Sunday, November 23, 2014

Working, learning, running

Hi everyone, and happy Sunday.

Between my last post and today I've been embarking on some projects in my still-new community (I now have four months in Citalá), and trying to utilize my free time in the most edifying ways I can.

Attending a graduation with some other PCVs
With respect to work activities, I have been teaching business management and entrepreneurship principles to high schoolers, reinforcing English learning with teachers who want to improve their English skills, and continuing with a drama class I started almost as soon as I arrived here. Most recently, I have begun supporting a fledgling tourism promotion organization in my community, which I am excited about, as Citalá has modest tourism potential that it is currently leaving unexploited. Specifically, I am working with the group on a security assessment of the municipality. The context here is that while the main target segment for tourism in Citalá will be middle-class professionals based in the capital (two hours away), due to the security situation in the country, many people with disposable income are hesitant to explore unfamiliar areas despite commanding the financial resources to do so. As the security situation in Citalá is among the most favorable in the country, the logic behind publishing a transparent and honest security assessment is that it will assist in allaying the safety concerns that middle-class people have to visit Citalá while highlighting a competitive advantage Citalá enjoys over similar destinations.

I hope and expect that more opportunities will arise through my collaboration with the tourism organization. This will of course depend on whether the individuals involved will be able to stay committed to the organization and maintain a high level of motivation. Most Peace Corps Volunteers will agree with me when I say that the most important resource when working in community economic development—of much greater consequence than money or even time—is motivation.

In addition to the projects I have mentioned, another part of my work is community integration. I know that sounds jargon-y, but an important tenet of Peace Corps is intercultural exchange and the projection of a positive image of America. In keeping with this responsibility as a PCV, I regularly attend cultural events and socialize with locals. For example, as El Salvador maintains a January-to-November academic year, I've recently been attending graduations in my community. Locals generally seem appreciative of volunteers when we take an interest in their rituals and culture, and as such these gestures promote positive ties between Americans and host country nationals.

Outside of work, in the last few months I have taken up MOOCs in a significant fashion. For those of you unfamiliar with the term, a MOOC is a massive open online course, accessed through providers such as Coursera (which I use) and EdX. The foundation of any MOOC is video lectures and periodic assessments (usually multiple-choice or short-answer question exams), and some also feature readings, written assignments, peer assessments, and interactive virtual office-hour sessions with professors. Courses are developed through collaborations between the MOOC providers and universities (and occasionally non-university institutions with expertise in a particular subject). As such, they provide a platform from which universities can promote their brands, while allowing people to access quality education online, free of charge. At this point, Coursera (which is for-profit) and EdX (a nonprofit supported by MIT and Harvard) are ad-free and generate revenue by charging students for verified certificates of course completion. I am interested to see where the MOOC industry heads in terms of its financial sustainability.

The reason I have embarked upon a regiment of MOOCs (aside from a general love of learning and a outsize amount of free time for a person my age--such is the Peace Corps lifestyle) is that I have recently developed a much greater interest in business, and have decided to pursue private-sector employment after Peace Corps. The classes I'm taking on Coursera, thus, are business-related, such as Introduction to Finance (UMichigan) and Introduction to Marketing (UPenn).

Also with the motive of developing my knowledge of business and different industries of interest, I have recently begun using Twitter again (you may have noticed the new sidebar on my blog). Feel free to follow me @frankjalarcon.

Lastly, on the topic of lifestyle, in the last few months I have for the first time in my life fully embraced running. I have been running on-and-off for years, usually reluctantly, like when I studied abroad and didn't have access to a gym. It has been something I have done as a last-resort form of exercise, not a beloved pastime. Most recently, I decided to change that. I simply decided that instead of just tolerating running as a default of exercise, I would like it. And it worked! I've been running around 15 or 20 miles a week (I know this because I track my runs with a neat app called RunKeeper) for the past few months, and it's an activity I look forward to and relish. It's somewhat astounding how a deliberate mindset shift can completely overhaul one's attitude toward something.

That's all for now. Feel free to contact me directly with any questions.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Work updates mostly

Saludos --

I'm now a month-and-a-half into my assignment in Citalá, and exactly halfway through my 27-month service in El Salvador. Citalá so far is meeting my expectations. People here are proving to offer the support necessary to make productive use of me, which in my view is the most important determinant of volunteer success and contentment. This is not to say there are so many people here eager to undertake projects that I'm booked every day from eight to five. Unfortunately, such a situation is virtually unheard of in Peace Corps El Salvador. But it is to say that there is enough going on here to keep me feeling optimistic and engaged.

