by Tony Moore
Let鈥檚 say you鈥檝e been studying Italian at Dickinson for a few years. Your classes have prepared you to speak, read and write in Italian. You study Italian culture, chat with other Italian majors and professors in Italian, follow the World Cup in La Gazzetta dello Sport.
You鈥檝e become mildly obsessed with how certain Italian words share their Latin roots with certain English words, and you start to notice that you think in Italian sometimes, that it鈥檚 really seeping into who you are on a day-to-day level.
In other words, you鈥檙e all in.
So at this point, you鈥檙e ready for what Luca Trazzi, visiting lecturer in Italian and Dickinson鈥檚 SITE contact, calls 鈥渁 rewarding combination of life, work and cultural experiences that very few internships can offer.鈥
(the Network of Autonomous Schools of the Lombardy Region鈥檚 Study and Intercultural Training and Experience) is a cultural exchange program and paid teaching internship that sends graduates to Italy for a full or partial year to teach classes at the secondary-school level. Students filter out of Dickinson, and around 50 other colleges and universities, each year into the program, and it鈥檚 nothing short of a life-changing experience.
鈥淭he SITE program is a wonderful opportunity,鈥 says Thiago Branco 鈥13, who majored in Italian studies and Latin American, Latino & Caribbean Studies and is a part of SITE as an 鈥渁ssistente madrelingua inglese,鈥 or 鈥淓nglish mother-tongue assistant.鈥 鈥淚t鈥檚 been developing in the richest region of Italy, and it鈥檚 an inestimable chance to understand how teaching works.鈥
That detail, how teaching works, might be surprisingly nebulous until graduates take the reins in the classroom, and the intensity of the SITE program鈥攖he immersive nature of the environment鈥攃an be a little intimidating at first blush.
鈥淢any rising seniors or recent graduates do not have previous teaching experience,鈥 says Trazzi, who himself came to Dickinson a decade ago as an exchange student from the University of Bologna. 鈥淎fter telling them not to panic, I explain what I did when I started teaching: Simply look back to when you were a student. Let your favorite professors inspire and guide you.鈥
They also tap into their Dickinson experiences as they prepare, which invariably leads to the conclusion that, experienced or not, they were ready all along.
鈥淚鈥檓 happily throwing myself into it, because spending my junior year abroad in Bologna taught me that I can rise to this kind of challenge,鈥 says Julia Barnes 鈥14, who majored in French and Italian studies and will head off to Lombardy in 2015. 鈥淎nd [my professors gave me] a solid foundation in my field: No matter how tough things get with my future students, the fact of the matter is that on an academic level I really know what I am doing.鈥
History major Wilson Riccardo 鈥12 has been through the program, and for him, inhabiting the role of a resident Italian was at the heart of the experience.
鈥淚n every period of my life, I try to really 鈥榣ive鈥 where I live,鈥 he says, noting that the SITE program led him to remain in Italy. 鈥淒uring that period, aside from the teaching itself, my Italian experience involved, as the Italians say, 鈥榗alarsi nel ruolo,鈥 鈥榩laying the part.鈥 鈥
Looking back, he realizes that the little details of playing the part (such as continually drinking coffee and never having dinner before 8 p.m.) gave way to something deeper. 鈥淚n more philosophical terms,鈥 he says, 鈥渋t meant learning to see the world from another point of view.鈥
All in, all over again.
Published July 22, 2014