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Interterm Courses Bring Perspective, Growth for Students, Faculty

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
Writer"

Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

Writer"

303 871-2660

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Interterm courses are shorter, intensive experiences offered between each quarter. Registration for Spring interterm is now open. You can find more information, see a list of courses or register听

Dehrian Ramirez snaps a photo during his trip to Rome during the winter interterm.
Dehrian Ramirez snaps a photo during his trip to Rome during the winter interterm.

Every Friday, Dehrian Ramirez would walk out the door with his mother鈥檚 homemade tamales. Week after week he sold them 鈥 a half dozen for $12, a dozen for $20.

The senior real estate major knew he had to do whatever it took to bankroll what he hoped would be a life-changing experience.

Sure enough, this past winter, he found himself exploring the streets of Italy with the camera he borrowed from his brother. The Photography and Culture in Rome course he took may be the best money he鈥檚 spent.

鈥淚t was an unbelievable experience,鈥 Ramirez says. 鈥淭here's just so much to see, so much history there, so many museums and art.鈥

The week in Rome was just one of听10 international interterm opportunities听offered this past winter by the听Office of Special Programs.听As in past years, the length and curricula varied, but each course featured a small number of students and focused on experiential learning, with a distinct multicultural identity and purpose.

Students learn about indigenous history and rock art from South African archaeologist Janette Deacon during an winter interterm course. (Photo: Mike Kerwin)
Students learn about indigenous history and rock art from South African archaeologist Janette Deacon. (Photo: Mike Kerwin)

Assistant professor Thomas Lavanchy, who teaches courses on geography and the environment, typically includes lessons on racism and government corruption when he takes students to South Africa for two weeks.

鈥淭hey get off the plane wide-eyed, but by the end of the trip, they are comfortable with being in a foreign place,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou see their growth as global citizens and as travelers.鈥

In Lavanchy鈥檚 class, students study plate tectonics and climate while hiking. They visit wine country to talk history and the economy. In diamond mines, they take notes on business. Along the way, they meet people from all corners of South African society.

鈥淚t鈥檚 these relationships and stories that get told that you can鈥檛 replicate in the classroom,鈥 Lavanchy says. 鈥淲e want them to get something out of it, not just travel as a tourist but travel as an informed person. Enjoy that experience and do fun things but also have a bit of reflection that goes beyond these two weeks.鈥

Interterm, Lavanchy says, is ideal for students who can鈥檛 commit to a full quarter of international study, perhaps because of a heavy course load or extra-curricular obligations.

But it鈥檚 also ideal, says associate professor Bob Uttaro, for anyone looking for a more focused, introspective experience.

鈥淎t the end of the day, this is what education is supposed to be,鈥 says Uttaro, who took 17 students to Kenya this winter. 鈥淚 think it gives us an opportunity to think about how we can get our students out there to take what they learn in the classroom and apply it.鈥

There are no prerequisites for Uttaro鈥檚 Conservation, Communities and Culture class 鈥 or for any interterm course for that matter.

鈥淚t doesn't matter what you鈥檙e majoring in. These are issues that touch everybody,鈥 Uttaro says. 鈥淭he one thing we heard constantly from students is at the end of the trip they said it was transformational.鈥

That鈥檚 certainly the way Dehrian Ramirez feels. Professionally, a foreign city gave him a new perspective on property development and public transit. Personally, he鈥檚 grown more mature and independent. Interterm, and the work it took to get there, was beyond worthwhile.

鈥淚f you weren't able to study abroad, do it for sure. If you went abroad, do it as well,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 more than recommend it.鈥