The Chilean Chronicles Blog (The US Return Extended Version)

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Tag Archives: University of Georgia

So I’m Loving my new job: Graduate Researcher for Experience UGA Program

Posted on February 27, 2015 by Dr. Lisa R. Brown
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My Squad of UGA Education Majors who hosted the CCSD kindergartners on campus

 

Last Tuesday was my first week of field trips with children from the Clarke County School District (CCSD) in Athens, Georgia. The lovely ladies in the above picture are UGA undergraduates from the elementary education program who I supervised today as they worked with CCSD visiting kindergarteners. Although they worked with elementary children, our program coordinates every grade level of the CCSD for on-campus field trips in a variety of academic areas on campus. I am excited about the Civic Rights Social Justice field trip we are planning for next month with CCSD 11th graders and UGA Black Law Student Associations (BALSA) members.

These up-and-coming future teachers were great at receiving advice and instruction from me as well as interacting with the kindergartners and getting them excited about their walk around campus and the planned learning activities. We had seven area kindergarten classes join us today on campus where they engaged the environment, drew geometric shapes of the things they observed and basically interacted with UGA folks. It was so much fun talking to the little children and hearing how they think at such young and impressionable ages. šŸ™‚

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Prior to the elementary aged students we were visited by CCSD 9th graders, who joined us on campus to learn about the biological sciences. It was surreal being back in a laboratory with students again as I’ve been here at UGA completing my PhD. I arrived in 2010 and 2009 was my last time teaching a science course with high school students in the laboratory. The irony for me is that I had always maintained that the Columbus (Ohio) Public School District would do well to plug into the local major university, which is Ohio State University (OSU). My particular laboratory when I arrived to my school was poorly stocked and maintained. I spent the better part of the first few weeks cleaning, stocking, and securing the lab so that it would be safe for the students to use. Nevertheless, I always thought it would be wonderful to expose these secondary level student to a university laboratory. My new graduate assistantship within the Office of Service Learning allows me to do exactly that from the university side of things. The Experience UGA program is a wonderful opportunity and cooperative to facilitate community engagement stemming toward the university to the community in a very educationally enriching way.

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The students from the Clarke County School District from pre-K through grade 12 all take part in the Experience UGA program. They come to campus and are greeted by UGA faculty who share their experiences and encourage the students to think about collegiate study. Current UGA students (see above) also tell their stories to the pre-collegians and provide their own personal testimonies about what it’s like to be a college student working in a STEM area.

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In this lab we worked with small snails to introduce their food sources and the scent of their predator and observe their chemosensory reactions and how they responded to environmental conditions.

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The students loved it and one of them wrote us a very personal letter explaining how the trip had changed their entire perspective on attending college to study in the science area. To have that type of immediate transformative response from students was so encouraging. I am going to do my best to identify some grants and external funding sources to help support this very valuable UGA program.

Despite what we expected, the predatory snail that our little pygmy snails were supposed to flee didn’t attack them, nor did they try to swim away from the larger snail. We assumed that the predator snail’s scent was not strong enough to elicit a response because when we added concentrated droplets of the scent of the predator to the water the pygmy snails scurried away from it. I told the professor I did not want to be a part of any ā€œsnail murdersā€ in the presence of the minor children. She got a kick out of that little joke. šŸ™‚

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The happy educators.

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Dr. Janna Dresden (red turtleneck shirt) organized and selected the UGA students who would serve as site teachers for the K-graders last Friday. She is super awesome and has a love for teaching children and training future teachers that was contagious. She is also on the advisory board of the Experience UGA program so it has been an absolute pleasure to work with her, both on the research and activities programming.

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My Squad

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In addition to this new job, of course, I am finishing my dissertation. I know I have mentioned my desire to be a university professor in the area of Adult Education Learning and Organization Development. My dream is to teach part time in the United States at an American University and also spend the other part of the year teaching in Chile. In preparation for this goal, I am auditing the SPAN 3010 course in Spanish conversation and composition (continuing adult education) in order to continue improving both my speaking and writing/reading skills in Spanish. My professor Aitor Ezquerra Pineda is a native of Spain and a super awesome teacher. He is very funny and we enjoy raising more ā€œadultā€ topics in class like social justice and current events as we are around the same age. I kind of feel like a teaching assistant in the course sometimes versus being one of the students. I’m sure that my classmates feel the same every time they ask me, ā€œAre you taking the test?ā€ and I respond, ā€œOh I don’t need to do that, I’m auditing this class and not trying to get a particular grade.ā€ I see both the sadness and jealously in some of their faces as I giggle to myself. Ha ha. #DoctoralCandidateBenefits.

