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Educating Global Citizens v . Training Global Nomads

Educating Global Citizens v . Training Global Nomads. Critical Breakthroughs in Student Learning at the Uganda Studies Program and the Australia Studies Centre. Mark Bartels , Uganda Studies Program Kimberly Spragg , Australia Studies Centre. The Problem. The Problem.

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Educating Global Citizens v . Training Global Nomads

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  1. Educating Global Citizens v. Training Global Nomads Critical Breakthroughs in Student Learning at the Uganda Studies Program and the Australia Studies Centre • Mark Bartels, Uganda Studies Program • Kimberly Spragg, Australia Studies Centre

  2. The Problem

  3. The Problem Steven Bouma-Prediger and Brian J. Walsh. “Education for Homelessness or Homemaking? The Christian College in a Postmodern Culture.” Christian Scholars Review 32, no. 3 (Spring 2003): 283. “Rather than learning how to become native to one’s place – to know the people and plants and animals and customs of a particular locale and thus to live sustainably in that place – we are socialized into a materialistic way of life that blinds us to both the cultural and the ecological realities of our community and our landscape. We assume we will (and should) move upward – and become more mobile, moving from place to place.” --Wes Jackson

  4. The Problem Steven Bouma-Prediger and Brian J. Walsh, 281. “education today often dislocates people from their native place to such a degree that it has created ‘a powerful class of itinerant professional[s]’” --Wendell Berry

  5. The Problem Steven Bouma-Prediger and Brian J. Walsh, 281. “the conventional wisdom holds that all education is good, and the more of it one has, the better . . . The truth is that without significant precautions, education can equip people merely to be more effective vandals of the earth.” --David Orr

  6. The Problem Steven Bouma-Prediger and Brian J. Walsh, 282. “Our question is: What happens if we allow ‘homecoming’ to be the guiding metaphor for our educational praxis?”

  7. The Traditional Nomad Robyn Davidson. “No Fixed Address: Nomads and the Fate of the Planet.” Quarterly Essay 24 (2006): 49.

  8. The Modern Nomad Robyn Davidson, 50.

  9. The Modern Nomad Robyn Davidson, 51. “And the more mobile we become, the less sense we have of being sensually enmeshed with our world and interdependent with, responsible for, others.”

  10. Connecting Telos & Praxis

  11. Connecting Telos & Praxis Steven Garber. The Fabric of Faithfulness: Weaving Together Belief and Behavior. (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2007), 57 “True education is always about learning to connect knowing with doing, belief with behavior; and yet that connection is incredibly difficult to make for students in the modern university.”

  12. Connecting Telos & Praxis Steven Garber, 57 “True education is always about learning to connect knowing with doing, belief with behavior; and yet that connection is incredibly difficult to make for students in the modern university.” “This issue and how we resolve it matters. For those whose vocations give them responsibility for students, it is not enough to know that they are able to answer all the questions posed during their university years—either those that come formally within the classroom or those that come late at night in a café.”

  13. Our Version of a Christian Global Citizen the Pilgrim and the Monk

  14. Students as Pilgrims

  15. Students as Pilgrims William T. Cavanaugh. “Migrant, Tourist, Pilgrim, Monk: Mobility and Identity in a Global Age.” Theological Studies 69 (2008): 351. “To embrace the identity of pilgrim now is first of all to embrace a certain type of mobility in the context of globalization. . . To accept our status as pilgrims on our way back to God is, as Augustine saw, to accept the provisional nature of human government. Our status as pilgrims makes clear that our primary identity is not that defined for us by national borders. The pilgrim seeks to transgress all artificial borders that impede the quest for communion with God and with other people.”

  16. Students as Pilgrims William T. Cavanaugh, 349. “Humility, therefore, was the essential virtue of the pilgrim. Pilgrimage was a kenotic movement, a stripping away of the external sources of stability in one’s life. The pilgrim’s way was the way of the cross: ‘If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their crosses and follow me.’ (Mk 8:34). The journey required a disorientation from the trappings of one’s quotidian identity, in order to respond to a call from the source of one’s deeper identity.”

  17. Students as Pilgrims USP Student-Fall 2009 “I think the biggest lesson I will have learned from this all will be something about arrogance, something about how subtle it can be, something about how much I wish it wasn’t so engrained into my identity. I’ve also learned a bit more about my privilege, the weight of choice, and the need to set limits for myself (because no one is about to tell me that I can not do anything that I want to do). I don’t think I ever would have understood these concepts had I not studied abroad—at least not the on the scale of cultural arrogance.”

