East Africa: Be Free Past Review

By (Environmental Studies, Mount Holyoke College) for

The School for Field Studies / SFS: Tanzania - Wildlife Management Studies

What did you gain/learn from your experience abroad? Was it worthwhile?
Yes! Very worthwhile. SFS made me love traveling even more than I already did. I am aware of cultural differences and complex management issues of human population growth, modernization, ecology, and wildlife management.

Review Photos

SFS: Kenya & Tanzania - Wildlife Management Studies Photo SFS: Kenya & Tanzania - Wildlife Management Studies Photo SFS: Kenya & Tanzania - Wildlife Management Studies Photo SFS: Kenya & Tanzania - Wildlife Management Studies Photo

Personal Information

How much international exposure did you have prior to this program? 1 month - 6 months

Review Your Program

* Overall educational experience

Academic rigor, intensity, resources, etc.

This is what education should be! Classes outdoors, with professors and guest lecturers from the area and know the history of local issues. Classroom lectures, traveling lectures, and field lectures, labs, are combined to get comprehensive views. The Tanzania side was not as academically rigorous as Mount Holyoke, but the type of work we were doing was engaging, interesting, and very relevant! The Kenya side was much more rigorous and the quality of the directed research was very high. Professors expected students to put in hard work and to be passionate about topics.

* Host Country Program Administration

On-site administration of your program

small program, so staff got to know students well. Staff/faculty meetings meant activities well coordinated. Moses Okello coordinated Kenya and Tanzania sites together well.

* Housing:

How satisfied were you with your living arrangements?

Students in hut or "banda" groups of 3 or 4.

* Food:

Vegetarian and vegan options. Friendly kitchen staff. Students help make breakfast/wash dishes.

* Social & Cultural Integration:

How integrated did you feel with the local culture?

Hikes (to waterfall on boarder of Kenya and Tanzania, to highlands above Lake Manyara Tanzania), safaris in National Parks, visits to cultural bomas (Maasai and Iraqw), souvenir shopping in Curio shops and in town.

* Health Care:

How well were health issues addressed during the program?

* Safety:

Very good about keeping students safe (from people, traffic, wildlife, etc). Very amenable to taking students to local clinics for treatment.

If you could do it all over again would you choose the same program? Yes

Finances

* Money: How easily were you able to live on a student's budget?

(1 = not very easy/$200+ on food & personal expenses/week, 2.5 = $100/week, 5 = very easily/minimal cost)

Language

* Did your program have a foreign language component? Yes
If applicable, to what degree did your living situation aid your language acquisition?

Language acquisition improvement?

Practiced everyday with staff and faculty. Swahili used mostly in Tanzania, in town. Picked up some Maasai and other local languages outside of the classroom.

Other Program Information

* Where did you live?

Select all that apply

  • Other
* Who did you live with?

Select all that apply

  • Americans

A Look Back

* What did you like most about the program?
  • Small group size
  • Specific program focus (wildlife management)
  • Remote locations
* What could be improved?
  • Staff/faculty in Kenya did not mingle with students as much as in Tanzania
* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? A student willing to live very far outside of his/her/zir/their comfort zone would love this program. Someone who wants to meet people from very different backgrounds, willing to share their story and get very close to a small group of 30 students.

Individual Course Reviews

Course Name/Rating:

Wildlife Management

Course Department:
Instructor:
Instruction Language: English
Comments:
Credit Transfer Issues:
Course Name/Rating:

Wildlife Ecology

Course Department:
Instructor:
Instruction Language: English
Comments:
Credit Transfer Issues:
Course Name/Rating:

Directed Research

Course Department:
Instructor: John Kiringe
Instruction Language: English
Comments: This was my highlight of the semester. Great to do the research project from data collection, to research, analysis, and writing. Very satisfying to produce a piece of work at the end I could be proud of. I was very well prepared by Mount Holyoke to do this, and now am very prepared for any other academic writing and research projects.
Credit Transfer Issues:
Course Name/Rating:

Swahili and Social Culture

Course Department:
Instructor:
Instruction Language: Swahili/English
Comments:
Credit Transfer Issues:
Course Name/Rating:

Politics and Policy

Course Department:
Instructor:
Instruction Language: English
Comments:
Credit Transfer Issues: