
University Professor Michael Waterman shares a lunch with students at Parkside.
|
Dorm Life Goes Global
Parkside combines college living and international learning
By Katherine Yungmee Kim
January 2005
On the third floor of the International Residential College at
Parkside, three young womenfreshman-year suitematesare in their
rooms, with the doors opened, studying for their finals. At first
glance, their suite is much like others you would find in an American
universitybooks and papers strewn across the floor, bunk beds,
microwave ovens. But there is something very different about this
living experience.
There are eight women who live in this suite: two are Indians born and
raised in Thailand, three are from the United States, one is from
Brazil, one is from the Dominican Republic and one is from Hong Kong.
The three from the U.S. are African American, Korean American and
Chinese American. Dipika Ratnaphat, a third-generation Indian Thai, is
giving a tour of her suite, comparing Parkside to the international
school she attended in Bangkok.
At Parkside, American and international students and faculty live
together, eat together, speak each others languages and learn about
each others religions and cultures. There are 680 students who live in
the residential college, and over 25 percent are from other countries.
Ratnaphat, a USC College student majoring in Chinese (she is already
fluent in Thai, Hindi, Punjabi and Spanish) and journalism, says that
being so far away from home is a lot easier when there are so many
others in the same boat. She spent her first Thanksgiving with other
international students in the dining hall at Parkside, where she said
she had the annual holiday turkey dinner
for the first time in
America.
Global Living
Based on the British system of residential collegeswhere faculty and
students reside together on campusParkside opened in January 2002.
There are currently three other residential colleges on
campusBirnkrant, North and Newbut Parkside is the only one that has
an overriding academic theme: to promote internationalization.
Were not just international students or majors, says Dan Tauss,
Parksides Area Director and USC College graduate student in
International Relations. But we get the students interested in
internationalization in some way.
Each year, resident advisors (RAs) decorate their floors to represent a
different country. A central lounge on the third floor of the suites
has a closet, which when opened, reveals a washing station for
religious ceremonies, such as Ramadan. The top floor of the Parkside
Apartments, where residents have their own kitchens, has a Muslim theme
on the north end and a Jewish theme on the south end.
The Collaborative Learning Center, a large study space on the first
floor of the suites, holds vitrines of artifactswood carvings,
instruments, fabricsfrom around the world, donated by USC College alum
Helen Donegan. Each week, international language groups, led by a
fluent speaker, are held in the common room for those who want to
practice their conversation skills.
The groups are offered in Chinese, Vietnamese, French, Korean, Spanish, Turkish, Japanese, Taiwanese, Farsi, Arabic and Russian.
A Real Influence
USC University Professor Michael Waterman, USC Associates Chair in
Natural Sciences, is in his second year as Faculty Master at Parkside.
One of the goals, he explains, is to form a community that includes
the students and the faculty.
On Tuesday nights, he holds a Masters Dinner in the Senior Commons
Room. A door that is attached to the cafeteria is opened up so that
students can go and get their dinners, and come sit on the chairs and
couches in the Commons Room to hear a presentation. The topics vary
from politics to art to climate change to films, Waterman says.
On Wednesday evenings, he hosts a small dinnerlimited to 12of
Parkside residents. I drive off campus and bring some ethnic food for
the dinner: Thai, Cuban, Oaxacan, Italian, he details. Students help
me set the table, serve the food and clean up after. It is an
opportunity for me to interact more closely with the students and I
have greatly enjoyed these evenings.
David Schwartz, a professor of genetics and chemistry at the University
of Wisconsin, was recently a guest at one of these dinners. He was
moved by the openness and intimacy of the conversation. I truly
believe that these dinners that Professor Waterman is hosting do change
a students perception of their place at the university in many
wonderfully positive ways, Schwartz wrote. I wish I had such
opportunity when I was a college student.
Other USC College professors live at Parkside: Stephen Toulmin,
professor of anthropology, is a senior faculty resident; Ricardo
Ramirez, assistant professor of political science and American Studies
& Ethnicity, and Mitch Earleywine, associate professor of
psychology, live in the suites with their families.
The Best Place To Live
Nitin Sharma, from Ludhiana, India, has been an RA at Parkside for
three years. He is explaining two programs at the dorm: Reel World
Dinners and Reel L.A. The Reel World dinners occur several times a
semester and focus on a different culture each time, with speakers,
films, and food. Reel L.A. is an annual springtime documentary-making
competition, where students are given cameras and sent to an ethnic
neighborhood in Los Angeles to film and edit their projects on
Saturday, to be screened and judged on Sunday night.
Others see this as the best dorm on campus, says Sharma, a senior
majoring in economics and math, and computer science. One of the
reasons is that its the nicest place to live.
I feel very lucky, he says of his experience at Parkside, Ive had
so many advantagesthe types of people Ive had the opportunity to
interact with. Different passions, different backgrounds and
international interests. The ways in which Ive gotten to know a good
number of faculty who either live here or are associated with Parkside,
or come here to lecture. Ive really benefited, he says happily. Its
really added to my educational experience.
|
 |
|