Our “Marooned Librarian” Hokie in South Africa has written an informative and delightful blog post about his experiences and work since his arrival May 2nd. Here’s an excerpt that will make you feel like you are there with him:
It is approaching winter here and the daylight hours are short, but the weather has been exceptionally pleasant. Late fall in Cape Town has felt like late spring in Blacksburg, but with much less rain. Afternoon skies have been clear blue, nearly every day. This is problematic. Winter is normally the rainy season, but Cape Town is experiencing a three year drought. Reservoir levels are critically low, and residents of the city have become good at conserving water. I’m trying to do my part, and am now comfortable with a procedure I’ve named the Cape Shower, which uses more water than an astronaut shower but less than a Navy shower. This is a habit that I need to take home with me.
His photos range from “painted murals on some of the buildings” to the protea, a beautiful South African flower” to “the daredevils that paraglide from mountains over towers to the beach” (below).
Keith also delineates, near the end of his blog-post, the projects he has worked on so far, and will be at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology for about another 2 weeks.
“The AUCA campus is a gorgeous, modern one-building campus.”
“The University purchases all textbooks for their students.”
“There are a lot of buildings in active construction.”
Anita with her “host/grad school friend, Jyldyz, their library director who invited me.”
Fulbright Specialist serves as consultant in Open Education (OE) and Open Educational Resources (OER)
Anita Walz, Virginia Tech’s Scholarly Communication Librarian for Copyright and Open Educational Resources, was invited to serve as a Fulbright Specialist for two weeks at the American University of Central Asia (AUCA) in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. She’s on her way home today!
Anita worked there together with her classmate from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Graduate School of Library and Information Science (UIUC GSLIS, now The iSchool at Illinois), who is now the Library Director, Jyldyz Bekbalaeva. “primarily… consulting/teaching/discussing about open education (OE) and open educational resources (OER).” Check out the letter she sent soon after she arrived–I have to say, reading it was just like being there with a couple of classmates for me, too, since I, like several other VT librarians, are also grads of the “iSchool at Illinois,” before it got the cool name:
Hi all,
Good morning! It’s 10:45am Saturday morning here and nearly 1am Saturday in Blacksburg. Hope you are resting well and not checking email right now!
I hope you are doing well. I’m really enjoying my time here in Kyrgyzstan. It would help a lot in getting around if I spoke more Russian, but my hosts are taking good care of me, everyone I need to talk with at the University speaks excellent English, and I’m getting my bearings a bit better each day. I have gotten sick only once (from airline food) and I think have adjusted better than most times to a drastic time change (it’s 10 hours later here than Virginia). It helped a lot to sleep in a flat bed for 11 hours in Moscow on my layover! The food is also very good. I’m told but that the tap water is ok (I’m still not sure if I trust this based on previous experience and continue to treat my drinking water.) I’m being adventurous in eating different things, knowing that I have a bottle of Cipro.
“The people here revere bread.”
It’s a really interesting time politically here. Many things (education, publishing, infrastructure etc.) collapsed in the post-soviet era but the needs are still present. Roads are full of potholes. Most building construction uses manual labor (e.g. to dig foundations) rather than machines — and there are a lot of buildings in active construction. High quality educational experiences are hard to come by and not available broadly. (I’ll probably ask more about this when I visit some public libraries and present at American Corners next week.) I’m told that there is a lot of investment by Turkish and other interests etc. It will likely look very different in a couple of years when all of the buildings under construction are finished. Corruption is apparently a huge problem. Kyrgyzstan, due to its location has always had foreign interests vying for influence/control.
The culture is much less scheduled and more flexible. That said, my hosts have arranged a schedule of people to meet with (and a number of presentations to teachers, students, AUCA faculty) I’ve already had a number of in depth conversations with various people at the University (all the librarians, Center for Teaching & Learning, various program directors, and some students), and with the U.S. embassy about their programs, goals, challenges, and understanding (or lack of) of open education. There is a lot of education, coaching, one-on-one “what do you do?” “how does that work?” and working to connect Creative Commons licenses and principles of open education (including pedagogy) to goals, issues, practices etc. There’s also a lot of normalizing — “oh, our students struggle with that too / we have that problem too, etc.” — types of conversation. And a lot of checking in with my host/grad school friend, Jyldyz, their library director who invited me. We work well together and I feel that we can be candid with each other. We’ll have time to debrief with both her boss (President of AUCA) who and separately with the Embassy next Friday. (I will be on my best behavior 🙂 I feel like I’m using everything I’ve learned in the last three+ years at VT, things from my Economics background, things I learned via my husband’s doctoral program in Higher Ed, plus a lot of consulting, listening/reflective listening, and people skills picked up along the way. (I’m finding that I really enjoy investing in people this way.)
I’m using this brochure Scott Fralin and I developed extensively in addition to my LibGuide on Open Ed. I’m also glad to have brought some visual aids (Fundamentals of Business, an OpenStax book, one of my own books on Instructional Design, and one I bought on VT history. Most of these, minus the business text I will leave here.) Since the school has a liberal arts focus, things like “homework software” and machine learning are not even on the radar.
An interesting factoid that I knew before I came here — the University purchases all textbooks for their students (perhaps a post-Soviet way of thinking held over?) So, I am thinking thru some different approaches to present that will better engage faculty interest beyond “students cannot afford textbooks” for a presentation on Thursday. This is something I need to be thinking about anyway for VT 🙂
There are a lot of different players here (Soros Fdn, a few others that are very actively investing in this space. I will meet them on Thursday after we are on a panel discussion together.)
