About Border Studies
Participants
Faculty and Staff
Courses and Field Studies
Living Arrangements
Scenes from the Program
Short Term Seminars
How to Apply
Resources

Need More Information?
Patty Lamson,Ph.D.
Director of International Programs
Earlham College
Richmond, IN 47374
Phone 765-983-1424
Fax 765-983-1553

pattyo@earlham.edu or
borders@earlham.edu



 

What Next?

Ever wonder what Border Studies participants do after graduation from College? They go on to do a multitude of things from medical school to law school to teaching. Continue below to meet some former BSPers and find out what they're doing now.

 

Nicole Beeman Cadwallader, 2000

After leaving Earlham, I went to the Rio Grande Valley in
south Texas through Teach For America. I taught middle school science in a little town named La Joya for two years. In between the two years, I lived in Oaxaca City with my boyfriend, Jason who took Spanish classes while I volunteered at a Women's Center, translating their grant
paperwork and teaching an evening daycare class.


After the two years (Teach For America is a two year commitment), Jason moved to south central Pennsylvania to start medical school at Penn State. I stayed in the Valley (I wasn't ready to leave) for another two years, teaching middle school science and Texas History at a public charter school founded by Teach For America alumni in Donna, Texas named IDEA Academy.


Jason and I were married in June 2005 in my hometown, South Bend, Indiana. Then I moved to south central Pennsylvania. I now teach middle school science at a school district in rural Lancaster county.


I am applying to doctoral programs in Curriculum and Instruction. I had no idea that I would be in the field of education for life--but I love it! I really have found my niche in curriculum and instruction, I've had 3 opportunities to write curriculum and be in leadership positions working
with curriculum and instructional strategies.

Other than that, I have picked up the slightly masochistic hobby of marathon running. I just finished my 5th marathon, in Philadephia.

 

Emily Jenkins, 2003

My host mother encouraged me to study abroad again, and I spent fall semester 2004 in Berlin studying nationalism and ethnic conflict through the School for International Training. Inspired by observations on the border, I designed my ethnographic research project on attitudes towards language use among young adults of Turkish descent raised in Berlin; this research formed the basis of my senior thesis for my major in Comparative Languages and Linguistics.


In March of my senior year, I applied for a job at Migrant Health Promotion (MHP) in Southeast Michigan, one of the pioneering agencies of the promotor/a (community health worker) model. It’s been confirmed that my cross-cultural and language skills gained on Border Studies were key in getting the job offer. I graduated on time in spring 2006 and was selected for the Charles Fellowship in International Studies, a chunk of money awarded to one graduating Earlhamite for further international study.


After six months working with migrant farmworker teens, I accepted an AmeriCorps position coordinating and teaching for an ESL program at the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services in Dearborn, MI. I took a break in the middle of my year of service and used the Charles Fellowship to fund a month-long, self-designed Arabic immersion experience in Amman, Jordan. My stay ended just as the Israeli bombing of Lebanon began, and in the sad and anxious weeks that followed, I discovered how living cross-culturally makes your life not only richer, but sometimes also more painful.


After studying abroad three times and working with people of all different backgrounds, it has become clear what makes me most excited in life: being able to see things from a different perspective-maybe a little like a Mexican immigrant, or a Palestinian student-and that influences your choices and the people around you. For me, it’s time to stop packing and unpacking the suitcase every nine months; I want to to help those changes happen in other people. I’m applying for positions working with study abroad and/or international students, and in the meantime temping at the University of Michigan International Center.


I’m happy to say that I went to college for four years out of state, spent a quarter of that time out of the country, and still got engaged to my high school sweetheart, Jon. I’ve returned to the Juárez/El Paso area twice to visit my host family and talk with my host sister on the phone every few months. I credit my family for making my college experience possible, my professors for making it worthwhile, and my fiancé, friends and mentors for making it pleasant. I owe much of the success and happiness I’ve enjoyed to the Border Studies program staff and the people in Juárez and El Paso who took me in as their own, and count the decision to study on the border as one of the most influential and positive turning points in my life.


Emily Jenkins studied on the border as a junior in fall 2003. She lived with the Ibañez family in Juárez, worked with undocumented youth in detention through Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center for her field study, and wrote her oral history on Cipriana Jurado, labor organizer and founder/director of Centro de Investigación y Solidaridad Obrera.

 

Amy Jaret, 2004 and Kathleen Reynolds, 1997

Two Border Studies Students, One Office-----


Kathleen and I had been working together for about three months before we figured out that we both did Border Studies. From the outset, I had noticed that she speaks Spanish well, and apparently, one day she had a similar reaction when she overheard me talking to a Spanish-speaking ESL student. Upon asking me how I learned Spanish, I told her that I “Studied for a semester in Ciudad Juárez, on the border of Mexico and the US.” She smiled with what I thought was no more than recognition of the program, and asked, “Was that the Borders Program?” I said that it was, ready to explain the details of a program unfamiliar to, well, just about everybody. But quickly she added that she, too, had gone on the program, in its first year – 1997. Of course we complimented each other’s Spanish: we had the same teachers. So…in answer to your question “Where are Border Studies Participants Now?” we’re at the Albany Park Community Center, on the Northwest side of Chicago. When will you be joining us???

Kathleen Reynolds:
As a junior at the College of Wooster in Ohio, I did the Borders Program in its first year, Fall of 1997. I had a great experience living with the Ortiz family in Juarez and working at the FEMAP Foundation (www.femap.org). After graduating in 1999, I moved to Chicago and became a VISTA volunteer in the Adult Education Department at the Albany Park Community Center, where I have worked continuously since in several different positions (including coordinator and ESL teacher).


Amy Jaret:
I went on the Border Studies Program in the fall of 2004, during my Junior year at Earlham College. While I was there, I worked at Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, in El Paso, with their Battered Immigrant Women’s Program. During my senior year at Earlham, I worked in the International Programs Office as an intern for Border Studies. I graduated in 2006 with a major in Latin American Studies and a minor in Spanish. In September, I began an Americorps position as an ESL and Adult Literacy tutor at the Albany Park Community Center, in Chicago.

 

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