Well, I don’t know when I can blog again as finishing up my dissertation, traveling to conferences, and working a job that is twice the hours that I had in the past (and I’m most grateful about that) consumes so much of my time. Thank God Spring Break is next week, but that means nothing to a doctoral student as those times are just another opportunity to do more writing.

Chau chau amigo. Ā”Que te vaya bien! Also, hope you all enjoyed Black History Month as well, I certainly did. šŸ™‚ Oh Lordt!! I’m so sleepy and hungry right now. lol

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Turning the Page to my Next Chapter

Posted on January 24, 2015 by Dr. Lisa R. Brown

New friends

Oh Man!! So much has happened upon my return to the United States. The adjustment has been seriously cray cray at times, but I am starting to gain my bearings. I arrived the day after class had begun and was dealing with a bunch of emotions particularly related to leaving my new friends and family in Chile. However, thank God for Skype and Facebook as we have been keeping in touch daily through those mediums or simply via email.

I initially was not awarded another graduate assistantship from my department at the beginning of the fall semester last year. I was initially a little anxious about that, but as per usual, the Lord came through for me and I had little to no financial difficulties maintaining myself in Chile. I want to give a serious shout-out to my committee Chair (Dr. Sandmann), academic adviser and mentor. She recommended me for a position in the Office of Service-Learning on our campus. They had an untimely departure of another woman who took a faculty position at Spelman College in Atlanta (which was her alma mater). So win-win-win for everyone!! I interviewed with the director and my background and credentials fit perfectly with both our needs. I will be working with a community engagement program that is a cooperative venture on behalf of Clarke County School District (CCSD) and UGA. It is a pre-collegiate program to turn the students attention toward matriculation at a university (and of course we hope it to be UGA). The director also informed me that they would make space for me to incorporate my civic engagement scholarship as well. How very exciting!:)

So, as a result of getting this graduate assistantship opportunity I needed to pick up more credit ours (which the university pays for). I was also able to audit a Spanish conversation and composition course, which would have been next in the series of classes I would have taken had I continued in the Romans Language Department. My dream is to return to Chile to teach at a university part of the year and then do part of my academic professorship in the United States. Therefore, it was important that I don’t lose track of my Castellano Spanish more general and Spanish more specifically as I was no long in an immersion environment.

My first thought as always was to contact my old Profesor Clarke who he and his family have been so supportive of me and my efforts in Chile. I also contacted Professor Correa-DĆ­az who is a constant support to me as well here at UGA. I meet with Holley Smith who helped me select a class after explaining to her my situation and goals. She informed me about a weekly Spanish language table of folks who meet at The Globe restaurant in downtown Athens. Now get this… the woman who is the lead organizer of the table is Chilean!! Now you know only God orchestrates like that. :)

So I attended the first session this past Thursday and had the best time. I will continue with this in addition to my class to help prepare me for my career plans. Above is a picture of us from last Thursdays. The man’s name is IIKay and he is a true polyglot. Born in Germany to Turkish parents, he can speak French, German, and is now learning Spanish. I told him that Portuguese and French are my next language goals. The beautiful leader of our group is Ximena Gonzalez-Parada and she is a super-awesome person. I felt so at home and connected with her and we are now Facebook friends as well. I asked her for this picture to lead of the new season and transition of ā€œThe Chilean Chronicles DeuxiĆØme Partieā€. I used Google translator to spell Part two in French. I hope it is correct. lol

So please keep following the blog and comment as you feel moved to do so.

”Hasta pronto!

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I like how Santiago, Chile wakes up. Beep Beep!!

