IFSP- Indonesia 2012
Special Funding Opportunity for 2012 Participants
$1,300 Stipend
Through a grant sponsored by the U.S. Department of State as part of the U.S. Indonesia Partnership Program for Study Abroad Capacity, the first 10 applicants accepted to the program will be eligible for a $1,300 stipend.
Priority will be given to current undergraduate and graduate students attending the University of Washington.
Read about the "UW part of national effort for greater ties with Indonesia" article below.
UW part of national effort for greater ties with Indonesia -- June 6, 2011 By Molly McElroy
Source: http://www.washington.edu/news/articles/uw-role-in-national-effort-for-greater-ties-with-indonesia
For 16 years, Randall Kyes, research professor in psychology
and director of
the UW
Center for Global Field Study, has led undergraduate and
graduate students on fieldwork expeditions to Indonesia.
Once on Tinjil Island, a biodiversity hotspot and home of one
of Southeast Asia’s premier primate natural habitat breeding
facilities, students conduct their own field studies while
developing research relationships with Indonesian students and
researchers.
Now Kyes’ program,
International Field Study Program-Indonesia, is getting a
financial boost from the feds. The UW is one of six U.S.
universities to receive funding from the U.S. Department of
State’s Bureau of
Educational and Cultural Affairs to increase the number of
American students studying in Indonesia, the
fourth most populated country in the world.
Worldwide, Indonesia is also the
third most populous democracy and has the largest Muslim
population. Its more than 17,000 islands make it the world’s
biggest archipelagic country.
The funding, which is part of the State Department’s two-year
U.S.-Indonesia Partnership Program for Study Abroad Capacity,
reflects the Obama administration’s interest in cultivating
relationships with Indonesia as a way to improve opportunities
for business, education, science and technology partnerships
between the two countries.
The Institute of International
Education, a nonprofit that coordinates international
exchange programs such as
the
Fulbright Program, will oversee the U.S.-Indonesia study
abroad partnership.
Kyes, a core scientist at the
Washington National Primate
Center, has been conducting primate field research in
Indonesia since 1990. He said: “I’m very pleased to see that the
U.S. government is working to improve ties with Indonesia. I
believe this initiative is an important step in helping to
expand the study abroad opportunities in Indonesia which
ultimately will serve to benefit both countries.”
The UW is among the most active U.S. universities in
Indonesia with faculty and staff throughout campus doing
fieldwork and other studies there.
“The UW has emerged as an
acknowledged national leader in Indonesian studies, with
research strengths across the entire spectrum of disciplines,
including language, culture, history, law, public health,
anthropology and environmental science,” said Stephen Hanson, UW
vice provost for global affairs.
Kyes’ program, in particular, has been “one of the real
pioneers in bringing American students to study in Indonesia,
working alongside their Indonesian colleagues on crucial issues
involving environmental preservation,” Hanson said.
The State Department funding to UW will be used for student
stipends for Kyes’ summer program,
International Field Study Program-Indonesia. The stipends
will help defray the costs of travel to Indonesia and will be
available for next summer’s expedition, June 28 to July 24,
2012.
Application information will be available later this summer
and applications will be due in February 2012.
The summer program includes a required pre-trip preparation
course offered during the spring quarter at UW. The course
covers basic Bahasa Indonesian conversation skills, planning
student research projects for the trip and preparing students
for what they should expect while living on Tinjil, a remote
island with no permanent residents.
“Students get to experience firsthand what it is like to live
in a tropical jungle setting while conducting research,” Kyes
said. Daily life includes hardships with pesky insects,
temperature extremes and lack of running water and electricity.
This year three students, two from UW and one from the
University of Texas at San Antonio, will accompany Kyes to
Indonesia.
More than 60 UW students have participated in the month-long
summer program since it began in 1995. The program is conducted
in collaboration with Bogor Agricultural University and also
involves Indonesian students.
The students have conducted surveys of vegetation and
biodiversity, such as in crabs, reptiles, birds and coral
populations. Following Kyes’ expertise, other students have
studied primate behavior, including sexual and feeding
behaviors, dominance, mother and infant relationships and issues
of human-wildlife conflict.
The students get a vivid experience with fieldwork while
learning about the interactions between conservation biology and
global health.
“The environment and human health are intimately linked, and
we are seeing increasing appreciation of the need to study these
areas as an integrated system,” Kyes said. “To be effective in
conservation, we have to be aware of human impacts on the
environment.”
