HECUA -- Student Resources -- Programs -- Community Internships in Latin America

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What: Community Internships is a fall or spring semester internship and seminar program in Ecuador.

Hands-On Experience:
In addition to substantive work at internship sites working on health, youth development, women’s issues, environment, human rights or other issues, you will also experience Ecuador’s diverse culture through field studies in indigenous communities and the rain forest.

When: mid-September to mid-December, late January to mid-May

Cost (Fall 2004/Spring 2005): $13,100 ($13,900 for non-member schools). (There is an $800 discount for students from member schools.)

Includes: tuition, lodging, food stipend, health insurance and field travel ground expenses.

Additional expenses: international airfare, books, passport, visa and personal expenses.

Click here for scholarship and financial aid information.

Prerequisites: Completion of first year of college, the equivalent of two years of college Spanish. Students need to be able to speak and understand Spanish independently for the internship. Open to all majors interested in social change in Latin America and eager for practical experience as well as immersion in the Spanish language.

NOTES: Internship placements vary based on student interest and language skills. Language instruction is not provided.

Housing and meals: In Quito, you will stay with a host family. Hotels or hostels are used during group field trips. Meals are provided by home stay families or through a food stipend during travel.

Interested? Click here to request more information.


If questions arise about how HECUA transfers credit and how member institutions can integrate our curricuum into specific majors/minors, please contact a member of our Student Service Team:

Mary Delorie
(651-287-3311; [email protected])

David Holliday
(651-287-3311; [email protected])

Alysha Boie
(651-287-3312; [email protected])

 





NEW OFFERING
SPRING 2006 BANGLADESH SEMESTER PROGAM FOR CREDIT
Click Here for for more information


EXTRAORDINARY SOCIAL LABORATORY FOR LEARNING


The Community Internships in Latin America program offers a semester of study and experience with a focus on community participation and social change. A home stay is combined with a hands-on internship and independent study opportunity designed to meet your own learning goals. A field seminar involving local experts and activists provides an intensive immersion into Latin American daily life and culture. Models of community participation, organization, development and social change are compared and contrasted. Students learn first-hand about challenges in Ecuadorian communities and explore ways they are being addressed.

Ecuador offers an idyllic climate, mountain vistas and mild weather as well as a complex scenario of social, cultural, economic and political phenomena. Current issues of globalization, ecological issues, oil politics and Plan Colombia are addressed as you learn from individuals who help make change. Non-Governmental Organizations advancing community development and social change are dynamic and diverse in the country, providing an extraordinary site for internships.

The fall program offers a seminar focused on social movements; the spring offering concentrates on globalization and human migration. All lectures and discussions are in Spanish. (Note: Ecuadorians speak slowly and clearly – an ideal environment for students to gain confidence and fluidity.) Readings are mostly in Spanish. Papers may be written in English or Spanish. Internships and field projects are conducted entirely in Spanish. Students needing additional language development may arrange for outside tutorials at an additional cost.

Click Here for Recent Photos of Fall 2004 Program

More Information:

courses

academic documentation

syllabus/English

faculty

syllabus/Spanish

program flyer

program director credentials

   

"My experience teaching street children in a residential center made me examine how we can create a more socially and economically just society."




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