Offered

    through UWMadisons office of International

    Academic Programs (IAP), the year-long exchange

    has accepted almost 150 participants from a handful of American universities since 1991. This is

    Delehantys twelfth-or-so midterm visit, which means he has served as one of the programs

    faculty advisors pretty much from the start.

    Delehanty, who is also the associate director of UWMadisons African Studies Program,

    is here to advise the students on their the fieldwork research projects that each will transform

    into a 35 to 50 page paper within the next few months.

    2

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    3/13

    It is also a chance to check in with the students, to see how each is faring in one of the

    nations most innovative, unique, and challenging opportunities for undergraduate academic

    study abroad.

    Hitting the wall

    Some call it hitting the wall. Others, the midterm slump.

    Its almost like clockwork, Delehanty had told me during our four-hour car ride from

    Dakar to Saint-Louis. Its sort of a fixture in the study-abroad experience.

    And this is no less true in Saint-Louis. By now, some are over the novelty of being called

    toubab(white person) in the busy markets. Most are craving hot showers and flush toilets.

    Others have just said goodbye to boyfriends or siblings who visited for the holidays; now they

    are facing another semester before seeing them again.

    Many of the students will confide to us over that week that if they felt they could leave

    right then, they probably would.

    All of them say they wouldnt trade this experience for the world.

    Learning to judge from w ithin

    These students are not tourists, Baydallaye Kane, professor of English and the on-site

    program coordinator at UGB, tells me.

    His office, on the second floor of the universitys main building, is bright with light from

    one whole window of walls. A framed black-and-white photo of Gaston Berger, Saint-Louis

    native and Afro-French philosopher, hangs on the wall by the door.

    Although we now have a number of exchange programs, the UW program was the first,

    and is very unique he says.

    3

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    4/13

    Kane, one of the early architects of the UGB programtogether with UWMadison

    African Languages and Literature professor Edris Makward and then-associate director of IAP

    Joan Raduchawas determined to design opportunities for the greatest cultural immersion

    possible.

    These students really experience our

    culture. Thats what I like so much about this

    program. Its a cultural exchange at least as

    much as it is academic.

    Accordingly, the program consists of three

    pillars: residential immersion in UGB courses and

    African student life, intense instruction in the

    Wolof language, and an innovative research project tailored to each students interest.

    And so after a month-long stay with a Senegalese host family in Dakar for early

    orientation and language instruction, each student lives in UGB housing with a Senegalese

    roommate. Like everyone else, they wash their clothes in plastic pails and take cold showers for

    the year. And they eat chebu gen(fish and rice) and other local fare at the outdoor blue-

    terraced buvetteas goats amble along the acacia-lined paths between buildings.

    Arguably, students might find downtown Saint-Louis, about a ten-minute taxi ride from

    the university, a more stimulating environment. There, market-lined streets and nightclubs offer

    color and more touristy opportunities. But that would distance them from ordinary student life

    at UGB.

    In this setting, their intensive Wolof instruction comes in handy. While all of the

    Americans on this program arrive with some facility in French, an official language of the

    4

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    5/13

    country, they receive year-long language instruction in Wolof, the most widely spoken language

    in Senegal.

    As Jo Ellen Fair, UWMadison journalism professor and faculty co-director of the UGB

    program, explains: After a while you dont want the Senegalese students to switch into French

    every time you walk up to them. If theres a Wolof conversation going on, you want to join it in

    Wolof.

    The last of the programs three-prong immersion mission is perhaps the most

    innovative: the fieldwork projects which require these students to research some aspect of

    Senegalese life, culture, or environment. To do so, students must navigate communities beyond

    the university, where French and Wolof are just two of many languages spoken.

    Getting students out into the community is especially important in a country like

    Senegal, Delehanty explains. All universities are an abstract of society at large, but in Africa

    the university is especially distant from the day-to-day lives of most citizens. (Never mind the

    rarity of higher education: approximately 50 percent of Senegalese men and 30 percent of

    women cannot read or write.)

    Students have tackled such subjects as the struggling fishing industry, conflict resolution

    in the Casamance region, and the role of Chinese merchants in

    Senegalese economy (see sidebar).

    This was particularly challenging to establish, explains

    former IAP director and fellow program founder Joan Raducha.

    The concept of undergraduate students doing fieldwork is not

    really part of the French system. But it was Kane, who himself

    was trained in a traditional French system, who really pushed

    5

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    6/13

    for the inside perspective that fieldwork projects would provide.

    Baydallaye is one of the most creative administrators Ive ever encountered, Raducha

    says by way of explanation. (Indeed, as the newly elected dean of UGBs College of Letters and

    Human Sciences, he is now implementing a major, and equally creative, restructuring of the

    universitys entire curricular structure.)

