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AFS is committed to intercultural learning. Learning through an AFS experience involves growth and change in terms of...
Personal Values and Skills: At the core of
all AFS experiences is the removal of people from their familiar environment and
their placement in a new environment. In such unusual circumstances,
participants are confronted repeatedly with crises of varying dimensions. They
must make judgments and act without familiar cues. But AFS participants are
prepared in advance, and they are assured of support and guidance on an
as-needed basis, thus enabling them to turn these crises into opportunities for
reassessing their values, stretching their capabilities and practicing new
skills.
Interpersonal Relationship-Building:
Every AFS participant becomes fully involved in daily living and working
arrangements with a variety of people in the new environment. This requires
developing and maintaining relationships with others from diverse backgrounds.
The interpersonal skills developed in this intercultural context are
transferable to many other settings during the participant's lifetime. Host
nationals often gain reciprocal benefits from their contacts with AFS
participants.
Intercultural Knowledge and Sensitivity:
During the course of their immersion in the host culture, AFS participants
are exposed to innumerable dimensions of that culture, ranging from the simple
acquisition of daily necessities to the complex and subtle distinctions made by
hosts among alternative values, social norms and patterns of thought. In
addition, most AFS exchanges include a formal learning component in which host
nationals explain the social, political, economic and religious structures of
their countries. In the case of exchanges involving adult professionals, hosts
and visitors both gain new skills and alternative concepts, leading to a
sharpening of their talents. Involvement in so many dimensions of life deepens
participants' insights into their home culture as well as their knowledge of
their host culture from the perspective of an outsider.
Awareness About Global Issues: Living in
a place other than one's home community often helps one recognize that the world
is one large community, a global island, in which certain problems are shared by
everyone everywhere. AFS participants empathize with their hosts' perspective on
some of these problems and, thus, appreciate that workable solutions must be
culturally sensitive, not merely technologically feasible. Such awareness
prepares the AFS participant to take his or her place among those addressing
crises facing humankind.
Global education addresses the whole range of concerns that people of the world share. It is mission-driven education that promotes a common commitment to the world and its people.
Focus on Intercultural Learning
Intercultural learning is a special type of experiential learning because it focuses on the mindset of the people involved and forces them to change their perspective through cross-cultural empathy. This is a highly emotional learning experience that requires support and mediation in order to achieve desired results.
Focus onCommunities
While continuing to appreciate the value of each individual, AFS recognizes that people are more than individuals; they belong to communities, and, therefore, we need to involve the various communities from which these individuals come and reach into new communities that have not yet been touched by the educational benefits of AFS. When AFS works with schools and communities, it multiplies its potential impact. AFS cannot have a global impact unless its participants act together and act locally.
Focus on
Service and Commitment
In helping the war wounded on both sides of the battlefield, the American Field Service ambulance drivers who began our organization demonstrated their commitment to the core AFS values, including the respect for the worth and dignity of all people, regardless of nationality. The "S" in AFS continues to stand for Service. Global citizens contribute to the world through their service to the community, to others, to the environment and to the world. AFS organizations continue to make new efforts to become involved in meaningful volunteer service.
Focus on Integration and Post-Return
In many respects, what happens after an AFS program is what really matters. An AFS program should not be an isolated incident in a person's life. The application of cultural lessons learned to one's daily life in one's local community is AFS's goal and challenge. Therefore, it is important to support and maximize the integration of the knowledge attained through AFS programs. To reinforce new knowledge, AFS endorses the practice of post-return integration in addition to the standard pre-departure and mid-experience orientations. Returning program participants are our natural constituents and a link between AFS and their own communities. By working with participants in the post-return phase, we help them take advantage of the special knowledge and new skills they possess as they encounter new learning opportunities and build bridges between cultures at home.
Focus on Action and Changing Behavior
We can become aware of global issues by studying them, but AFS promotes more than intellectual awareness. The intercultural learning method employed in AFS programs is experiential and active learning by doing. Our participants do not just watch, read or listen. They participate in other cultures, form relationships with other people and give service to other communities. Through these actions, they demonstrate that learning.
The critical part of any AFS global education package is a unified approach, grounded in the Global Education Framework and involving the school as the primary participant, with a broader educational impact that reaches those who never have the opportunity to leave their own communities. The method should be to involve everyone in the school and community in the exchange experience, not just the individual students or teachers and the families who host them.