This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
This
Thursday is Thanksgiving Day in the United States. Americans traditionally
gather for a large holiday meal with family and friends. Most schools are also
closed Friday for Thanksgiving break. Some students get all week off.
So where does this leave international students? We
asked a few colleges and universities around the country for this week's report
in our Foreign Student Series.
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| Campus farm at Green Mountain College in Poultney, Vermont |
In the Northeast, Green Mountain
College in Poultney, Vermont,
has twenty-nine international students this year out of a student population of
about eight hundred. Dick Weis is the director of international programs. He
says teachers and coaches invite international students to their homes for
Thanksgiving. Professor Weis is having six or seven at his house for the
holiday.
In the Southeast, Lelia Crawford is director of
international student programs at Emory University
in Atlanta, Georgia. She says school groups organize
meals for the more than one thousand five hundred international students at
Emory.
Local
organizations also get involved, like a group called the Atlanta Ministry with
International Students. It arranges for students in the Atlanta area to
celebrate Thanksgiving with American families.
The
group also has a program called Christmas International House. International
students can spend the long winter holiday with families in other parts of the United States.
In the Midwest, Morningside College
in Sioux City, Iowa, has more than one thousand
students. Fourteen of them this year are from other countries. International
student adviser Nadia Sifri says they are connected with local host families
when they first arrive. The families provide a home away from home, she says,
and they generally invite the students to spend Thanksgiving with them.
And in the West, Bob Ericksen heads the Dashew Center
for International Students and Scholars at the University of California, Los
Angeles. UCLA has more than five thousand international students, and he says
they can enjoy not just one but three meals for Thanksgiving.
His office and the Study Abroad Office have
a dinner before the holiday. Then, on Thanksgiving Day, local families bring
food to a park to share with international students. And that evening, the
students can go to another Thanksgiving meal held by a service fraternity.
And
that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. Our
Foreign Students Series can be found on the Web at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve
Ember.