South Africa Sparked a fire for international health care in my heart and changed my life Past Review

By (Nursing., Pacific Lutheran University) for

SIT Study Abroad: South Africa - Community Health and Social Policy

What did you gain/learn from your experience abroad? Was it worthwhile?
I loved this program and the opportunity to learn and participate in a new culture. I was offered a job in South Africa working in the clinic I did my ISP with and I would love to go back. After learning about Community health I am excited about Nursing school, where as before I was hesitant to start. I learned first hand about discrimination, and gender social justice. I am now even more away and passionate about bias awareness and community change.

Personal Information

How much international exposure did you have prior to this program? 2 weeks - 1 month

Review Your Program

* Overall educational experience

Academic rigor, intensity, resources, etc.

Working with a american based program I felt like the work load and expectations/ standards of work were simmilar, if not easier than a normal semester work load. The work load provided great opportunity for learning and personal research but was not too overwhelming that you were locked inside doing homework all day every day. SIT provided the last month of the program as a time for Independent Study Project and I loved this time. It was a time where students could look into a subject that they were very excited about and structure it to their comfort level, and immersion level. I chose to live and work in a complete immersion situation and I love it. I learned I could write more than I ever thought. On a negative note, there was a week where we participated in a red cross class, as a health major I did not learn anything from that week, or I could have learned everything in a day, so I felt there could have been a better use of academic learning time.

* Host Country Program Administration

On-site administration of your program

At times it felt like administration was not as organised as it should have been. During our rural home stays alot of the activities we were supposed to do didn't happen because scheduled leaders and community members were not contacted or didn't show up. Alot of the times we just ended up waiting and killing time. Sometimes the administrators were more concerned about making the budget work out than the experienced. Especially at the end of the program I felt like the administration should have been more available and active in independent study projects, there was no supervision, this had its pros and cons. We had freedom to peruse any topic we wanted but finding resources were left completely up to us. I had to find a home stay family, traditional healers, a host clinic and translator in a different rural area by myself. the administration made no accommodation for disability support for dyslexia. Over all the program size was good we broke off into smaller groups of 12 for rural home stays, i got to know every one on the program.

* Housing:

How satisfied were you with your living arrangements?

I lived in a number of different host families and I feel in love with them, they were one of the best part of my study away experiences. They help with integration into the culture, and helped with my language skills. In shorter homestays I felt like a guest, and it was a little uncomfortable but in longer homestays I was part of the family. In the townships I felt safe with my family but would not have gone out at night by myself, I just had to be street smart, and not do anything I wouldn't do at home. I did not like the time living in the apartments. I felt like you can live in apartments anywhere in the world but not with homestay families. i felt like I was being a tourist instead of being integrated into the culture. My home stay family/ friends were not even allowed to visit the apartments, it was segregation because of class, and race. My language skills suffered not living/ communicating with home stay families or communities for a month.

* Food:

Living with low income families we ate alot of chicken, fried foods, miliem meal. Lacking in fruits and vegetables. This was alot of the cultur. Living in the apartment we had access to grocery stories were we could buy healthy food, but our food stipen was limiting. We payed alot of money for the program and only had a food allotment equivalent to $4 US dollars/ day for breakfast lunch and dinner. I survived but it made eating healthy with out using extra money not budgeted for food difficult.

* Social & Cultural Integration:

How integrated did you feel with the local culture?

My home stay family was very helpful with cultural experience and integration. I made lots of local friends, who taught me the culture. The program had great experiences, with the Reid dance, Traditional Healers, drop day in Durban, Hector Peterson museum, living in the townships, visiting rural communities and hospitals, the draconburg mountains were amazing!

* Health Care:

How well were health issues addressed during the program?

* Safety:

My health was good, good fast access to modern medicine, and doctors. If I had gotten seriously injured during my independent study project I would have been concern but that was a risk that I took living in a rural area. I was safe because I was smart, but during my independent study project If anything had happened to me no one would have known in administration for a month. There was not checking in, or accountability. I felt safe with all my homestay famlies

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?

Considering I did not know any Zulu before the program my Zulu did get butter, but I wish the language component was longer instead of only 4 weeks. I wish we had had more homework to keep us accountable for studying. We practiced with our home stay families, which was by fare the mosts beneficial. I used Zulu every day when I was there, especially during my Independent Study Project. I was living in a very rural area where only 10ish people spoke fluent English. Many people could string a few sentences of English together and I could string a few sentences of zulu in order to communicate but it was the most difficult part of the experience. I didn't realized how much I assumed people should know english.

Other Program Information

* Where did you live?

Select all that apply

  • Host Family
  • Apartment
  • Hotel
  • Hostel
* Who did you live with?

Select all that apply

  • Americans
  • Host Family

A Look Back

* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? Start your independent study project write up during the independent study time, do not write it when you return to Durban, it will make the last week of your time in Africa so much more relaxing. On the other hand totally enjoy and treasure all the time with your home stay families and ISP insinuation. Chose a topic you are really excited about, that way when you get to page 40 of your project your are still excited about it. Get in contact to your ISP advisor at the beginning of the semester, they will help you but not if you contact them the last week you are trying to franticly write your project.