|
Sustainable Community Development Is Focus of Education Project in Vietnam
It should come
as no surprise that internationally engaged faculty members in MSU's College
of Education expect there to be educational solutions to serious world
problems. Historically, faculty from that college have been involved in
the establishment of educational programs, and even new universities,
in countries around the world. More recently, projects in Southeast Asia
headed by Chris Wheeler in teacher education employ unique strategies
and collaborative partnerships to attack simultaneously problems such
as poverty, malnutrition, and environmental degradation in rural settings.
The most recent of these projects, "Integrating Educational Improvement
with Environmental Resource Management to Reduce Poverty in the Mekong
Delta of Vietnam," is a joint project between Michigan State University
and Cantho University (CTU), the main university for the province of Cantho
in the Mekong Delta area of Vietnam. CTU is a large comprehensive university
with a college of agriculture, a college of education, and a land-grant
focus. Its facilities include an agricultural research station in the
village of Hoa An attuned to the needs of the surrounding rice-producing
farms.
The project is being funded by a two-and-a-half-year grant of $318,000
from the Shell Sustainable Communities Programme as well as a $120,000
three-year linkage grant from the U.S. Department of State. Wheeler, along
with MSU colleagues Phu Van Nguyen (forestry), Jim Gallagher (teacher
education), William Hug (teacher education) and postdoctoral student Annelise
Carleton (fisheries and wildlife), are working with Cantho University
colleagues, led by Le Quang Minh, vice rector and professor at the institution,
and including Phung Thi Nguyet Hong, Shell grant manager, and Duong Quang
Minh, linkage grant project manager and Cantho lecturer in physics education.
rly by
improving household income, reducing malnutrition, and helping villagers
address important natural resource management issues through an innovative
approach to education and learning. Serious poverty characterizes rural
village life in the Mekong Delta. Among the many causes of poverty, environmental
resource management practices and a generally ineffective education system
are two major ones.
"What is unique about our project is the integrated approach to correcting
these problems," Wheeler says. "Our strategy to address this problem of
rural poverty is to link schools and communities in new ways. We have
learned that schools, and particularly children from the village, can
be a very powerful force for raising issues that the villagers know something
about, but have never addressed on a collective level."
The Cantho project is modeled on an earlier multidisciplinary project
Wheeler directed in the late 1990s in Thailand, the "Social Forestry,
Education, and Participation Project." In addition to Wheeler and Gallagher
from the College of Education, the project included Maureen McDonough
from the Department of Forestry, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
Funded by the Ford Foundation, the MSU Foundation, and the government
of Thailand, the project took place in an area of northern Thailand with
major deforestation problems. Students in rural primary and secondary
schools studied local problems related to forest management and then worked
with villagers on small-scale social forestry projects.
In Wheeler's words, "The overall project objective is to promote sustainable
community development in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam, particulaThe Cantho project is actually two interlinked projects. One, funded
by the Shell grant, is a community development project designed to boost
household income by expanding the sources of income generation. The other,
funded by the linkage grant, focuses on teacher education, with the objective
that future teachers will move away from teaching methods emphasizing
rote memorization toward more participatory teaching involving the understanding
of real-world problems.
A primary support facility for the project is CTU's research station,
located about 40 kilometers from the campus in the village of Hoa An.
The facility, Wheeler explains, "currently specializes in research on
the effects of acid sulfate soil, but has a farm systems approach, where
they are actually doing a lot of small-scale household-income-generating
projects." Through the Shell grant project, the research station is being
expanded into a "co-learning center." Hoa An community members will have
opportunities to learn about agroforestry projects, organic gardens, integrated
pest management projects, aquaculture projects, ideas for expanding the
kinds of livestock raised, and even biogas projects and will receive support
to use their knowledge for small-scale household-income-generating projects.
Widespread application of these ideas should help stem the overuse of
fertilizers and pesticides, improve poor surface-water quality resulting
from human and animal waste, and solve problems associated with acid sulfate
soil, all of which have negative effects on rice production.
In August 2001, an initial set of workshops was held in the two target
communities, An Binh (a village near the city of Cantho) and Hoa An. During
the workshops, four recent CTU graduates were trained for roles as facilitators
and evaluators. A learning community involving CTU faculty, local teachers
and principals, and the four field workers was also developed. Between
August and November, fieldworkers collected baseline data about the communities
using surveys and focus groups, the lead teachers gained experience with
the new teaching methods, and relationships were established with all
teachers in the six schools serving the target areas.
Although still in its early stages, the Cantho project shows every sign
of eventual success in meeting its community development and educational
reform objectives. Faculty in MSU's College of Education and beyond who
are interested in issues of international education will also find the
project valuable. Wheeler is optimistic that "this project will open the
door for additional ones involving Michigan State faculty in Vietnam,
particularly in the Mekong Delta." |