Friday, October 26, 2007

...

I forgot to mention I hope we get to experience live music of some sort, I think that would be just amazing.
Nicole

Numero Quatro

We turned in our first paper today on "what is CAFTA?". I can't believe we only have two weeks left. I am extremely nervous with excitment. Anxiousness? I don't know what I'm feeling, but I'm definately looking forward to this trip. I enjoy the company of all my classmates and feel safe and secure amongst them! I just hope I don't have any problems with my camera. It lost a shutter. Well, one of the little flaps. I'm going to bring all kinds of batteries. I just read in our packet today not to wear any camo clothing so we don't resemble the militia... which makes perfect sense and I wouldn't have thought about that before. I have to find an appropriate dress of skirt to bring to for our meetings. I need to remember Deet, and maybe some peppermint tea bags for traveler's diarreah, oh god that sounds horrible. Hopefully no one suffers that on this trip. I'm still nervous about the Malaria issue. Maybe just maybe I'm a bit of a Hypochondriac. I don't know. Anyways, I am very excited. I hope to gather a lot of information as well as photos, and I'm not going to lie, suveniers. Mostly I'm hoping to find really cool jewelry or an authentic nicaraguan dress or something. Definately Coffee. And The Volcano, that's something I've always wanted to see but never knew if I would! My two biggest goals are to come up with good questions for the people we meet, and to keep a daily journal when we're there.

Nicole

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Nicole's # 3

I'm getting even more excited. The past couple of days I've been thinking about the trip a lot. I'm looking forward to eating authentic Nicaraguan food, I bet it's pretty tasty. The markets I bet are going to be really cool. I wonder how people will react to us, and the different things people are going to tell us wherever we go, such as the factories and the coffee plantation. I'm looking forward to tomorrow so we can go over more of the book and talk more about what we'll be doing and what to expect in Nicaragua.

musings to delay the writing of a paper

Looking at the time line of Nicaraguan history it dawned on me that the Peace Corps was active in Nicaragua during the Somoza error and not as I had idealistically first thought during the literacy campaigns of the Sandinistas. When my uncle was in Nicaragua he was an agricultural volunteer. I always thought his work there was a grassroots effort to aid poor, rural farmers, not line the pockets of a wealthy and corrupt dictator. I remember being mesmerized as a child by his experiences in Nicaragua and by the very idea of the Peace Corps.
When thinking about this trip, I am most excited about the opportunity to travel again with purpose. I have always enjoyed traveling and experiencing different cultures and languages. My most recent trips have been to escape our cold winters or for pleasure. I look forward to going somewhere to gain understanding and knowledge that will connect me to a larger world, empower me to help others and broaden my perspectives and open my horizons to new ideas, world views and global issues.
Now I have to start this paper!
Denise

Megan's Second Blog

Now that the weeks are narrowing down, I'm getting more and more nervous to go. I talked to my parents about the trip and they don't seem to excited about the trip-,y dad especially. My grandma calls me just about every day to make sure I know that I should never be out of the teacher's sight when I'm down there and to always have a bathroom buddy, NEVER GO ALONE she always says. They are my family so they worry about me no matter what I do, so I don't let it bother me to much. I can't help but vision what Nicaraguans will be like, and living there for a week. I know one week is not a long time, but it's better than not going or expirencing at all. Our book, Nicaragua: Living in the shadow of the eagle, gives an ugly truth about America's meddlings down there, and I wonder if we'll feel the effects of some of our past relations. When white American students show up to look at how Nicaraguans live with cameras in thier hand, will they smile for the pictures or wonder what bisiness they have down there? Will they be happy to see us and tell us their story, or will they...not?

Well, only one way to find out huh? I'll let you know what I find.

Megan's First Blog

I'm excited to go to Nicaragua. It will be my first time out of the country, so it seems like everyday I'm checking to make sure my passport is exactly in the same spot as it always is, I'm parinoid I'm going to loose it and not be allowed on the plane! That would be terriable. This sesmster I'm taking a conversational spanish class through CMC as well, so I'm excited to try it out, my goal is to speak as much of it as possible.
This summer I was involved in a program hosted by the state department and had tons of meetings with different represenitives from there, Hellen Thompson, and other infulentuial figures, so I'm anticipating this expirence to parallel some of the meetings I had in D.C. in some ways.
I really would like to talk to alot of the locals, and from what I hear they will be willing to give me that chance. I just hope that the lanugage barrier won't be to solid.

