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Nov 23, 2024
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Course Catalog 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
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ANTH 215 - Tanzania: Education and Development The course explores the considerable challenges facing countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Tanzania, one of the poorest countries on the continent, has a long history of trying to engineer development through educational change. Students are introduced to this rich history from the pre-colonial period to the present which includes: a look at traditional education systems in several of the 120 different cultures of Tanzania; the introduction of mission and colonial schools; ujamaa socialist education models in the 1960s-80s; and current attempts to make secondary school a universal right for all children. The program begins in the Northern International city of Arusha with its many museums, international war crimes tribunal court, and thriving markets to Kilimanjaro regional capital city Moshi town for a week of lectures and site visits to schools, coffee cooperatives, local industries, hospitals, and development projects. We then head for our base on Mount Kilimanjaro, a cultural heritage site and the only snow-capped mountain that straddles the equator. Our home for two weeks is Rongai, a town located in national forest conservation territory. The course is run like an intensive ethnographic field school.
Credits 1
Notes Faculty led oversease trip.
Permission of Program Coodinator
Area Social Science
Division Social Science
Foundation Beyond the West
Compass Attributes Global Honors, Social Science, Taylor and Lane Scholars
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