NEW OPTIONS FOR STUDY ABROAD AT THE UO SUMMER OPTIONS Art (studio, several media) on the island of Spetses semester or year offered through the Athens program Business, Culture and Language Studies Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea Ewha Women's University, Seoul, South Korea Creative writing on the island of Spetses offered through the Athens program GAIAS: The Galapagos Academic Institute for the Arts & Sciences offered through the USFQ Program, Ecuador Field studies in Transylvania Romania and Hungary offered through the Budapest program German Language in Berlin offered through the Cologne program HIV / AIDS in Western Europe (pre-med) DIS Denmark Literature or Medieval Studies Cambridge, England Nursing in Scandinavia D/S Denmark Czech Republic Summer Program social sciences offered through the Prague program Scandinavian Glass Design D/S Denmark Theater arts on the island of Spetses offered through the Athens program ACADEMIC YEAR OPTIONS Advanced Italian Courses fall, winter, spring offered through the Siena program Culture and Media Studies (film) semester or year Aalborg University, Denmark Ecuadorian Rainforest Field Station independent research / advanced science students offered through the USFQ Program, Ecuador GAIAS: The Galapagos Academic Institute for the Arts & Sciences social & natural sciences offered through the USFQ Program, Ecuador Honors courses & most subjects semester or year National University of Singapore Human Rights in Latin America (new course) Rosario, Argentina International studies or language semester, year or summer Hanyang University, Seoul, South Korea Joint academics / internships in France most subjects & fields yearlong (with one semester of each) or academic year plus summer internship offered through the Lyon and Poitiers programs London internships in your first term most fields; fall, winter, spring offered through the London AHA program Marine sciences & marine studies semester or year University of Bergen, Norway Molecular biology either semester DIS Denmark Most subjects semester or year National Taiwan University Taipei Most subjects spring semester University of Hong Kang New courses in journalism & social science semester or year University of Tampere, Finland Psychology course work and practicum; semester or year Aalborg University Denmark Sciences and social sciences semester, year or even-year summers Hokkaido University Sapporo, Japan Sustainable Community Development bland of Kefalonia, Greece (AHA) Why Chinol? About a third of the world's people live in China, many of them in one of its 172 cities with over 1 million people living inside the city limits. (By comparison, the United States has nine such cities — the nearest one being Los Angeles!) The ability to work in China and with Chinese colleagues will be one of the most important hiring criteria of the twenty-first century. IE3 GLOBAL INTERNSHIP SITES Adoption Advocates International Addis Ababa, Ethiopia AMCHAM: American Chamber of Commerce Santiago, Chile Amigos de las Aves Alajuela, Cos fa Rica Assorted internships in many fields Florence, Italy; London, England Child Family Health International Capetown, South Africa Centro de Estudios Pluriculturales (CEPCU) Multicultural Studies Center Qtavalo, Ecuador Coleaia San Bartolome & CoTegia Parque de Espaha Rosario, Argentina Comparative Urban & Rural Health Care Rotation Child Family Health International (CFHI) Quito and Chone, Ecuador COOPE Sol I DAR Cooperative for Social Action and Sustainable Development San Jose, Costa Rica Cuba Environmental Education: Foundation for Nature and Humanity (temporarily suspended due to federal government rules) Havana, Cuba Fulbright Commission London, England Independent Institute for Environmental Concerns (UfU) 8orlin, Gormany Institute for Law and Environmental Governance (ILEG) Nairobi Kenya The London School Bithkok, Kyrgyzstan Nafana Presbyterian Secondary School Sampa, Ghana PACEMED Emergency Medical System Son Miguol da Albndv. Mexico Rabuor Village Project Rabaor, Kenya Scottish Parliament Edinburgh, Scotland SEDEJ (Servicios para el Desarrollo de los Jovenes): working with at-risk children NGO development and support (two positions) Santiago, Chib Sigurthur Nordal Institute Reykjavik, (upland Starfish Country Home and School Chiang Mai Province Thailand Tostan hat run in Sonagat rmw mbt in Guinea Tronwell English Institute Santiago, Chib Women in Progress Sampa, Ghana (^Qj0 (^Qjbbal "WE DESPERATELY NEED TO UNDERSTAND OTHER COUNTRIES AND OTHER CULTURES - FRIEND AND FOE ALIKE. WE ARE UNNECESSARILY PUTTING OURSELVES AT RISK BECAUSE OF OUR STUBBORN MONOLINGUALISM AND IGNORANCE OF THE WORLD." - National Strategic Task Force on Study Abroad, November 2003 INTERCULTURAL COMPETENCE AND OVERSEAS STUDY Intercultural competence may be defined as an individual's awareness of other cultures and cultural differences, knowledge about how to negotiate cultural differences with value-neutral methods, and skills for interacting with people from other cultural backgrounds in mutually beneficial ways. As recent world events demonstrate, intercultural competence is both very important and in short supply. In addition, intercultural competence is the buzzword in offices of human resources from multinational companies to universities to even relatively local firms. Everyone wants to hire new employees who are able to expand the ability of their organization or business to serve the needs and interests of more and more diverse populations - and the trend will only grow as the "global village" continues to integrate! To develop intercultural competence, you must go through several stages of personal and professional development. These stages do not necessarily occur only in a linear pattern but may overlap, and you may experience several developments at once. The generally recognized stages (developed by Dutch scholar Geert Hofstede) include: Awareness. An understanding that you have learned to see things through a particular cultural "lens," and that this lens is not a natural or normal way to see things, but a culturally created one, is the first part of developing awareness. Once you begin to understand this fact, you may also start to become aware of the wide variety of cultural "lenses" that exist, and the many different systems of knowledge and values that underlie them. Knowledge. Generally, awareness gives way to the accumulation of knowledge through many different forms of exploration: foreign language learning, cross-cultural course work, meeting people (while in your home country or traveling) and speaking with them, reading international websites and, of course, studying abroad. Skills. Increased exposure to other cultures helps you develop the ability to recognize the symbolism, value structures and ways of thinking and feeling that are integral parts of those cultures. Once you can "read" and "negotiate" these structures, you have the ability to bridge differences and work with people who have very little in common with yourself. These abilities become increasingly transferable to working with people from yet other cultures as your intercultural competence increases. The absolute best way to develop intercultural competence is to study or intern overseas. No other experience exposes you to the range, depth and intensity of cultural differences and cross-cultural scenarios that placing yourself in a long-term intercultural interaction does. This fact is the reason that so many employers and graduate schools seek applicants with overseas experience, and also why the UO is dedicated to making studying or interning abroad an option for every UO student. With so much in our global future resting on our ability to communicate and interact across cultural boundaries, you'll be helping yourself and the world at large by studying abroadl ■ 3