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Learning by Doing; School of Education Students Put Boots on the Ground in Peru

91制片厂 School of Education

School of Education Students Trip to Peru

October 24, 2025

By Basil Tutza

At roughly 8,000 feet above her hometown of Philadelphia, Madison Haney had assumed that getting to Machu Picchu would be more of a hike. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all steps, so it鈥檚 not that bad,鈥 she adds.

Haney had never ventured outside the country, much less travelled without her family, and yet she stood resolutely in the heart of Peru. 鈥淚 was definitely very nervous,鈥 she reminisces. 鈥淏ut once I got there, everybody was super supportive.鈥

This trip鈥攖he first of its kind to be hosted by the School of Education鈥攚as, according to Director of Student Recruitment Jack Barnes, 鈥渕ore service learning鈥 than its previous sponsored trip to Japan. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e putting your boots on the ground in a lower socioeconomic environment,鈥 says Barnes, 鈥淕etting education outside the classroom.鈥

The School of Education organized this study abroad experience with the help of GoEco and Maximo Nivel, organizations which connect education students to Peruvian after-school programs. 鈥淲e were teaching them English,鈥 Haney remarks. 鈥淲e wanted to teach them things they could actually use and remember.鈥

Haney, who leapt at the opportunity after hearing about how much her classmates enjoyed the trip to Tamagawa University in Japan, had prior experience with English Language Learners through the School of Education鈥攂ut, despite that, she emphasized how the teaching environment in Peru was unlike anything she could have found in Philadelphia. 鈥淚n America, you may have an English language center, where you have 25 kids that all speak English, and then you have one child that does not speak English. How do you differentiate that? But here, even with only 10 kids, they all speak different levels of English and Spanish because they鈥檙e different ages.鈥

Despite the language barrier, Haney and her peers insisted on a positive learning environment that transcended culture. 鈥淲e don't just want them sitting at a desk. We don't just want them sitting at the table doing worksheets all day.鈥 Instead, they recalled a combination of their prior education experience and, as Haney puts it, 鈥渨hat our high school teachers did to teach us Spanish,鈥 a combination of physical mnemonics and gamification. 鈥淲e would play 鈥楽imon Says鈥 with them in English and Spanish to get them moving, get them to know the body parts. There was a day when we were teaching them the days of the week in English, and we had them all written up on papers around the entire room. We would tell them, 鈥楻un over to this one,鈥 and the kids were just running laps around the classroom the whole time.鈥

When they weren鈥檛 teaching, Haney and her peers immersed themselves in Peruvian culture. As well as Machu Picchu, the students visited the Sacred Valley鈥擧aney particularly notes their visit to an encapsulated archaeological site, Ollantaytambo, 鈥淲here the Temple of the Sun was in the Incan empire. It had all these crazy big steps.鈥 Even their hostel posed a unique cultural experience, situated as it was in the center of Peru鈥檚 capital, Cusco. 鈥淲e had maybe three churches that were right next to our hostel. We would come out, and there'd be an entire parade going on right in front of our door. One day, I believe there was some very special day in the church, we couldn't even鈥︹ Haney pauses to laugh. 鈥淲e had to Uber back from our school that we were working with in the evening, and we had to stop halfway through the ride and get out because the parade's traffic was so bad. I thought, 鈥楾his isn鈥檛 like St. Patty鈥檚 Day in Philly.鈥欌

Haney reflects that her most important takeaway from the trip was her connection with the students. 鈥淭he kids that we worked with were so sweet,鈥 she says. 鈥淵es, there was the language barrier鈥 but they would see us coming down to school, and they'd be like, 鈥業ngles!鈥 We were like, 鈥榃e're here!鈥欌 Though she doesn鈥檛 intend to focus on English Language Learners in her wider career, she highlights how the Peru experience further reinforced the importance of student-teacher bonding in encouraging learning. 鈥淚 think a lot of the time, people get hung up on what we can teach the students. How fast they can learn it. It鈥檚 not about how fast we can prove that they know this, but rather, are these students able to make a connection with you?鈥

When asked if she would consider taking another trip with the School of Education, Haney says she would 鈥渁bsolutely love to.鈥 Considering the program鈥檚 success, Barnes expresses that future trips are highly likely. 鈥淲e want to enlighten students to see different perspectives of the world,鈥 he comments. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really the mission at Drexel.鈥