Monday, October 19, 2009

Camping Crazyness

PHOTO ALBUM 1: Camping Trip (link)

For my class of Mountain Sports, we spent a weekend at a national park doing a little camping as well as climbing. It was a good time getting up on the rock faces and getting back in touch with nature after having been separated for so long.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Running for LCP in US

I decided to run for president of AIESEC Chapel Hill due to the fact that I was looking to continue with the challenges of my AIESEC career. I would say it was kind of strange to have never met many of the people that were going to vote which meant virtual communication was the only form possible. After videos, applications, interviews, and debates, Chapel Hill chose me as LCP which I am very excited about for this coming year. I am almost positive that AIESEC is the only organization on campus where someone would even think about running for president from abroad. That is the platform that is AIESEC.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Typical Day of Food

Typical Menu of a weekday:

Breakfast (9am): Chocopix cereal



Lunch (2:30pm): Rice/Chicken/Cabbage with lemon/Sliced Tomatoes with salt/Avocado with salt



Once (7pm): Bread/Jam/Coffee



Dinner (11pm): Rice/Chicken

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Arrival of Greek Trainee

Our second trainee of the year, Natasha Katsiouli, arrived in October to AIESEC Viña del Mar to work in corporate social responsibility with an NGO in Valparaíso, Chile. It was quite embarassing when she arrived because she was speaking Spanish better than I do and I had been in Chile for 9 months. The LC in Viña gave here a warm welcome at the Local Comittee Conference in Quilpué, Chile. This video was taken just hours after she landed in Chile. It was a surprise because we had told her that we were going to a friend's house, but the truth was we were taking here to the venue of the conference.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Pocket Recruitment to Brazil

Our Pocket Recruitment focused on administration students that wanted to go to Brazil during the summer months of December to February. Using our program Activating Leadership Brazil (link), we were able to get 52 applicants for the program with a final number selected of 23. At this rate, it will most likely end in December with 14 matches and 11 realizations with the rest realizing in quarter 1. Dealing with 17 EPs has been quite the challenge, but with the strong OGX team that we have, there is no doubt of success. We already have matches with LCs in Florianópolis, Santa Maria, and Uberlandia. Segmentation of programs is the key to success.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Spring Time in Chile

PHOTO ALBUM 1: Camilo's Birthday Party (link)
PHOTO ALBUM 2: Experimenta AIESEC Viña (link)


I returned to Chile to start classes back up and to meet our second trainee that arrived to Viña from Brazil. He was doing a DT in a local NGO working on the professionalization of the NGO, Cotra (link). I ended up taking the classes of Development Psychology, Political and Social Themes of Contemporary Chile, Cultural Anthropology, Latin American Short Stories, and Mountain Sports at the Pontificie Universidad Católica de Valparaíso (link). They worked out pretty well. This was also a time of many strikes from elementary and middle school teachers who were not happy with the salary that they were receiving. This is really bad for the children because they cannot go to school because there are no teachers. Elections of the student federation for 2010 were being held around this time where there were all out campaigns to be elected. They would go into each and every class and do a presentation to the class about why they should be the leaders of the federation. The culture of the classroom is very different than what I am accustomed to in the United States. There is much more of a relaxed atmosphere, the classes are canceled much more often without notice, the classes are more democratic about when we are going to take the tests, and every time someone enters the class late, the whole class erupts in an Ooooooooo starting at a low tone and going up. My Development Psychology professor uses anecdotal stories for each and everything that he teaches. The girl in my class gave that birth in September serves as the reference for things we are learning in class about the behavior of newborns. Sex education hardly does not exist in a country that is guided by the Catholic ideology. If you want to avoid STDs or pregnancy, abstinence is the only way to go. As seen in the United States as well as Chile, this teaching ideology serves not to reduce pregnancy rates but rather only to increase them it seems. The cafeterias within the university are run by contracted external business but do not have a brand name at all. Real coffee does not exist. Everything is powdered coffee with hot water added. Lunch foods at the university are mainly hotdogs.

I ride a Mercedes Benz to school everyday. Not what you normally think of but it's a Mercedes Benz nonetheless (link). It’s the type of buses that are used by the city’s public transportation. The public transportation is privatized to companies that have the best bid for the government. My host dad works for a company that bids to run the parking meters of the city each year. They are always coming up with bids to take on the running of different government operations. Privatization: Crazy.