IRENE LÓPEZ PH.D.
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Cross Cultural Psychology:
A Globally Connected Course Between the U.S. & Saudi Arabia

One Student's Evaluation of the Course

2/7/2017

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Teaching about diversity is becoming increasingly hard in the U.S. Thus, I was overwhelmed with joy, with a former student of mine recently forwarded me this article that she wrote about her experience in my Cross Cultural Psychology class. In the article she wrote about how globally connecting with another student from Effat University completely changed her worldview. It's moments like these that make me feel more hopeful for a more inclusive world.:: 

www.hercampus.com/school/kenyon/peeking-outside-gambier-bubble-and-peering-saudi-arabia?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=google_mail&utm_source=email
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Preparing for A Site Visit

12/5/2016

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So it appears that we have received Kenyon's blessing and support to visit Effat University. A colleague and I are planning to visit during our Spring Break and to prepare I've begun researching our trip. Things I'm learning so far - 

Note to Self: Things I May Not Bring into Saudi Arabia

http://www.blueabaya.com/items-banned-from-bringing-into-saudi-arabia
1. Binoculars
2. Products containing frog meat
3. Christmas trees
4. fur
5. I may not bring a live chicken (good to know)

I am so excited for this trip. I really hope it happens!





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Evaluation of Our Connection

12/5/2016

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Did it work? Was all the work that we did to connect our courses worth it? well, there is only one way to find out! Today I forwarded to my class a series of questions regarding our globally connected experience and will post a summary of (anonoymous) responses when I finally get all of the data.  I was particularly interested in the students experiences with intergroup anxiety. There is a theory that reducing intergroup anxiety may be related ton increased cultural sensitivity. In the future, it would be good to explicitly measure these two constructs but for now these are the questions I asked: 

  1. How useful was the map assignment? Do you feel that it helped your understanding of cross cultural psychology?
  2. With regards to contacting your partner, how excited were you to make contact with your partner? Did you confident making this connection?
  3. How awkward was it to contact your partner? Did you dread it at all?
  4. How anxious did you feel contacting your partner? Were there particular things that you felt worried about?
  5. Did you continue to feel anxious after your first contact?
  6. How tense did you feel making contact with your partner? Why? What made you feel tense?
  7. Was there anything that made you feel uneasy during this course connection?
  8. How much, if at all, did this course connection irritate you?  
  9. How much, if at all, did you enjoy this course connection? Why?
  10. Do you feel that this course connection helped deepen your understanding of Saudi Arabia? How so?
  11. What was your favorite part of this experience?
  12. If you had to do a globally connected course again, would you do it?
  13. Do you intend to keep in contact with your partner?
  14. What words of advice might you have for future instructors who want to globally connect their courses?
  15. Other thoughts?
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Guest Lecture: What is abnormal?

11/23/2016

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Do you think you know what is abnormal? Well, hopefully by the end of this talk you won't! 
In this our final connection, I taped a lecture on culture and mental health for Prof. Felmban's Cross Cultural Psychology class.

1. ​What Criteria Should We use? I first discussed the various criteria that have been put forth to understand abnormality, best conceptualized as the 4 Ds (eg deviancy, distressing, dysfunctional and dangeriousness), and discuss the shortcomings of each criteria.

2. Is distress, and the way that it is expressed, universal (etic) or culturally specific (etic?) Next, I tried to help students understand distress using emic and etic approaches by further analyzing the cultural idiom of distress known as ataques de nervios. 

3. Analysis of Culturally Specific Form of Distress.  Then I discussed the 4Ds in relation to ataques

4. What type of help should I give?  And finally discussed various ways to treat this form of distress that use etic  (eg use of behavioral and cognitive techniques to lower arousal) and emic (eg use of rubbing alcohol) to help lower emotional arousal.

The hope is that students come away with a more nuanced idea of distress that does not simply reduce illness to purely biological dysfunction.
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Personal Interviews

11/17/2016

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How do students who live on opposite sides of the world get to know each? As part of our global course connection, students at our respective sites were paired with a partner with whom they had to interview. The results?  Stay Tuned for postings below.
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Teaching Cross Cultural Psychology - Post Election

11/10/2016

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Coming to class after the Election was very difficult. I briefly considered cancelling class as I personally was not sure if I could come in to teach. It had been a very painful night and the thought of holding class, as if nothing had happened, seemed dishonest at best.

However, I also knew that it was precisely these moments when I *had* to teach. By not teaching, I was staying silent, and that option seemed like the worse of all.  Of all the classes that I teach, Cross Cultural Psychology, is by far the most meaningful and, by extension, also the most difficult to teach.

