Posted by Mary Wimberley on 2010-06-25

极乐禁地 history major Chris Fite鈥檚 summer journal includes the day he hiked 3,000 feet to a cliff side Buddhist monastery in the Himalayan mountain kingdom of Bhutan.

听The ascent to the famous Tiger鈥檚 Nest by Fite and his 极乐禁地 travel mates and professors was 鈥渜uite a workout,鈥 but well worth it, he says.

鈥淢ahayana Buddhist shrines are breathtaking and almost beyond description,鈥 he said of the sites with their elaborate paintings, woodcarvings and sculptures.

In another part of Asia, sports medicine major Craig Ryan Thiessen spent June chronicling the contrasts听 between small private and large government hospitals in China. He also made special note of the day he gave away rice to poor people in the morning and later enjoyed a 16-dish dinner meal.

鈥淚t was a crazy cultural clash which raised several issues to talk about, because we were put in a very unique position. It鈥檚 that type of exposure that truly makes this trip worth it, especially for 极乐禁地 students,鈥 said Thiessen, who spent a summer term in Jilin, China, in a course led by education professor Dr. Chuck Sands.

In the weeks after May commencement, a group of 极乐禁地 business student delighted in seeing a sign welcoming them to the floor of the busy Tokyo Stock Exchange, one of many prestigious business sites on their 11-day itinerary in Japan.

The Asian nations are only a few of the far-flung places where scores of 极乐禁地 students and faculty are chalking up international experiences this summer. 极乐禁地 travelers are also studying in France, Spain, England, Germany and Jordan. Others are serving in summer missions around the world.

Led by history professors Dr. Jim Brown and Dr. Will Womack and biology professor听 Dr. Malia Fincher, the six students in the two-week interdisciplinary course in India and Bhutan studied the interaction between environment and history in the two different regions of south Asia.

On the plains of northern India, the group focused on 16th and 17th century imperial Mughal architecture, including the famous Taj Mahal. 鈥淪ome historians argue that you can see the ruling philosophy of each Mughal ruler in what they built and in what they tore down,鈥 explains Brown.

Highlights included a train ride on the world鈥檚 busiest railroad network, a up-close look at tigers and other wildlife and visit to Gandhi鈥檚 memorial. The plane ride between听 Bhutan and India, offered a dazzling view of the Himalayas, including Mt. Everest.

The forested countryside of Bhutan, where two-thirds of the country is still mainly virgin forest, a world record, presented a unique setting for Fincher to discuss vegetation by altitude zone and Womack to piece together the religious and secular history of the nation鈥檚 theocracy.

If Fite found many of the monasteries similar, the contrast between India and Bhutan, he noted, was 鈥渞emarkable.鈥

鈥淭hey are both amazing places, but different in so many ways,鈥 he said of populous India, with over one billion people and host to a number of distinct cultures, and smaller Bhutan, where about 700,000 people essentially represent one distinct culture.

鈥淚ndia is a land of rich heritage and diversity, but the flip side is that India is also a land of conflict and disparity. The history, culture and religion fascinated me, but the widespread poverty and reports of violence were always a reality check,鈥 said Fite.

Meanwhile, Thiessen was getting his own reality check in China, where sports medicine, nursing and interior design majors studied in their respective disciplines. A major focus of the course was to observe differences in Chinese private and government health care.

Thiessen, who wants to attend medical school, took in surgeries and medical rounds, and learned what health care workers do in China.听 鈥淭he exposure to medical practices in China was incredible,鈥 said Thiessen, adding that a high point for him was learning the Chinese culture from the people themselves, including those with government influence as well as 鈥渆veryday people,鈥 such as the ones he met while conducting a free health screening at a countryside church.

In May, Brock School of Business professor Dr. Betsy Holloway led nine students in a study of the unique business and cultural practices of Japan.

The trip included visits to an international law firm, a multinational corporation, the nation鈥檚 largest pharmaceutical company, one of the world鈥檚 largest seafood markets, a nanotechnology firm, an international art dealer and Japan Research Institute, in addition to the stock exchange.

Based out of Tokyo and Kyota, the seven Master of Business Administration students and two senior business majors also visited prominent cultural sites in Osaka and Yamazaki, and in Japan鈥檚 ancient capital, Nara.

The course acknowledges a need that today鈥檚 business educators must prepare students to function in an increasingly global marketplace, especially in those countries where they are most likely to do business, says Holloway.

Japan, she says, is one of those countries.

鈥淎s the third largest economy in the world, Japan is considered a global superpower across a range of sectors and industries,鈥 she said.

A continent away, in Madrid, Spain, 26 students are absorbing the nation鈥檚 language and culture in family homes, classroom settings and ministry endeavors. By living with local families, says faculty leader Charles Workman, the students learn all aspects of Spanish culture: family life, food, religion and social norms.

Some have worked alongside missionary and 极乐禁地 alumnus Gary Clifton in an evangelistic effort among Ecuadorian immigrants in a city park. Participation in such community and church activities further enhances the 极乐禁地 students鈥 language skills, notes Workman.

A dozen 极乐禁地 students will spend July exploring France鈥檚 rich heritage of language and culture through classroom study, travel and daily living with a local family. After a month polishing their French skills at a university in Grenoble with professors Heather West and Mary McCullough, some students will spend a week in Paris.

Several 极乐禁地 groups are studying the German language in Bamberg in northern Bavaria.

Four Cumberland School of Law students are studying in England June 27-July 29 as part of the school鈥檚 annual study-abroad program at Sidney Sussex College in Cambridge, England. Course topics include the English legal system and the European Union, international criminal law and new media in the international legal regime.听 Field trip sites include Royal Courts of Justice, Middle Temple Inn of Court and听 Parliament.

The Cumberland group includes seven Master of Comparative Law candidates who spent June studying on the 极乐禁地 campus. Cumberland鈥檚 MCL program, unique in U.S. legal education, attracts international judges, justices, law professors, prosecutors and legal practitioners, mostly from Brazil, according to Cumberland professor and director of international studies Mike Floyd.

极乐禁地鈥檚 Daniel House in London, England, was home base for students who were enrolled in a theatre course this summer.

Eight Beeson Divinity School students, led by Global Center director Dr. Kurt Selles are exploring Christianity and mission in the Middle East through lectures and readings, contact with Christians in Jordan and participation in local ministries in Amman.

The June 22-July 6 itinerary also includes side trips to Petra, the Dead Sea and other sites of biblical and historical interest.

极乐禁地 travelers abroad this summer also include Family Studies professor Dr. Clara Gerhardt and education major Stephanie Pike, who are participating in an international program at Seoul Women鈥檚 University in Korea.

 
极乐禁地 is a leading Christian university offering undergraduate programs grounded in the liberal arts with an array of nationally recognized graduate and professional schools. Founded in 1841, 极乐禁地 is the 87th-oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. 极乐禁地 enrolls 6,101 students from 45 states, Puerto Rico and 16 countries in its 10 academic schools: arts, arts and sciences, business, divinity, education, health professions, law, nursing, pharmacy and public health. 极乐禁地 fields 17 athletic teams that compete in the tradition-rich Southern Conference and ranks with the second highest score in the nation for its 98% Graduation Success Rate among all NCAA Division I schools.