  18. Students as Pilgrims William T. Cavanaugh, 353. “No account of pilgrimage could be complete without an analysis of those on whom the pilgrim depends. Those who journey as pilgrims are not self-sufficient, but must rely on those who abide along the way, those who remain in place in order to offer hospitality to those who journey.”

  19. Students as Monks

  20. Students as Monks Christine D. Pohl. Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a Christian Tradition. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1999), 62. “Because the practice of hospitality is so significant in establishing and reinforcing social relationships and moral bonds, we notice it’s more subversive character only when socially undervalued persons are welcomed. In contrast to a tame hospitality that welcomes persons already well situated in a community, hospitality that welcomes ‘the least’ and recognizes their equal value can be an act of resistance and defiance, a challenge to the values and expectations of the larger community.”

  21. Students as Monks Steven Bouma-Prediger and Brian J. Walsh, 288. “A resident is a temporary occupant, putting down few roots and investing little, knowing little, and perhaps caring little for the immediate locale beyond it’s ability to gratify . . . The inhabitant, by contrast, ‘dwells’ . . . Good inhabitance is an art requiring detailed knowledge of a place, the capacity for observation, and a sense of care and rootedness.” -- David Orr

  22. Students as Monks William T. Cavanaugh, 355. “Amidst the hypermobility of a globalized world, there is much to recommend stability . . . And yet . . . There is nothing inherently superior about stability over mobility, the local over the global. The telos of stability and mobility makes all the difference.”

  23. Educating the Global Citizen The Praxis of Home-making

  24. ASC Praxis Coaxing the Colonial Student to Jump Off the Veranda.

  25. ASC Praxis Anthony Ogden. “The View from the Veranda: Understanding Today's Colonial Student.” Frontiers: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad 17 (Fall/Winter 2007-2008): 37-38. “Like children of empire, colonial students have a sense of entitlement, as if the world is theirs for discovery, if not for the taking. New cultures are experienced in just the same way as new commodities are coveted, purchased and owned.”

  26. ASC Praxis Anthony Ogden, 38-39.

  27. ASC Praxis • Student ‘tourist’ issues: • Enter into the study abroad experience on their own terms. • Expect the host ‘native’ to welcome them in the way they require.

  28. ASC Praxis Barbara C. Schmidt-Rinehart and Susan M. Knight. “The Homestay Component of Study Abroad: Three Perspectives.” Foreign Language Annals 37, no. 2 (Summer 2004): 259. “Thus, dichotomies surfaced because students wanted to be treated as part of the family only when they wanted to receive certain attention, but at other times, when the mothers began to treat them as their own children in a protective sense, they resisted this familial relationship.”

  29. ASC Praxis • Student ‘tourist’ issues: • Enter into the study abroad experience on their own terms. • Expect the host ‘native’ to welcome them in the way they require. • Struggle with the global issues emphasis of the core classes.

  30. ASC Praxis ASC Student-Fall 2009 “Frankly, all this political stuff that we had to learn for this class I really don’t care about. To me, politics are something corrupt, just as human beings are, and I don’t involve myself into understanding them too deeply at the risk of actually figuring out what the stupid people who run the countries of this world really think about.” “Art and Environment are kind of my forte, so for me they teach me the most about what I want to know about the culture and explain so much more to me than any of the other things really could. Probably because the language used in art and environment is something that I am used to, while the political stuff is all gibberish and unintelligible to me.”

  31. ASC Praxis ASC Student-Fall 2009 “I decided . . . to ask a few more general questions and . . . I learned that . . . the man, was from Vietnam . . . Usually I would be like, that’s cool or whatever, tell me more about your family …. But NO! I suddenly asked him ‘Do you experience a lot of prejudice being Vietnamese and living in America after the Vietnamese war?’ Since when do I ask questions like that of strangers? . . . I felt really smart at that moment. Because I asked him this I got to learn that he was 12 at the time of that war, his brother was in the FBI and had to fight on the American’s side . . .”

  32. ASC Praxis • Coaxing students off the veranda: • Accessible to the ‘wimpy’ student. • Discomfort essential to student learning.