Indeed, as I often tell my class, It is only when things get hard and uncomfortable that I know I must be doing my job right.

Why?
 Because learning about others and accepting others where they are is unbelievably difficult. As I stressed to my class, good people can, and do, disagree. And yet, while this is true, it is also important that we do not impose the burden of tolerance solely on those who have historically carried the heavier load. 

So what did I do? I held class - and it was difficult - but I hope good. Students talked if they wanted to or sat in silence. And then I gave them the option  - to write to our sister school, Effat University, in Saudi Arabia, so that they may explain their feelings at this point

This assignment was completely voluntary and ungraded. Students could write a direct letter to their assigned partner or just write a more general letter. Students could sign their letters or not. Many of the students did take me up on the offer and I wrote as well.

The photo above is my letter to my friend and colleague, Prof. Wedjan Felmban. I value our intercultural and interfaith friendship and my experience in connecting this class just reaffirms my faith in the power of teaching Cross Cultural Psychology.
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What is the Bias Blind Spot?

11/3/2016

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Today Prof. Felmban guest lectured to our Cross Cultural Psychology Class on her dissertation which dealt with the phenomena known as the bias blind spot.

Think you're not biased? Think again. Prof Felmban from #Effat University provides a definition of the bias blind spot to my cross cultural psych class #globalkenyon #glca #globallyconnected #liberalarts #effat #kenyon

A video posted by Prof Lopez (@profirenelopez) on Nov 17, 2016 at 8:14pm PST

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Photos from Prof. Felmban Guest Lecture

11/3/2016

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A New Way to Teach 

9/14/2016

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Teaching cross cultural psychology is hard. Teaching cross cultural psychology in rural Ohio is even harder. How can I teach about issues of culture without sounding like an ad for National Geographic? How do I make the experiences of others real? How can I help my students get a distance near experience when, in reality, we are just far, so isolated, from others?

This semester, as part of funding from the Mellon Foundation, I have been given the opportunity to globally connect my Cross Cultural Psychology course at Kenyon College with another Cross Cultural Psychology course at Effat University.

Like Kenyon, Effat University is a small liberal arts college, dedicated toward helping it's students become critical thinkers.  At both sites, classes are taught in English and both schools even use the same textbook! However, unlike Kenyon, Effat is a all women's school with an exclusive Muslim student body. Further, Kenyon is a residential college where most students are monolingual and live away from family.  

What will this experience be like? What will our students learn? This blog is meant to document our paths as we globally connect our course - from Gambier to Jeddah, away we go! Inshallah!

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Contact Information:

Irene López, PhD.
Kenyon College
Department of Psychology
203 North College Road
Samuel Mather 302
Gambier, Ohio 43022
United States


OFFICE: (740) 427-5373
FAX:     (740) 427-5237 
EMAIL: lopezi@kenyon.edu
Twitter: @ProfIreneLopez


  • About Me
  • Teaching
    • Teaching Philosophy >
      • Culturally Responsive Pedagogy
      • Samples of Innovative Teaching
    • My Teaching Blog
    • International Teaching >
      • Kenyon Copenhagen (2021)
      • Franklin University Switzerland
      • Ecuador - USFQ (2020)
      • Fulbright in Hungary! (Spring 2020)
      • Saudi Arabia - Effat University (2016)
      • Kenyon in Rome (2012) >
        • Snapshots of Rome
        • Rome >
          • Visit to Insane Asylum (Santa Maria della Pieta)
        • Travel throughout Italy >
          • Abruzzo
          • Pompeii
          • Venice
          • Florence
          • Siena
          • Fumone
      • Semester At Sea (2010) >
        • Japan
        • China
        • Viet Nam
        • India
        • Mauritius
        • South Africa
        • Ghana
        • Brazil
    • Teaching Awards >
      • Henry David International Mentoring Award (2015)
      • Trustee Teaching Award
    • Students >
      • Need a Recommendation?
  • Research
    • Areas of Interest >
      • Acculturation
      • Ataques de Nervios
      • Class
      • Skin Color
    • CV
    • Citations >
      • Academia.Edu
      • Research Gate
  • Service
    • Focus Groups with Syrian Refugees (2014)
    • APA Delegation to Cuba (2012)
  • Photovoice
    • Photovoice in Puerto Rico
    • Photovoice in Haiti
    • Photovoice in the Dominican Republic
    • Photography Project with Rania Matar
  • Photography
  • Review Materials
  • Blogs