
Democracy in Latin America
Looking Back Thinking AheadFall 2002
Harvard Study Abroad
It's Getting Easier!Eileen O'Connor

The face of study
abroad at Harvard is changing. Last May, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences
(FAS) adopted a new study out of residence policy. The administration
now views study abroad itself as a meaningful supplement to a Harvard
education. No longer must students prove they have found a ?special
opportunity? not available to them in Cambridge. Language study
is encouraged but not longer required, and students can both choose from
pre-approved study abroad options or design their own. The result, says
DRCLAS director John Coatsworth, who also chairs the FAS Faculty Committee
on Study Out of Residence, is a great deal of flexibility. ?A mathematician
can study in Budapest without knowing Hungarian, or a student can study
the tropical biosphere in the jungle where there are no language teachers,
if he or she so chooses.?
DRCLAS and the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures can help
students tailor a study abroad experience to their personal needs and
interests. With a grant from DRCLAS and the Department of Romance Languages
and Literatures, Spanish preceptor Johanna Liander traveled to Chile and
Argentina this summer to investigate study abroad options. In addition
to identifying programs in language, literature and culture for her own
department, Liander also pinpointed strong curricula in such disciplines
as political science, economics and natural sciences.
?I hope more faculty members do what I did,? Liander says
of her trip, ?because there is a massive initiative to encourage
students to go abroad from all departments. Many of my students interested
in Latin America are not concentrators, and I hope we can provide even
more information to them in the future.?
Liander spent 18 days visiting 14 sites at 12 universities, striving to
obtain a sense of their strengths and the distinct types of opportunities
they could present to Harvard students. DRCLAS already boasts a database
of up to 300 study abroad programs or universities in Latin America, which
students can search by country or interest. Liander's findings will further
the DRCLAS goal of becoming familiar with six to twelve universities in
each country. Then, she says, ?we can tell a student to study physics
at university X, theatre at university Y, and for Latin American literature
go to university Z.?
At every institution, the administrators, faculty and students were ?very
willing and able to help, and positive about the prospect of developing
a relationship with Harvard,? Liander reports. She sees her trip
as ?an important step for Harvard to identify strengths in various
universities abroad so that we can provide students with a variety of
experience options.? However, she notes, ?first we have to
make students aware that it is possible to go abroad without a major struggle.?
In Buenos Aires, Liander visited three campuses of the Universidad de
Buenos Aires (UBA): El Centro de Idiomas, Ciencias Exactas, and Filosofia
y Letras. She describes the UBA ?as a very large public institution
of high and long-standing intellectual reputation, and probably the best
choice for graduate or highly focused undergraduate students.? Those
students who want a small campus but are reluctant to forgo a bustling
urban setting might look to a new public university primarily for working
people in Buenos Aires, the Universidad 3 de Febrero.
For the student looking for an even cozier atmosphere, Liander identified
two smaller private universities: the Universidad de San Andres in the
peaceful suburb of Victoria, and the Universidad Tocuato di Tella in Belgrano,
a charming Buenos Aires neighborhood. Torcuato di Tella, says Liander,
?is particularly strong in political science, history and business.?
Another great option for the social sciences is FLACSO, as the Buenos
Aires office is not only a research center but also offers undergraduate
and graduate programs.
In Santiago, Liander visited two large institutions, the private Universidad
Católica and the public Universidad de Chile, as well as the smaller
private Universidad Diego Portales?all colleges she calls ?very
ready to take on students.? In Valparaiso, Liander found the Universidad
Católica and Universidad Técnica Federico Santa Maria to
be first-rate undergraduate options. In Chile?s verdant lakes region,
the Universidad Austral de Chile in Valdivia is a good alternative for
students seeking a more rural experience, and is very strong in both science
and literature. And close to both the lakes region and ski country, Chile?s
second largest city, Concepción, is home to the Universidad de
Concepción, which Liander describes as ?a liberal university
on a beautiful campus that is very equipped to accommodate U.S. students.?
In the coming year, the Committee on Study Out of Residence will work
with Harvard departments and centers to find viable programs for their
students, just as Liander did for Romance Languages and Literatures, DRCLAS,
and the University as a whole. ?I hope we can make study abroad
experience closer to extraordinary and unique, and set the standards for
how other universities think about study abroad,? Coatsworth says.
?We will continue to help individual students find the one place
in Latin America where they will be best treated and learn the most about
what they want to study.?
Eileen O'Connor concentrated in Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard and graduated in 2000.