More Comming Up! Until Now blog readers

Megan

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

blog one

I have always been very intrested in learning about central and south American cultures, but i have never had a chance to travel farther south then Arizona. I have a feeling that this trip is going to be the best way for me to really expirience their culture. Much more so then if I was to travel there on my own seeing as how I don't speak any Spanish and on this trip we are going to have a translator at all times. I would imagine that it is very difficult to get a true sense of a culture if you don't even know what anybody is saying. All in all i think this trip is going to make me appreciate how lucky I am much more and help drive me to make changes in the way I live so i can better benifit this world.
Michael Vogler

blog uno

a teacher once told me to always make the familiar, strange and the strange, fimiliar and your life will be much more meaningful. i am really excited to experence this culture, to learn about free and fair trade and how much i impact the world without really realizing it. Something as little as the coffee you buy at the supermarket, effects a much greater picture then the average person thinks. they just go home and drink their coffee every morning untill its time to buy some more, never stoping to think "were does this coffee really come from?" I am excited for the people, the food, the hospatalitly , to make the strange fimiliar.
shana

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Blog # 2

I just realized the other day that there are only 3 weeks left until we go to Nicaragua. I can't wait. We learned that it is going to be 90 degrees when we're down there which is going to be hard to get used to again. Then getting used to 30 degrees when we come back. Let alone the reverse culture shock. I'm excited for the market and the Volcano. I still need to think of questions that I want to ask people when we're in Nicaragua. We watched a film last Friday that got opinions of native Nicaraguans, and taught more about the history of Nicaragua. It showed footage of a large earthquake back in the seventies. I look forward to going to the fair trade coffee plantation, and hope we still get to go spend a night in the Rain Cloud Forest. Speaking of which I keep thinking about the Malaria shot. It makes me nervous. I don't know why, I'm not afraid of shots. Hmm. There will be a total of I believe six CMC students and two CMC professors from the ALpine campus and two more professors from the Leadville CMC campus. We have a great group to travel with from what I've seen so far.

Nicole Marcisofsky

Belated Blog # 1

Well this one is a little late... and it took me a while to figure out how to post mine. I was intimidated by Nicaragua Living Under the Shadow of the Eagle at first, but the reading is interesting and I don't have a problem keeping focused on it after all. We have a lot to learn before we go so we have a greater understanding of Nicaragua. I have never studied about a country so intensely before going to visit, which is why I this is going to be such an exciting trip for me. I have never been south of the U.S. border, another reason this is so exciting. I first heard about this course last semester and was interested in it from that moment on. I have heard great things, and look forward to meeting with various natives of Nicaragua, as well as gaining insights on different views.

Nicole Marcisofsky

Thursday, October 18, 2007

jeffrey marks

Going to Nicaragua will be vary diffent, I have never traveled to a county that lives on two dollars a day. I have also never bin to a tropical rain forest this I belve is what most intested me about the trip also that facked that the hole class is about one contery I have never had such I focest class on one idea
When I read LIVING IN THE SHDOW OF THE EAGLE I cant stop thinking about how pore Nicaragua is and when I think about that I think it is amazing how far this country had come and how much it has to go

Blog 1

I have been looking forward to this trip since I first heard about it in August. As my anticipation grows,the focus I had originally approached this trip with widens. I was drawn to this trip because ever since I was first introduced to Liberation Theology as an undergrad, it has resonated with me. I have been curious about the links between Liberation Theology and the work of Paulo Freire and others in participatory education. I have also been trying to draw links between Liberation Theology and Ruby Payne's work on poverty. My hope is that this opportunity provides a general framework for me to organize my thoughts, synthesize a vast amount of tangential knowledge and come up with the start of a PhD. proposal. I would like to talk with as many people as possible. I would like to try to speak as much Spanish as I can without the help of a translator but I know I will struggle enormously. I would like to see some schools at various levels and speak to teachers, especially teachers who had taught during the large literacy movements. I am curious to see the methods of instruction and the philosophy of education now. I would like to see how the country is handling environmental issues, as a producer based economy. Mostly, I just want to experience as much as Nicaragua as I can.
Knowledge emerges only through invention and re-invention, through the restless, impatient, continuing, hopeful inquiry human beings pursue in the world, with the world and with each other. Paulo Freire

First Blog

Going to Nicaragua in less than a month I was wondering, if we would be doing any camping out in the Nicaraguan cloud forest. If so, what would we need for camping gear? I all ready know that this trip is going to be one of the better trips that I have been on. Outside of the U.S., I have only been to Mexico and they were all drunken trips. I am excited for this trip because I want to see a different culture and compare how different it is to ours. I think it would be interesting and exciting if they have do some religious ritual while we are down there. I wrote a paper last year on sweatshops and had a lot of mixed feelings about it. When I first heard about it I was really against it but they depend on it. I am very excited to actually see the environment of a sweatshop, I am sure that there are worse ones out there but I will have a better understanding of it.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Welcome!

Hi, this is Bob Gumbrecht, associate professor of Social Science at CMC, and the leader of our CMC class trip to Nicaragua. The trip is part of a political science course called Current Political Issues. We will be traveling from Nov. 9 - 17.

The theme of the course is economic and political development. In particular, we are going to study the impact of neoliberalism and free trade, especially the impending arrival of CAFTA - the Central American Free Trade Agreement, negotiated between the countries of Central America, the Dominican Republic, and the United States. We want to find out if free trade agreements like this are in the best interests of the people of Nicaragua, 80% of whom live on less than $2 a day.

We will spend our days in Nicaragua talking with as many people we can, from all walks of life: young, old, urban, rural, wealthy, poor, liberal, conservative, etc.

I am excited to visit Nicaragua and visit with all these people and have them tell us their stories, tell us whether this plan is a good one for them.

As I write this, we are about a month away from departure, and are just beginning our study of the country. As the weeks pass, each student from the course will describe our activities and post his/her thoughts and observations. Thanks for reading - and check back often...

Bob