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Humphrey Fellow Shares Armenian Culture With Local Children

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  • Humphrey Fellow Shares Armenian Culture With Local Children

    HUMPHREY FELLOW SHARES ARMENIAN CULTURE WITH LOCAL CHILDREN

    Cornell Chronicle, Ithaca, NY
    Dec 6 2013

    By Amanda Ward

    Cornell faculty, visiting fellows, graduate students and Ithaca
    community members are exposing Ithaca-area K-12 students to languages
    and cultures in hopes of stimulating students' interest in studying
    foreign languages - including Japanese, Vietnamese, Indonesian,
    Mandarin, Korean, Macedonian, Burmese, Tagalog, Tibetan, Polish,
    Turkish, Armenian and Swahili.

    The volunteers work through Cornell's community outreach program
    CERIS (Cornell Educational Resources for International Studies), a
    collaboration of the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and
    Area Studies Programs. The program, which seeks to internationalize
    U.S. students' education in community centers and schools in the
    Ithaca area, includes language instruction classes and cultural
    immersion activities in art, music, math, drawing and cooking.

    The language teachers are for the most part native speakers of the
    language they teach, and most have K-12 teaching experience. One
    such teacher, Harutyun Gevorgyan, heads information and research
    programs at the Armenian National Agrarian University, where he's
    also a lecturer. This year, as a Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow at Cornell,
    Gevorgyan teaches Armenian to about 20 elementary school students at
    the Greater Ithaca Activities Center.

    "As a lecturer in Armenia, I became very interested in volunteering
    for the CERIS language program to share my culture and language,"
    Gevorgyan says. "I focus on engaging my students in reading, writing
    and speaking Armenian vocabulary words, and I have also incorporated
    cultural experience into the classroom.

    "We have picture-drawing contests, and I give Armenian sweets as
    prizes. I use games such as bingo to reinforce vocabulary, tell
    Armenian fairytales, and teach how to cook Armenian desserts, such
    as alani, which is made by stuffing peaches with walnuts, sugar
    and butter."

    As a Humphrey fellow, Gevorgyan looks for projects for future
    collaboration between Cornell and his home institution. Gevorgyan
    says he hopes he is expanding the worldview of his students beyond
    Ithaca and inspiring them to explore cultures and languages. CERIS
    is working to expand and internationalize the education that American
    students are receiving.

    The Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program provides a year of
    professional enrichment in the United States for experienced midcareer
    professionals from developing countries. Fellows are selected based
    on their potential for leadership and their commitment to public
    service in either the public or private sector.

    Amanda Ward is a graduate student assistant at the Mario Einaudi
    Center for International Studies.

    http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/2013/12/humphrey-fellow-shares-armenian-culture-children

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