The Power of Being There: Study Abroad in Cuba and the Cultivation of a “Culture of Peace”

Authors

  • Lynne Bond
  • Sinan Koont
  • Skye Stephenson

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36366/frontiers.v11i1.153

Keywords:

Study Abroad, Cuba, Culture of Peace

Abstract

While our primary motivation for carrying out this study has been to explore the power of US study abroad in Cuba for promoting a culture of peace, this work may have import beyond this specific setting for several reasons. First, participant evaluations designed to document transformative changes in the direction of cross-cultural deepening5 remain relatively rare in the study abroad field, despite clamor (e.g., Barber, 1983) from some international education circles to evaluate more systematically program outcomes (see Chieffo & Griffiths, 2004 for a review of the current status of this research). Even less common are studies that include groups from more than one sending institution and program, such as this study. This study is of further interest because it exclusively examines short term programs. In recent years, this program format has been rapidly increasing in prevalence (see Chin, 2003) but continues to provoke debate regarding program outcomes, particularly in relation to cross-cultural learning and adjustment. Many question how much an undergraduate really can learn about another country and about themselves in a cross-cultural setting in only a few weeks. With few exceptions (e.g., University of Delaware’s 2004 study cited by Chieffo & Griffiths, 2004), there is little sound research available to address the question of whether short-term programs are anything more than just glorified tourism, packaged as an academic course.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Lynne Bond

Lynne A. Bond, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology at The University of Vermont and Director of its Office of Community-University Partnerships and Service-Learning. Her teaching, research, and publications have focused on developmental and community psychology and particularly on strategies for promoting healthy human development in the context of families and communities. Her scholarship has emphasized community leadership in formal and informal venues, bringing her and her students to Latin America and the Caribbean.

Sinan Koont

Sinan Koont, PhD., is Associate Professor of Economics at Dickinson College, where he is also the Coordinator of the Latin American Studies Certificate Program. His current research interest is agrarian reform and macro economic policy in Central America and the Caribbean, particularly the Cuban economy. Until prevented from doing so by restrictive regulations, he had been leading Dickinson students on a study tour of Cuba as part of a semester course on the Cuban economy and society.

Skye Stephenson

Skye Stephenson, Ph.D., is Director of Latin American and Caribbean programs at the School for International Training. She spent a decade in Latin America overseeing study abroad programs in Chile and Latin America. Author of The Spanish-speaking South Americans: Bridging Hemispheres (Intercultural Press, 2003) and section editor for The NAFSA Guide to Study Abroad (3rd edition, 2005), her areas of scholarly interest include new visions and techniques for cross-cultural adjustment and the culture of peace

References

Barber, E.G. (1983). The Impact of Foreign Educational Experiences on Individuals. ISECSI Bulletin of International Exchanges, vol. 20, 7–10.

Chieffo, L., & Griffiths, L. (2004). Large-scale assessment of student attitudes after a short-term study abroad program. Frontiers: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, Vol. X, Fall, 165–178.

Chin, K. K. (2003). Open doors: Report on international educational exchange. New York: Institute of International Education.

Díaz González, B. (2003). Contribución a una cultura de la tolerancia y la paz. Paper presented at the XXIV annual meeting of the Latin American Studies Association, Dallas, TX.

Dwyer, M. M. (2004). More is better: The impact of study abroad program duration. Frontier: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, Fall, Vol. X, 151–177.

Lacayo Parajon, J. F. (1998). Cultura de Paz: Una Utopía Viable, Urgente y Necesaria. San Salvador, El Salvador: Talles Graficos UCA.

Lincoln Fellowship Advisory Council. (2004, Dec). The state and future of study abroad in the United States: A briefing book for the bipartisan commission on the Abraham Lincoln Study Abroad Fellowship Program. Lincoln Fellowships Commission. Available at http://www.nafsa.org/pdf/lincolnbriefing/pdf

Stephenson, S. (1999). Two cultures under one roof. Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, Fall, Vol. I, 1–30.

Stephenson, S. (2002). Beyond the Lapith and the Centaurs: Cross-cultural deepening through study abroad. In W. Grunzweig & N. Rinehart (Eds.), Rockin, in Red Square: Ctitical approaches to international education in the age of cyberculture. Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers.

Downloads

Published

2005-08-15

How to Cite

Bond, L., Koont, S., & Stephenson, S. (2005). The Power of Being There: Study Abroad in Cuba and the Cultivation of a “Culture of Peace”. Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 11(1), 99–120. https://doi.org/10.36366/frontiers.v11i1.153

Issue

Section

Research Articles