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Botswana: University Immersion in Southern Africa

Gaborone, Botswana

Botswana Program Students Present Their Independent Study Projects at Poster Session

Published: April 24, 2012

Botswana Program students showing their project posters

Photos courtesy of Firas Suqi

In what has become an annual tradition, students on the ACM Botswana: University Immersion in Southern Africa program presented the results of their independent study projects on April 20 at a poster session and reception at the University of Botswana (UB) in Gaborone, which hosts the program.

About 100 people from the university and surrounding community attended the event to hear about projects on topics ranging from the consequences of urbanization on monkeys in Gaborone, to the development and preservation of traditional culture, to economic empowerment in marginalized populations.

The independent project is one of the program's four academic components, giving students the opportunity to explore their individual interests in current social issues in Botswana and southern Africa. In recent years, students have conducted projects in areas such as health care, business and development, immigration, gender relations, social trends, the arts, and governmental programs and policies.

The poster session highlights the Botswana Program's commitment to rigorous scholarship, independent study, and sharing the students' findings with the broader community, according to Bill Moseley, a geography professor at Macalester College who is the Botswana Program Director this spring.

The projects all involved primary data collection, often in the form of interviews, and were vetted in advance by the UB office of research and development and a relevant government ministry. Moseley supervised the students' projects.

Moseley opened the event with a brief introduction, followed by remarks from the Director of the UB Office of International Education and Partnerships and the Director of the UB Office of Research and Development. For the remainder of the session, guests talked individually with the 14 students about their projects. The students' project posters will remain on display for a week in the UB Library building.

Along with the independent study project, program participants study Setswana language, take a course taught by the Program Director, and choose an elective course at UB taught by university faculty. Students also volunteer with community service organizations and other non-governmental organizations in Gaborone, and live in a residence hall at the University of Botswana.

This spring, the program also included a rural homestay; a weekend trip to Johannesburg, South Africa; a week-long trip to northern Botswana, including the Okavanga Delta and Chobe National Park; and a visit to the Jwaneng diamond mine.

Botswana Program students showing their project posters included (at right, from the top): Kayla Musgjerd, Lauren Rueda, Marcel Baugh, Axumawit Teklu, Megan Slavish, Melissa Eisenberg, and Emily Johnson.

Botswana Program students and their projects

Use the links to see the students' posters (if available). See the program webpage for a list of student projects in recent years.


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Laura Eberly The ACM Botswana program presented me with an array of experiences which, from the phenomenal to the mundane, challenged my understanding of development, Africa, people, and myself. I appreciated equally opportunities to meet current and former presidents and listen to federal budget presentations and the opportunities to ride khombis and to work side by side with Batswana women discussing and laughing about clients and husbands in mixed English and Setswana. I alternately cherished and struggled with the slow pace of life, the subtle, roundabout conversations, and the overwhelming heat, but through these transformations confronted serious questions about research, international development, my involvement in different communities, the political and social systems of my own country, and the intricacies of friendship. It was an extraordinary journey.

—Laura Eberly, Botswana, Spring 2008

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