Work-wise, so far I have begun teaching a weekly drama class with 7th-9th graders at the primary school, which is good fun. Who knew that what I learned during my four years in CTE at Tam High would come in handy five years later in El Salvador? Additionally, soon I'll be starting an entrepreneurship class at the high school and an English conversation section with high schoolers attending the private Adventist school in town. The management of all three educational institutions has been very welcoming and willing to collaborate, an openness that PCVs in this country cannot always count on.

Apart from my work in the schools, I am hoping to engage with a committee that the alcaldía just formed to promote tourism in the municipality. I see modest potential for Citalá with respect to tourism development--owing to its proximity to existing touristic amenities, charming ambiance, and pleasant climate--and am interested to ascertain the vision of the committee when I attend one of its meetings for the first time tomorrow. Ideally I would like to find a way for the touristic ambitions of the alcaldía and the entrepreneurial ambitions of the high schoolers to complement one another, but it is yet too early to tell if such a collaboration is within the realm of feasibility.

Another development I am looking forward to with restrained optimism is the renewal of the ADESCO (Asociación de Desarrollo Comunitario) that represents the downtown neighborhood of Citalá and has been mostly dormant of late. The alcaldía is coordinating the effort to elect a new ADESCO board of directors, and though there are all kinds of partisan tensions simmering beneath the surface (I shouldn't and won't go into details), my hope is that the ADESCO leadership that emerges is a motivated group of individuals willing to work for the common good in spite of political differences. We shall see.

Lastly, I expect to co-lead some HIV prevention workshops for youth over the next few months. Last week using PEPFAR funds Peace Corps hosted a training-of-trainers event on HIV prevention to which each volunteer was able to bring two counterparts. I invited one of the health promoters at the medical clinic in Citalá, as well as a person who coordinates a youth group in town. They enjoyed the training and are very motivated to co-lead trainings with me in Citalá using the techniques they learned.

The novelty of working in a community with motivated individuals is not wearing off one bit.

Until next time,
Frank

Above: Some festivities celebrating Central American Independence
Below: Volunteers and counterparts at the HIV prevention training

Thursday, July 31, 2014

New site, new opportunities

Citalá as viewed from the hill overlooking it, with
my new friend Ale in the foreground.
Having left Toreras last Friday after ten months there, I'm now living and working in the charming town of Citalá, Chalatenango, El Salvador, located in the country's northwest. If my first six days in Citalá are any indication of what's to come, I think I'm going to be quite happy during my fourteen-or-so months here. People here are sociable and inviting, and hearteningly display great pride in their hometown, and my host family here is helpful and fun to be around. The contrasts between my new and old sites are enormous. While despair and hopelessness lamentably consumed Toreras, vibrancy prevails here. Having WiFi at home and reliable cell signal also don't hurt...

I realize that in time I am sure to encounter some sources of frustration as I begin work projects here (this is inevitable in any country), and that I am in the thick of my site "honeymoon" (as Peace Corps parlance would have it), but for now I am content to enjoy said honeymoon and be grateful for all that Citalá offers that I was not able to count on in my previous location.

That's all for now. Feel free to contact me directly with any questions.

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Heading Out West

I have some exciting news to announce: Next week I'm moving to a new site, where I'll serve out the remaining fourteen months of my time as a volunteer in El Salvador.

I hope to bring to a close the days of lamenting Toreras' inadequacies as a Peace Corps site, so it will suffice to say that a community without aspirations for its future cannot make productive use of a Peace Corps Volunteer. I have learned and grown a great deal over the course of my nine months in Toreras, and do not regret having been sent there, but I would be lying if I said that I am not very happy to have an opportunity to spend the duration of my Peace Corps service in a place that has some capacity to make use of me and offers reasons to feel hopeful about its future and the future of El Salvador.

That place is Citalá, Chalatenango, a small city on the western side of the country. I visited there last week with my Project Manager to meet a few community leaders and my future host family, and left with a favorable first impression. I am reticent to provide many details, having only visited my new community briefly, so I'll leave those to future posts. 

I leave Toreras on Thursday, July 24, and my first day in Citalá will be Friday, July 25.