Posted on January 5, 2015 by Dr. Lisa R. Brown

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This past week has been so relaxing for me. I arrived here from Talca on Tuesday, December 30th and was able to spend the New Year in Santiago. I was disappointed that many of my friends had to change plans and could not come visit with me here, but I knew they couldn’t from the outset. One thing I have come to love about Chilenos, is that they don’t want to disappoint the people they care about. So if you ask them to do something for you, they will like say, ā€œĀ”Sipo!ā€ and then struggle to figure out how to tell you that they have overcommitted themselves and cannot connect with you as hoped. It’s the funniest, because I tend to understand things happen, but they always seem to feel so awful. I so love my Chilean cariƱos.

NewYear

So Saturday morning I woke up so refreshed and loved hearing the car horns beeping and people scurrying about the streets below from the vantage point of my patio window. I literally spent the first few days simply catching up on my sleep in my big soft and warm queen-sized bed. This last leg of my dissertation research was so intense. I needed to secure a total of 200 surveys from public and private university graduate level adult learners. I arrived to Chile with about only 40 surveys completed from the public universities and only 7 from the private. I arrived on October 2nd, and would need almost three-quarters move before my December departure from Talca. I literally received the last needed surveys on December 29th and by the 30th (my final research day in Talca) two more rolled in for good measure making my total completion rate 204.

I didn’t realize how tense I had been during the last leg of my dissertation research and visiting scholar experience here in Chile. I certainly think that the events surround the killing of Michael Brown and subsequent uprising in the US surrounding police brutality also contributed to a very stressful period during my time here. Nevertheless, my Chilean friends at the Universidad Católica del Maule came through for me, as always, to uplift me using encouraging words, ā€œChile es mĆ”s tranquilo Lisaā€ and expressions (e.g., big hugs, empathetic smiles, and joyful laugher). That helped me get through a very difficult and reflective period as a black woman living abroad in another country watching my people suffer assault in such brutal ways. But there is a silver lining as a result of those tensions. I submitted a proposal for a special call for Chapters to a New York book publisher. The Editor was looking for scholars to respond to events in Ferguson, MO, and racism more generally in the United States and recommend how higher education could respond. My proposal was accepted, J so I have been spending my last few days in Chile writing and reflecting… it has been a very cleansing and liberating feeling to lend my voice and advocacy on behalf of what has become an unbearable phenomenon for black people in the US (i.e., police brutality and judicial injustice).

Santiago

Man!! Those two years seem to have gone by overnight!

So, when my friends couldn’t make my party I decided to go knock on the doors of my neighbors. I’m an Aquarius and making friend actually come pretty easy for me. My daughter always laughs at me because she says I seem to make very close friendship connections wherever I go. It’s true!! J Ha ha So my neighbor Pablo—who is a law school student at the University of Chile—took me up on my offer. We enjoyed great food, Chilean wine, and talked racism and politics. It was a great and wonderful visit and we have promised to keep in touch via Skype as he wants to improve his English and I my Castellano Spanish.Ā Ā  #WinWin.

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So the day has finally arrived. January 5, 2015, and I am here in my hotel restaurant area waiting for my shuttle to arrive (in 6 hours ha ha). This day opened with mixed emotions as I am so happy to be seeing my family and friends again in the US; but I am also sad to be leaving the new ā€œfamifriendsā€ I’ve developed here in Chile. In reality, I actually feel that I am only going on a business trip to the US as Chile truly has become mi otro paĆ­s (my other country). The concierge said he considers me Chilena—In part because I always stay in the same apartamento when I come to live in Santiago—since I have a resident identification card.

They take really good care of me here and the owners also have long-term housing options that I plan to explore after graduation. My dream is to become a professor and teach part of the year in Chile and the other part in the United States. I also plan to continue working on my speaking abilities upon my US return. However, Chilean Spanish (Catellano) is a bit different and they seem to speak so fast here. It’s funny, I have kinda adjusted to the pace and now when I hear other Spanish speakers (Spaniards, Dominican, and Mexicans) the language seems so much slower and clearer for me to understand.

Well, that’s it for now in terms of the Chilean Chronicles Blog. I hope you have enjoyed this journey with me and stay tuned for my next iteration as a blogger and future scholar. Yeah, seems this writing thing is here to stay (including the errors and edits) and I am grateful to WordPress and this opportunity to improve my writing and vent my thoughts and feelings. Ā”Que se vayan bien a todos! ā¤ ~Lisa

Ā UGA Logo

GO DAWGS!! šŸ™‚

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