    Exchange opportunities for American students are very important in terms of cultural

    tolerance, Kane says of the value of cultural immersion. Unlike their grandparentswho didnt

    necessarily have the opportunity to experience other culturesthese students can see another

    culture from the inside.

    Thats important because then they can judge a culture from that place, he continues.

    Its not okay to say I dont like this about a culture when you dont understand it. But if you

    understand the culture and then dont like something about it, thats different.

    But that is not to say its easy.

    Scaling the wall

    What exactly is so uncomfortable about the year in Senegal? Certainly Saint-Louis is a

    modern city by West African standards. And the Universit Gaston-Berger, founded in 1990, is

    regarded as the most advanced institution of higher learning in the country.

    When we visit in the middle of winter, the weather is 80 degrees and sunny every day

    it being the cool and dry season of the year. And the Senegalese we meet do justice to their

    reputation as open and warm people. (In fact, each student recounts with equal parts pride and

    humility the week spent celebrating the Muslim holiday Tabaski with the families of their

    Senegalese friends.)

    6

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    7/13

    Were definitely not sending them into

    the bush, says Delehanty, who knows

    something about that. He spent several years in

    Niger, another former French colony, while

    serving in the Peace Corps and, later,

    researching settlement of marginal lands for his

    doctorate in geography.

    Still, most of the students have never navigated in a Muslim culture, where a religion

    unfamiliar to most of them permeates social mores and requires different comportment: a more

    modest dress for women, for example. And seemingly small things can loom large over time,

    for example, only extending ones right hand in social situations, not the left.

    Combine that with a more relaxed sense of time, an intensely social culture, and

    diverging sanitary routines, and theres a point they have to abandon many of their own

    ingrained patterns and expectations. Each student has to find his or her own way of handling

    such disorientation.

    Some solutions are practical. One student learned to manage the power outages that

    interrupt routine errands by taking a book wherever she goes to just wait it out.

    All of them recognize that just the act of seeing oneself through such challenges, which

    sometimes require just sitting through discomfort, has helped them to foster a different attitude

    entirelyone that they will draw on long beyond the program year.

    I think the wall that I hit was built by my expectations, says Larsen. I had to learn not

    to get worked up over things. Now no matter what happens, I feel like things will work out.

    7

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    8/13

    I learned to have faith, says Catherine Skroch, who has just returned from conducting

    peace studies and conflict resolution in the Casamance. Finally, I just said: Im going to close

    my eyes and hold my breath and jump into it, and hope it all turns out alright.

    Political Science major Brenda Lazarus assesses her experience with pride: Im more

    independent now, she says. Im more confident that whatever situation Im in I can deal with

    it.

    A different kind of student

    Its a different kind of student who

    chooses to go to Senegal, program coordinator

    Andrea Muilenburg had told me before I left for

    my trip with Delehanty. They are more

    independent, she had said, because they have to

    conduct a fieldwork project without the oversight

    of an on-site advisor. They are also more disciplined and mature.

    Its not a regular academic environment, Muilenburg explained. They dont have the

    luxuries that students would have in other countries.

    Raducha says one of the biggest challenges has been designing productive academic

    years when whole courses can be canceled or postponed for weeks at a time.

    For the most part, its the students who show remarkable discipline and drive.

    Indeed, the alumni of the UGB program have proven to form an uncommonly successful

    lot. Along with a disproportionately high number of future Peace Corps volunteers, a striking

    number have gone on to practice medicine or enter NGOs.

    8

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    9/13

    Sarah Nehrling, who participated in the program during the 2003-04 academic year,

    recently returned to work for a Senegalese NGO in Theis, an important city between Dakar and

    Saint-Louis.

    When we visit her in a caf on our way back to Dakar, she updates Jim on the status of

    her fellow UGB alumni. Three are in the Peace Corps and another is earning her masters in

    public health from UWMadison. Nehrling herself is now working for her third NGO in West

    Africa since graduating back at UWMadison in 2005. She plans to stay at least a year and a

    half.

    With hindsight, Nehrling acknowledges that, while such a unique opportunity draws

    exceptional individuals, something in the experience itself solidifies their compassion and

    resolve.

    Theres a big difference between [the students on UWMadisons exchange program]

    and the other foreign students attending UGB with less preparation and immersion, Nehrling

    tells us. American students on other programs, for example, only stay for one semester and

    most often live in separate housing. Some of those students say, I didnt learn a thing about

    Senegal when I was there, I admit it.

    They dont experience the same level of stress and discomfort, she explains. There is

    a cracking point in study abroad when youre just frustrated with so many things. And you

    either learn how to deal with it, or you completely give up in the negative sense. You just tune

    out.

    So is it just a level of discomfort that makes UW students more successful here?

    Delehanty asks.

    No, not that, she corrects. Its the sense of self that results from having to adapt to such

    intense cultural immersion.

