Learning to change the world


May 27th, 2010 9:54 AM UTC
By ONE Partners

Want to know what a real world education for someone who wants to change the world looks like?

I work for Global Citizen Year (GCY), a non-profit social venture that is redefining the path to global leadership. We’re doing this by embedding high school graduates in developing nations during a bridge year before college.

Before we send our Fellows abroad, we host a US Training Institute that exposes our students to the theory behind economic development, leadership, and social innovation. We bring in Stanford professors, social entrepreneurs, and business leaders. It’s the workshop of all workshops.

But theory is different than practice. Ian Zimmermann, a GCY Fellow who recently returned from Guatemala, will tell you that real-world learning takes time and patience. For his experience, he found that he first had to learn a common language and take in the culture, building a new identity and creating trusting relationships. Only then was he able to understand the cultural history of the community and begin to identify what he could provide to the students of his school.

A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of spending a weekend with our first class of Fellows. They were speaking new languages, discussing how they earned the respect of their host communities, and describing how they carved out a role for themselves at their organizations.

Throughout our re-entry sessions, when our Fellows considered larger questions about poverty and development, their insights were nuanced and specific to the places in which they lived – with a newfound understanding that there really are no silver bullets in overcoming poverty.

After four days of discussion and reflection, there was a clear consensus: immersion abroad is a pre-requisite for exploration and deeper understanding of any of our global challenges. To get at the root of any social problem you must first understand it through the eyes of the community.

The takeaway here? Our Fellows are now approaching college with new experiences and lots of curiosity. The prospect of more schooling no longer feels like a drag—instead, it feels exciting and practical.

I can’t help but think that this is the type of real world education that could prepare the next generation to take on the complexity of the global challenges we face.

For a glimpse of what two of our Fellows experienced in Senegal, take a look at the video below.

Profiles of 2 GCY Fellows in Senegal from Global Citizen Year on Vimeo.

-Wil Keenan, Global Citizen Year

TAGS: From Our Partners

  1. Debbie Ksays: May 27th, 2010 12:33 PM EST

    May 27, 2010 at 12:33 pm

    GREAT report from Wil – keep up your enthusiasm & positive energy! It is exactly from people like you & grassroots orgs like Global Citizen Year that the TRUEST progress will be made in the fight against extreme poverty.

    Because what ultimately matters in our movement is NOT how many NGO’s there are sitting in offices & micromanaging social change from behind a desk, but how many of us are on the FRONTLINES, at the grassroots of the world’s poorest societies, lifting up people’s hopes & lives. ~ All the best.

    AS ONE, debbie
    http://www.mpwn-uganda.org

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