Rio Grande Gap Year Semester: Stories of Culture, Identity, & Environment Along the Southern Boarder
- United States of America
About Program
Trek to the headwaters of the Rio Grande, float sections of the river in New Mexico and Texas, and explore the living intersections of culture, identity, and justice along the southern border on this gap year semester program.
Divisions between cultures and national borders are constantly in flux. Few are more dramatic and multi-layered as that between the United States and Mexico. The Rio Grande currently makes up half of the US southern border, but this wasn’t always the case. Cultures, nations, and shared histories along the river are much older than either the US or Mexico. A deeper investigation of these histories and present realities allows for greater understanding and more engaged advocacy to counteract the political and social narratives that can simplify and polarize border issues. Throughout this semester study groups will meet with both ancestral and more recent stewards of the land and engage issues related to current border tensions.
Video and Photos
Diversity & Inclusion 💙
BIPOC Support
LGBTQIA+ Support
In some cases, students may be advised not to speak about their sexual orientations and/or gender identities with local contacts (such as homestay families, ISP mentors, language teachers, and guest speakers) due to safety concerns. Likewise, transgender and non-binary students may have to choose to present outwardly as male or female in certain contexts during the program. In other cases, “coming out” to some or all host community members may be a safe choice.
Neurodivergent Support
Accessibility Support
Impact 🌎
Sustainability
Ethical Impact
Learning Service is a holistic experience that combines an intimate and authentic engagement with the local community, the study of effective development, and the contribution to an established community-driven project. It is the process of living, working alongside, and humbly absorbing the culture of those being served while coordinating closely with project managers to understand the trajectory of the project, from inception to completion and beyond. It is an acknowledgment that often it is the volunteer who stands to gain as much or more from the work. And it is a commitment to making contributions that create positive impacts in the communities coupled with the humility to always listen and learn first.
Program Highlights
- Hear stories from communities, cultures, and the land, from pre-Hispanic to early Mexico to present day
- Explore our own relationship to land and water as we float sections of the Rio Grande around Taos, NM and Big Bend, TX and learn how natural forces have shaped the landscape.
- Gain a deeper understanding of sustainability and food sovereignty from cutting edge regenerative agriculture projects in Taos, NM and the San Luis Valley, CO
- Look critically at US immigration policy, nationalism, and social justice, meeting with organizations at the front-line of immigrant-advocacy work
- Trek to the headwaters of the Rio Grande on a multi-day backpacking expedition in the Southern Rockies