So my research project is all done and finished! Later I'll write a post about the conclusions I've come to. For now, I'm taking a break and letting the data digest. While I do that I've begun working on personal statements and resumes for grad school applications. I've finally found a program that calls to me; the master's in Development Practice program. It's very new and sounds like just my sort of thing :)
In a nutshell, this is from the program website:
"Integrating the core areas of the health, natural, social and management sciences, the Master's in Development Practice program provides students with the substantive knowledge and practical skills required to analyze and diagnose the multi-dimensional challenges of sustainable development such as extreme poverty, climate change and infectious disease."
I like the sound of it because it's interdisciplinary and focuses on practical skills. Also, the programs all include a summer international internship in development practice. So fingers crossed, if I work hard on my applications this fall I'll get into one of the programs and be enrolled next year!
That is my longterm plan for the future. For the nearer future, I will be flying home at the end of October, taking the GREs at the end of November, and then in December I'll be going to England to spend Christmas and New Year's with Matt's lovely family. After that we are going back to China to teach English for about 6 months while I wait to hear back from grad schools. We know how to avoid the many pitfalls that accompany teaching English in China, and we are also able to make a good salary and save most of it because the cost of living is quite low. Hopefully I'll be able to save up a little money for grad school and eat delicious food every day too!
Finally, to keep this blog interesting now that my research is finished I feel it's necessary to include some cute photos of puppies. Here is Mongo, the street puppy, hiding in our shoe rack.
Our friend Johannah took her in off the street and has been taking care of her for the past few weeks. We dog sat while Johannah's apartment was being inspected and got to play with her all day. She's a very nice dog, cuddly and well behaved for a street dog. She has tons of personality too. Even Matt was totally smitten by the end of the day!
Well that's all for now!
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Monday, September 24, 2012
Finished!
Here we are about 8 months after my first blog posts. I am excited to say that I have finished my project! Wooo! It's been one heck of a rollercoaster but I'm happy with what I accomplished in my research. Here's a brief recap of my final 3 trips to the countryside :)
My first last trip was to my Darkhan/Selenge site. My brother Bryan was visiting me in Mongolia before going to Japan for a year of study and he decided to come along. We had an... interesting trip... We got lots of good information about the gardens, and saw some excellent onions, turnips and carrots growing in the bottles. However, when I got back to Ulaanbaatar I realized my driver had robbed me while I went into a ger to do an interview. I foolishly left my pouch of money in my bag in the car and the guy had helped himself to $50-70 by my estimate. I expect people to pickpocket me on the street and watch out for it but I wasn't prepared for someone I'd hired to steal from me when I was paying him a good wage for easy work. Alas.
My second last trip was to Ondorkhaan. I hired a different translator because Chingerel found a permanent job. My new translator Yumjirka was quite good, but there turned out to be very little work for her in Ondorkhaan. Many of the families were away from home preparing hay for the winter or hadn't taken care of the gardens. Additionally, the driver I hired to go to both clusters of families demanded more money on our way to the second site. He was my driver for the first trip and one of the families I had given a garden. What had started off as a friendly trip soon turned ugly as he demanded more money than we agreed on. In the end he dropped us off in the city and I paid him half for the half job he had done and I forfeited the data of his family's garden. I ended up doing phone interviews, via Yumjirka, with the 2 families at the second site. One great success from this trip was hearing about a daughter of one of the families who had taken her garden to school in Choibalsan, over 200 miles away! There's a truly nomadic garden that will hopefully inspire teachers and students alike to plant their own gardens :)
For my truly final research trip to Arvaikheer, Chingerel generously offered to give up her weekend to be my translator. Having the same translator for the whole project definitely made a difference, and I had an excellent and productive trip to Arvaikheer. In addition, the driver we hired was friendly and delightful, a pleasant, sort of grandfatherly soul who told me he loved going to the countryside on my research trips to visit the families because he got to taste every family's fermented horse milk! We visited all the families and completed 9 interviews in one afternoon, a record, stayed in a clean and comfortable motel, and were able to take the bus back the very next day. A delightful and successful trip in every way, and a great way to end my project.
My first last trip was to my Darkhan/Selenge site. My brother Bryan was visiting me in Mongolia before going to Japan for a year of study and he decided to come along. We had an... interesting trip... We got lots of good information about the gardens, and saw some excellent onions, turnips and carrots growing in the bottles. However, when I got back to Ulaanbaatar I realized my driver had robbed me while I went into a ger to do an interview. I foolishly left my pouch of money in my bag in the car and the guy had helped himself to $50-70 by my estimate. I expect people to pickpocket me on the street and watch out for it but I wasn't prepared for someone I'd hired to steal from me when I was paying him a good wage for easy work. Alas.
My second last trip was to Ondorkhaan. I hired a different translator because Chingerel found a permanent job. My new translator Yumjirka was quite good, but there turned out to be very little work for her in Ondorkhaan. Many of the families were away from home preparing hay for the winter or hadn't taken care of the gardens. Additionally, the driver I hired to go to both clusters of families demanded more money on our way to the second site. He was my driver for the first trip and one of the families I had given a garden. What had started off as a friendly trip soon turned ugly as he demanded more money than we agreed on. In the end he dropped us off in the city and I paid him half for the half job he had done and I forfeited the data of his family's garden. I ended up doing phone interviews, via Yumjirka, with the 2 families at the second site. One great success from this trip was hearing about a daughter of one of the families who had taken her garden to school in Choibalsan, over 200 miles away! There's a truly nomadic garden that will hopefully inspire teachers and students alike to plant their own gardens :)
For my truly final research trip to Arvaikheer, Chingerel generously offered to give up her weekend to be my translator. Having the same translator for the whole project definitely made a difference, and I had an excellent and productive trip to Arvaikheer. In addition, the driver we hired was friendly and delightful, a pleasant, sort of grandfatherly soul who told me he loved going to the countryside on my research trips to visit the families because he got to taste every family's fermented horse milk! We visited all the families and completed 9 interviews in one afternoon, a record, stayed in a clean and comfortable motel, and were able to take the bus back the very next day. A delightful and successful trip in every way, and a great way to end my project.
Bryan in Selenge aimag
Turnip! wow!
A nice healthy beet plant
This spring onion was harvested and used by the family in soup and dumplings
A really nice picture of me, Jonathan, and my grandmother with Nyamsuren's family
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