  33. ASC Praxis ASC Student-Spring 2008 “One of the things I learned in Australia was that if I allowed my American citizenship and loyalty to be greater than my heavenly citizenship, my vision of the world would always be skewed, and never accurate. It was a very uncomfortable discovery.”

  34. ASC Praxis • Coaxing students off the veranda: • Accessible to the ‘wimpy’ student. • Discomfort essential to student learning. • Study of Indigenous cultures aimed at homemaking.

  35. ASC Praxis Richard Twiss. One Church, Many Tribes : Following Jesus the Way God Made You. (Revised. Ventura, CA: Regal Books, 2000) “I would love to see some of our Anglo church leaders, when asked to help a Native church, say, ‘Yes, but on one condition: only if you will in turn send your pastors and leaders to come and equip us with the grace and gifting God has given you as Native people.’ When that day comes, it will verify that we are seen by our Anglo brethren as equal colaborers in the mission of the church.”

  36. ASC Praxis • Coaxing students off the veranda: • Accessible to the ‘wimpy’ student. • Discomfort essential to student learning. • Study of Indigenous cultures aimed at homemaking. • Emphasis on practical hospitality and action.

  37. USP Praxis Coaxing Crusading Students Down Off Their (High) Horses.

  38. USP Praxis Coaxing Crusading Students Down Off Their (High) Horses. Engage in intellectual and relational aspects of the semester within the context of the Christian virtues of faith, hope and love.

  39. USP Praxis • Coaxing Crusading Students Down Off Their (High) Horses. • Engage in intellectual and relational aspects of the semester within the context of the Christian virtues of faith, hope and love. • We are as worried about being a hope-friendly and love-friendly program as we are about being a faith-friendly program.

  40. USP Praxis USP student ‘tourist’ issues:

  41. USP Praxis • USP student ‘tourist’ issues: • how the posture of Helper can objectify others as much as the posture of Tourist.

  42. USP Praxis Henri Nouwen, Donald MacNeill and Douglass Morrison. Compassion: A Reflection on the Christian Life. Revised. (New York: Doubleday, 2005), 23. “But it is not said of Jesus that he reached down from on high to pull us up from slavery, but that he became a slave with us. God’s compassion is a compassion that reveals itself in servanthood. Jesus became subject to the same powers and influences that dominate us, and suffered our fears, uncertainties, and anxieties with us. Jesus emptied himself.”

  43. USP Praxis Henri Nouwen, et al, 28. “To try to lift others up to our own privileged position is honorable and perhaps even an expression of generosity, but to attempt to put ourselves in a position of disrepute and to become dependent and vulnerable seems to be a form of masochism that defies the best of our aspirations.”

  44. USP Praxis USP Student-Fall 2009 “The world is more complicated than I thought. The program was not what I was expecting – I thought I would learn about how I could help Ugandans, how to change the problems here, but instead I learned a lot about myself.”

  45. USP Praxis • USP student ‘tourist’ issues: • how the posture of Helper can objectify others as much as the posture of Tourist.

  46. USP Praxis • USP student ‘tourist’ issues: • how the posture of Helper can objectify others as much as the posture of Tourist. • easily substituting knowledge & activism for Christian compassion.

  47. USP Praxis Henri Nouwen, et al, 51. “There appears to be a general assumption that it is good for people to be exposed to the pain and suffering of the world.”

  48. USP Praxis Henri Nouwen, et al, 51. “There appears to be a general assumption that it is good for people to be exposed to the pain and suffering of the world.” “Can we reasonably expect compassion from the many isolated individuals who are constantly being reminded in the privacy of their homes or cars of the vast extent of human suffering?”

  49. USP Praxis Henri Nouwen, et al, 51. “There appears to be a general assumption that it is good for people to be exposed to the pain and suffering of the world.” “Can we reasonably expect compassion from the many isolated individuals who are constantly being reminded in the privacy of their homes or cars of the vast extent of human suffering?” “We might ask, however, whether mass communication directed to millions of people who experience themselves as small, insignificant, powerless individuals does not in fact do more harm than good.”

  50. USP Praxis John V. Taylor. The Primal Vision: Christian Presence Amid African Religion. (SCM Press: London, 1963), 135. “I have tried, in writing this book, to make an attempt to explore an approach to men of another faith and culture which is reverent and attentive, and which consists essentially not of assertion, not even of action, but of presence.”

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