The AUCA campus is a gorgeous, modern one-building campus. The building is only two-years old. There are around ~1,100 students plus a one-year college prep high school program. Though it is much smaller than VT and private (and currently heavily reliant on donor money), we have many of the same challenges.
Hope you all have a very nice weekend!
Anita
Anita R. Walz
Open Education, Copyright & Scholarly Communications Librarian
Library Liaison to Economics, Mathematics, and Legal Studies arwalz@vt.edu | Tel: 540-231-2204 | Fax: 540-231-7808 | Newman Library 422 | Twitter: @arwalz
Open Educational Resources Guide http://guides.lib.vt.edu/oerVirginia Tech
University Libraries (0434)
560 Drillfield Drive
Blacksburg, VA 24061 http://www.lib.vt.edu
A marine research ship in Cape Town Harbour. (Photos from Robert’s Facebook.)
Robert photographed a flock of penguins at the Cape Town Two Oceans Aquarium.
At the Cape Town waterfront–a reminder of the historic importantance of the port for world trade.
ROBERT SEBEK: VT’S FIRST EXCHANGE LIBRARIAN TO SOUTH AFRICA’S CAPE PENINSULA UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY
News from our man in South Africa!
Robert reports that he has “…met wonderful people in the library– Janine has gone over a lot of her instruction program–things I will share when I come back. I’ll be sitting in a class today and am scheduled for several more this week. I also met with library IT Friday and we talked EZproxy in detail. I hope I’ve helped them resolve a long-standing problem… Wandering around my neighborhood. Reminds me of San Francisco. I’m not sure I’ll ever get used to looking the other way when crossing the street or 24 hour time notation.”
“I felt the rains down in Africa”
He also mentions that it’s fairly cold and the days are short, so he’s wondering if our next exchange librarian might be better off going down there during our winter or spring, their summer or fall. Also, he’s having some hiccups with his WiFi connection and needs a local telephone. He advises our next Hokie exchange librarian to get an international-enabled telephone before departure. Combining all the things Robert is learning with what Joanne experienced during her visit with us in June, we should have a good bit of prep advice based on real experience for people next round.
PLEASE NOTE: We’ll be calling for project proposals after Robert makes a presentation on his findings and adventures this September, but you can already start thinking about reviewing some of the CPUT’s areas of strength to base proposals on here. One of our findings is that a one month period seems quite OK, considering Joanne got “heaps and heaps” done, so those with family considerations may rest easy that a proposal for just a month (instead of the 6-8 weeks we originally envisioned) will be fine.
I sent the following email to my education abroad students, who were studying for exams in Hefei, to pump them up for the following week’s excursion to the great city of Beijing.
From: Hover, Paul
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 1:56 AM
To: (Students of Virginia Tech in China Summer II Course 2012)
Subject: Preparing our Beijing Excursion: a few notes I entered into my smartphone along the way
Hi all,
Our little hotel is in the most interesting neighborhood I have yet seen in China. It’s extremely hard for taxis to find but I now have a card with a map. The Hutong courtyard neighborhoods are large, historically unchanged compounds of many alleys and narrow passages, crowded with folks hanging out and going about their business. The alleys are a bit narrow and winding here and there, but well-kept, and the low, simple buildings and shops authentically reflect how Beijing was and still is organized. Shopping, restaurants, you can find it all in the Hutong. Immediately adjacent (a 4 minute walk) is a bustling, renovated neighborhood shopping area with lots of small arts & crafts shops (no hustlers except the rickshaw dudes), trendy restaurants and bars, and just an incredibly lively and friendly atmosphere. I met a Spanish lady who speaks Chinese like a Mandarin, hailing a taxi and then flinging a few choice phrases at it as the driver drove on without her. I opened the conversation with her by asking her to repeat the choicest of her fluent harangue. Don’t ask me to teach you that, you’ll have to find your own Spaniard.
In harm’s way
I was caught in a huge rainstorm and completely soaked Friday night after dinner. It was so bad, my umbrella was a joke! I was just at the moment of deluge crossing in the middle of a giant big-city roundabout and traffic was blindly coming at me… fortunately a police car stopped and helped me get across. Imagine that in seconds I went from dry to wading almost up to my knees. So far there have been 77 deaths in Beijing attributed to the recent rains and subsequent flooding, but that was last week, and I wasn’t expecting it still to be happening. Things happen so fast–that’s traveling.
TianNaMen Square, the Forbidden City, and the Great Wall
Saturday morning our tour takes us to TianNaMen Square, the astounding Forbidden City, and the Great Wall.Read more…
Our 3rd speaker in the Destination Areas Global Speakers Series, Robbie Fried, is a VT grad who is building a business in China, and expanding rapidly. Entitled ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN THE MIDDLE KINGDOM: SCALING A BUSINESS IN CHINA AND BEYOND, the event takes place Tuesday, Feb. 27 at 7:00pm. See you there!
Keith, our Librarian in South Africa
Our “Marooned Librarian” Hokie in South Africa has written an informative and delightful blog post about his experiences and work since his arrival May 2nd. Here’s an excerpt that will make you feel like you are there with him:
His photos range from “painted murals on some of the buildings” to the protea, a beautiful South African flower” to “the daredevils that paraglide from mountains over towers to the beach” (below).
By HaveLanguageWillTravel • 1. International Students & Faculty, 2. Strategic Global Collaborations, 4. Global Opportunities, 5. International Librarians, 7. Emails from Abroad 0