Antioch University New England - Because the world needs you now.
Visit our mobile website Subscribe to the AUNE RSS feed Follow us on Twitter Follow us on YouTube Join the AUNE LinkedIn Group Follow us on Facebook Follow us on flickr

News & Events
AUNE News AUNE Event Calendar

Propose/Edit An Event

Related Resources

NEWS RELEASE

Contact: Jan Fiderio at 603.283.2107

August 16, 2011 for Immediate Release

AUNE Students Learn to Teach Alongside Honduran Teachers

Two-week field study program shows each a different side to education

(Keene, NH) -- A schoolroom in a mountain town in Honduras might as well be the moon to most U.S. teachers. But teacher certification students at Antioch University New England (AUNE), working with Honduran teachers during a field study course, learn as much themselves as they teach others, and discover that there are many ways to teach children.

“[Students in the program get] travel experience: to leave what they know, their assumptions, their confirmations,” said Lisa Bisceglia, an AUNE alumna who leads a two-week field study in El Rosario, Honduras, each spring. “It’s a very poor community. But we do not imply that North Americans are coming to teach them anything, but to share what works best from our classrooms. At AUNE, we have so many resources at our disposal. To go into a one-room schoolhouse with eighty kids and they don’t even have chalk—then you’re really teaching.”

Bisceglia ('01, Experienced Educator) has been leading the study course since 2003. It is part of the Americans Caring Teaching Sharing (ACTS) program, which was started in 1986 to work on community development in a remote area of Honduras. Soon after she graduated from AUNE, Bisceglia accompanied her husband, a Dartmouth College medical student, on an ACTS mission to El Rosario, and she was hooked. On a visit to AUNE soon after that, she ran into Jane Miller and Tom Julius, core faculty members in AUNE’s Department of Education. They helped her design a two-week course in Honduras for teacher certification students.

“I knew it was going to be different, and it was a lot different,” said Greg Szewczyk, one of the six AUNE students who went last May. “What I got out of it especially were the interactions, working along with the teachers that were there and feeding off what they knew. We did a lot of classroom activities, and I knew that if it worked for the students in that situation, it could work in a lot of other situations.”

Jennifer O’Donnell, who went to El Rosario in 2009 as a student in AUNE’s teacher certification program and then developed an education committee within ACTS for her internship, works with Bisceglia to plan the teacher trips. “Each time I travel to the village, I understand a little more,” O’Donnell said. “I find myself breaking apart what I thought I understood about education, in order to fit in the new pieces of information and student and teacher experiences.

“The teacher trip to El Rosario gives AUNE teachers the opportunity to look at a different education model and system, noting the similarities and differences to our own, and to find ways to adapt lessons, activities and educational philosophy to fit the Honduran model.”

Jane Miller, core faculty member in the Department of Education, said that one student told her that, working with Honduran teachers, she discovered collaborative teaching abilities she never knew she had, which empower her to work with diverse populations. Another student’s trip to Honduras was her first experience outside the United States. “She was so inspired by the Honduran teachers and their ability to teach with very few resources that she has taken a teaching position on a small island in the Marshall Islands, where the teaching resources are scarce,” Miller said.

Read the blog written by AUNE students in May.
Find out more about the field study in El Rosario here.
Find out more about AUNE’s Elementary Teacher and Early Childhood Teacher Certification program here.
Find out more about ACTS here.

About Antioch University New England (AUNE)
Antioch University New England offers highly respected doctoral, master’s and certificate programs in education, environmental studies, management and psychology. Located in Keene, New Hampshire, this unique institution serves a thousand students each year. Our graduates have gone on to be leaders of positive change, working toward a more just and sustainable society. Founded in 1964, Antioch University New England is the oldest of Antioch University’s graduate campuses. Learn more at: www.antiochne.edu

About Antioch University
Antioch University serves more than 4,000 adult students around the world and across the country, online and at its five campuses in four states. Each campus offers degree programs that meet—and often anticipate—the pressing needs of its region and the wider world. The University is also home to the landmark PhD in Leadership and Change; Antioch Education Abroad, an exceptional opportunity of immersive service and study programs; and WYSO, a leading public radio affiliate and an essential source of global news and opinion.

Antioch University is a nonprofit private 501(c) (3) organization and member of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. For more information, visit www.antioch.edu.


Visit our mobile website Subscribe to the AUNE RSS feed Follow us on Twitter Follow us on YouTube Join the AUNE LinkedIn Group Follow us on Facebook Follow us on flickr

© 2012 Antioch University New England, 40 Avon Street, Keene, NH 03431-3516    800.553.8920

Employment | HelpDesk | Contact Us | Sitemap | myAntioch | Propose an Edit

Last Updated: 9/3/11