Jessy Cawley, in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania

Jessy Cawley, a Civil Engineering major, participated in the CIEE Tanzania program in 2009.

I studied in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania during the Fall and Winter terms of 2009.  Dar es Salaam has a population of almost 2.5 million people.  As months passed, I explored more and more of the city, visiting another mtaa, or neighborhood, and the anxious bustling somehow transformed into a vivacious tranquility.  The first time I rode on the public transportation, a small bus called a “dala-dala”, Beyonce was booming from the stereo and school children navigated on and off the stops wearing their cute blue and white uniforms.  I’m continually grateful for my time there.  The University of Dar es Salaam is similar in size to our own Oregon State University.  I’ve often reflected on my time there.  You never know what you’ll learn before you leave for a great adventure to a new place.   With every new person/place/circumstance abroad, I learned so much about my own culture and perspective because of the differences and similarities.
I can’t describe the things I’ve learned since going to Tanzania or the things that I’ve observed since returning.  If our daily lives were a radio, I somehow have picked up many more stations than I could have tuned into before.  I imagined I would learn a lot about other cultures and share my own, and I did.  I really learned a lot about American culture, and I also watched my views on race, poverty, health, and religion evolve in different ways.  I refuse to claim I now understand the whole picture, but a lot of stereotypes dissolved.  I really encourage all students to study abroad in Tanzania or anywhere you feel lead to go.  Also, I really encourage other students to meet the international students on our campus because we, the people of the world, really affect one another in good ways.

Karin in Madagascar
Karin Bucht at Isalo National Park in Madagascar

Karin Bucht, Environmental Science and International Studies Degrees, is spending Fall 2010 on an SIT study abroad program on biodiversity in Madagascar.  The following is an excerpt from her own blog.

So I’m back in Antananarivo, the capital for the next week. Since Tulear; we road tripped through Madagascar, visiting several different Parks and protected areas. The first place we stopped was Isalo National Park, which was incredible, even though a large portion had been burned several weeks before by an out of control brush fire.  The rocks and the views were incredible.

Our second stop along our roadtrip was Anjy, which is a community managed protected area. The best thing about Anjy, we found out the next morning. First off, while waiting for breakfast; a group of ringtail lemurs came and passed by our campsite. Later that morning we did a circuit tour where we learned that the lemurs passing by our campsite was just the beginning of our lemur experience. According to our guides, about 400 ringtails live in Anjy, in

lemurs
Lemurs at Anjy

groups of about 20. Being a community managed protected area, the lemurs here have never been hunted by locals and are very accustomed to humans. So when we did our circuit tour, we found ourselves in the midst of a group, with lemurs passing overhead. The hike also included some great views, but the lemurs were definitely the highlight. It seems pretty incredible to find lemurs here more approachable than they were at a private reserve (called Berenty) that we visited in the south. I’m still in Tana now, enjoying a reasonably fast cybercafé and getting lots of practice with the french keyboard. Veloma!

group shot in Isalo
Karin and her SIT classmates at Isalo National Park