An overview of possibilities for the Persistence Perú Module

Suggested activities/readings for an emerging curriculum

Fall-2008
Winter-2009                                                       
Spring-2009
Participants who have travelling experience and know Spanish, might arrange their stay in Peru starting in the fall. In past experiences, we have had participants who took our summer program and then continued with our year long program and travelled to Peru in the summer to stay for the rest of the year. If interested please contact Raul asap.

Before the trip to Peru:
The 4 questions
The philosophy and psychology of the program; what is the Persistence program?
What is a student-centered educational environment?
How ideas from Paulo Freire, William Glasser, Howard Gardner, Howard Zinn apply to our program.
The covenant, who writes it? how do I make my voice be heard?
Latin America and Latin Americans
"One Hundred Years of Solitude"
Native Americans in South America,
Spanish: read everything using Spanish sounds, the five vowel sounds, how do children learn to speak? Frases equivalentes de uso diario: going to, have to, there is/are, terminaciones verbales.

Health: READ PLEASE
In Peru:
You can arrange to pay for your own Spanish lessons in addition to do your own Learning through the cultural immersion program set up by the local youth organization.
Weekly seminar/conference? (up to participants)

El Centro is an ongoing project, if you are interested in teaching ESL, a hobby or anything you consider important or interesting to children, let Raul know. This year we are inviting Evergreen participants to find a used musical instrument in garage sales in the US, take it to Peru and donate it to the Youth Organization III Milenio.

To learn about Peru and Peruvians: Before 1492 you can:
- go  on Field trips to pre-Inca sites: Moro, Farfan, Huacas in the Jequetepeque Valley, Pakatnamu
- read "The Pakatnamu Papers";
"The Royal Commentaries of the Incas" by Garcilaso de la Vega, the Chronicles of Guaman Poma de Ayala.
- visit sites and museums in Chan Chan, Sipan, the pre-Incas and the Incas.
 
Field trip to Cajamarca: to learn about Atahuallpa and Pizarro and the "conquest" of the Incas. Was Carlos Castañeda born in Cajamarca, Peru?; The Catholic church and its influence.

Read "Broad and Alien is the World"by Ciro Alegria and "One Hundred Years of Solitude" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez to have an introduction to the culture.

Is it possible to have a student-centered program in Peru?


Back in the US:

In preparation for students presentations: workshops on powerpoint, web page building, imovies (video editing).

Discussions on US-Latin American relations.

In which ways has your life been impacted by this experience?

What did you learn that you couldn't have possibly learned without being in Peru?
Freire's pedagogy and US Education
"Pedagogy of the Oppressed"
"A Peoples History of the U.S."
Bloom's Taxonomy.
"Superlearning", can we learn a foreign language in a few weeks?
What does Choice Theory have to do with this program?
Freire's pedagogy and Education in Peru:
Colonial Peru, field trips to colonial and pre-incan sites in Trujillo and Lambayeque. 
A discussion on Bartolome de las Casas.
Reading materials:
"The Daughters of the Conquistadors", "Seven Essays of Peruvian Reality" by Jose Carlos Mariategui.
Summer and the Southern hemisphere. The ancient Peruvians and the Inti: el Dios Sol, la diosa Luna, el Apu y Naylamp.
Independent Project presentations start in week five. What is the most important aspect of your learning that you will share with your class?

US news and Latin America.
TV and channels in Spanish.
Immigration and immigrants.
Study Abroad Reunion
Visitors:
Mason Co. Literacy Program,
International Studies Dean,
Financial Aid and
Academic Study Abroad Advisors.
The Peru Group DTF
Peru Today, volunteer work in local institutions, your host family and new friends. Community: the dynamics of community life.
Traditional medicines and curanderos.
The arts in ancient Peru. Ceramics and weaving.
Dances and Music of Peru, the instruments, group dances
Recycling and the concept of "garbage", the environment.
Peru's recent history, democracy and leadership.
Your project and Peru -
Our email exchanges with co-learners on campus.
Medio ambiente
Suggestions for future programs.
- books for learning  Spanish
- books for Latin American studies.
- what to take.

Passport, shots, visa, paperwork, reserve tickets.
Who is going?

Building a digital portfolio using the program list or
the interactive web page TBA discussion site.

Plans for week 6 and after.

Is the "conquest"still happening? Independent travel, a possibility to visit Mariankari Bajo; the Peruvian Amazonian indigenous populations.
Lima and the coast: the criollos and the westernized mestizos.
Huancayo, Cusco: the indigenous and the mestizos.
Quechua and Aymara, the indigenous languages, the people in the high Andean regions.
The quechuan nations in the Altiplano (Southern Peru and Northern Bolivia), the Titicaca Lake and the Uros.





RETURN
Evaluations
Possible questions for the Peru experience 

What is it like being an American in South America?
What is it like being a woman or a man in South America?
What expectations did we have before we left, what happened to those expectations once in Peru?
In what ways are we still feeling the effects of our time abroad?
Who did we meet while we were in Peru, how would we describe those people, and why would we describe them that way...
How did we effect the people we met while abroad, did we really communicate, did we create lasting connections?