Thursday, June 10, 2010

Uchi birds

There are some incredible birds around Carmen Pampa, called crested oropendulas. They are related to oriels, and they make fascinating hanging nests.




Here they are called uchis, and our student Maritza Yanarico studied them for her graduation project. She followed their life cycle and eating habits in Carmen Pampa, examining ten groups of nests.




They are highly social birds, working as a team to find food and protect their nests. Unfortunately, their food source sometimes happens to be a farmer's crop, so understanding more about them helps farmers know how to keep them out of their fields. (Maritza suggests reflective tape and scarecrows.)

Maritza defended her project yesterday, and became our most recent graduate.

Maritza said that her first order of business was to visit her grandmother in Sorata, north of La Paz, and share the good news with her -- she hasn't seen her in 5 years! She wants to develop a conservation project for the Yungas, helping farmers work in concert with the environment, to promote species conservation and make farming more sustainable. She will use traditional knowledge that is getting lost as the last generation dies, and combine it with modern knowledge.

Here stands Maritza proudly (center) with her sister Sonia, mother-in-law Goya, son Daniel, brother Richard, Mother Julia and husband Julio, holding their daughter Dana.



Maritza received help from a lot of different people, including Dr. Kent Jenson at SDSU, and lots of moral support from our Board President Ann Leahy, and our Foundress Sister Damon. Her thank you speech lasted five minutes! Her gratitude reminded me of an old saying: What you are is God's gift to you; what you become is your gift to God. Well, Maritza's graduation is a great gift to this work of God, and we are very proud of her.

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

David Flannery

Smith College professor and friend of the College Mary Murphy wrote about one of our star visiting professionals, David Flannery.

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After a career in education spanning nearly half a century, visiting professional David Flannery has reached that stage of life in which many of his peers spend their days playing golf, relaxing with family, or schmoozing with other retired friends. He’s earned the right to kick back and take it easy. David, however, has already “retired” three times, and has chosen, in his words, not “to stop working, but to work differently.” This semester at the College, he is donating his time as an instructor of English.

David serves as the primary instructor for nine English students in the Agronomy and Education departments, and he collaborates with Bolivian instructors to provide additional hours of English for three levels of English in the Tourism department.

David brings to his volunteer semester at the College an impressive body of knowledge and experience. This first career spanned 40 years in public education, interrupted only by a stint at the University of Wisconsin to earn his doctorate in educational administration. He held a variety of positions, starting as a teacher of secondary English and Social Studies, then a high-school principal in the Minneapolis area, a director of secondary education for a rural school district in Oregon, and back to Minnesota where he served as superintendent of the Elk River School District for 14 years.

After his initial retirement, he worked as a consultant for the Perpich Center for Arts Education in Minneapolis, eventually becoming interim executive director for the Center – for three and a half years! David loved the job and hated to leave, but knew that the Center needed someone with vision who could commit to serving as director for a decade, so he decided in 2005 to retire for the second time.

This led to a third career, one in international education with the Nacel Schools. The Nacel organization benefited from David’s expertise in educational administration as it established American schools in the East Asia. David helped to get three schools started, two in Korea and one in China. He made some 10 trips to Asia in three years, once living for six months in Beijing, where he hired staff, established curriculum, and served both as school principal and as an English teacher. Tired, eventually, of all the traveling, he retired from Nacel in the summer of 2009. But not, of course, to stop working.

David is clear about his motives in volunteering at the College. Laughing, he says that he wanted to escape winter in Minnesota. More seriously, he explains that he retired to have the time and freedom to work at an institution whose mission he believes in and to engage in the sort of work that that he loves, especially teaching. He came to Bolivia aiming, also, to improve his Spanish, and he meets regularly with two Education students for Spanish conversation. Expressing frustration in his inability to express his ideas as an adult, he expects to continue studying Spanish after he returns home in June.

In spite of his rich and varied career in public and international education, David admits that his experience teaching at the College has been much more difficult than he would have imagined. Learning Spanish while trying to teach students who didn’t yet know any English is a tough assignment. When asked about any disappointments, he mentions only one: classes that fall apart despite his careful preparations.

Overall, David’s volunteer semester has been a positive experience. He likes being part of the volunteer community, a multi-age group with whom he shares meals, chores, and conversation. He appreciates living among students and other teachers at the College. He values all that he has learned of language, food, Bolivian culture, rural culture, and Aymara culture. He rejoices in breakthroughs he has made as he mastered a new area of teaching.

But he misses his family: wife Mary Grace, three adult children and seven grandchildren, all living in the Minneapolis area and all supportive of his volunteer semester in Carmen Pampa. He talks with Mary Grace via Internet three times a week, and she came here for a visit in March, but he misses home and is eager to be part of the daily lives of his children and grandchildren again.

And so, David Flannery is about to retire for the fourth time. We here in Carmen Pampa will miss him greatly, while we speculate about his next career.