    9

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    10/13

    SIDEBAR A:

    A culture in a cultu re in a culture

    When we meet her at the campus blue-terraced, open-air buvette, Maren Larsen tells

    us she has chosen to research the place of Chinese merchants in the Senegalese economy.

    This, as it turns out, has led her to speak with everyone from a cultural attach of Senegals

    Economic Mission to street merchants in Dakars Chinatown. She has also enrolled in Chinese

    language courses, which UGB is offering for the first time this year.

    But because her Chinese is rudimentary at best and most of the Asian shop owners

    speak neither French nor Wolof, Larsen found herself approaching the Senegalese merchants

    who hawk goods outside the Chinese owners stores. They would be effective intermediaries,

    she thought.

    I learned to bargain with them, Larsen says. I said: Ill give you an English lesson if

    you let me interview you about your work.

    Unfortunately, the English lesson takes twice as long as the interview! she laughs.

    Still, she says shes gained an invaluable perspective on the informal economy between

    the Chinese and Senegalese merchants, the latter of whom often purchase their goods from the

    stores directly behind them.

    Im doing real research, she says, and not just from an American perspective. The

    Senegalese are asking the same questions Im asking [Why did these Chinese merchants

    suddenly appear and what are they doing here?], so I dont feel like Im just examining their

    culture as an outsider.

    I feel like a real UGB student.

    10

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    11/13

    SIDEBAR B:

    A different kind of program

    It didnt take long for us to ask what the people at UGB needed in exchange, Raducha

    says.

    Both institutions were committed to building a program that truly benefited each

    partnereven when this meant accommodating very different needs. This commitment has

    required the programs administrators to be almost as flexible as the students it sends abroad.

    Joan was genuinely invested in giving UGB a fair half of the exchange, Kane says.

    Even if that meant finding positively unique solutions.

    By the second year of the exchange, UWMadison was welcoming top applicants from

    UGB to spend a year studying in Wisconsin. In some years, one Senegalese student came to

    Wisconsin, and in others years there were two or three. Because of economic disparities,

    attending UWMadison is out of the reach of most Senegalese students, so fees from the

    American participants contributed to the costs of bringing Senegalese counterparts to

    Wisconsin. (Generally, one UGB student could come to Wisconsin for every four UWMadison

    students sent to Senegal.)

    Within just a few years, it was clear that this was an untenable arrangement: fewer than

    one out of ten students from Saint-Louis who visited Madison returned to Senegal. Instead,

    most parlayed their Madison experience into admission to a U.S. graduate school. Educational

    advancement of this kind certainly was good for the participating Senegalese students and

    admirable in every regard, but program organizers on both sides were concerned that extended

    or permanent stays in the U.S. would limit the exchanges direct benefits to UGB and Senegal.

    11

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    12/13

    They just sort of wove into the social fabric here, Raducha explains. Indeed, several

    have obtained Ph.D.s and assumed faculty posts in American universities. As of yet, none has

    returned to teach at UGB. A plan B was needed.

    We really listened to the universitys administrators as they were figuring out what they

    needed in exchange, Raducha remembers.

    Unlike UGB, which is still growing, UWMadison is completely settled, says Kane,

    making it a perfect place for a scholar in need of a library and fellow colleagues. We realized

    we didnt need to strengthen the experiences of our students as much as we needed to offer

    professional development opportunities to our top faculty. This, we figured, would lead them to

    return to UGBand in turn wed attract further top students from West Africa to our university.

    Now three Saint-Louis faculty and administrators spend three to five months every year

    conducting research at UWMadison.

    I feel very good about what we did with Senegal, Raducha says. A partnership means

    both sides benefit. And if that means changing our rules, well, you have to do whats useful to

    both sides.

    On UGBs campus, the fact that UWMadison students are paying for other peoples

    education and professional opportunities is not lost on program participants.

    At first we thought it was weird that there was this arrangement, says one Wisconsin

    student who joined us on our bumpy car ride back to Dakar. But it sort of makes sense. Like,

    why shouldnt my tuition help pay for their growth? Why wouldnt it?

    Says another student, Personally, Im glad that they can do this, now that Ive seen the

    resources here, I have to stop myself from saying our libraries are the size of city blocks! I

    realized how much we [UWMadison] have to offer.

    12

  • 8/14/2019 A Different Kind of Student: U.S.-Senegal exchange attracts unique students to a unique program

    13/13

    13

    In fact, the arrangement has nothing to do with charity, and the costs to Wisconsin

    participants are nil. UGB waives most tuition, room, and board costs for Wisconsin participants

    precisely so that the fees that the American students pay can be reserved for UGB faculty and

    staff research trips to UWMadison.

    Its a new era in international education. No longer need large research universities

    merely consume the educational and cultural experiences of other countries. Exchanges like

    UWMadisons Senegal program value the fact that each institution has something different to

    offer and gain from the arrangement. Both stand to grow because of it.