Studying abroad in Cuba is about to get easier
By Emily DeRuy
The announcement that the United States will normalize relations with 
Cuba is good news for students who want to study on the island.
After decades of restrictions and bureaucratic bickering, it will likely 
become much easier for American students to study abroad in Cuba—and 
perhaps even more importantly, for Cuban students to pursue an education 
in the U.S., according to educators and researchers who have closely 
followed Cuba's relationship with the U.S.
"I do think this will make a difference," said Brian Whalen, president 
and CEO of the Forum on Education Abroad, which has advocated for the 
easing of study abroad regulations. "It's still more difficult right now 
than it needs to be."
It's been difficult for a while. During the Bush administration in the 
early 2000s, the U.S. imposed restrictions that forced most American 
universities operating programs in Cuba to shutter. In 2011, under 
Obama, the U.S. opened the door for schools to resume study abroad 
programs in Cuba, but the process still required navigating a web of 
paperwork and licenses. And third-party study abroad providers like 
Academic Programs International, which received a license to operate a 
Cuba program for academic credit only in 2013, were largely left out of 
the resurgence. About half of the students who go abroad do so through 
such third-party programs, Whalen said, so the inability of those 
programs to operate has severely impeded study abroad opportunities in Cuba.
"It's not like studying in Spain," he said, adding that some 
organizations have complained about backlogs and roadblocks to starting 
programs in Cuba. "Bottom line…there's greater demand, but we don't have 
the supply in place. I have no doubt the normalization of the 
relationship will help that."
Duke University may consider reestablishing a program it closed in 2004 
if there is enough faculty interest. Wednesday's announcement would 
"certainly make it easier," said Amanda Kelso, executive director of the 
Global Education Office for Undergraduate Students.
Under the new diplomatic thaw, the Obama administration will expand 
travel allowances for 12 categories, including educational activities. 
American credit and debit cards will also work on the island, which will 
make it easier for the university and students to move money, Kelso said.
The White House did not immediately return a request for comment 
regarding how study abroad might be impacted. A spokeswoman for the 
State Department, which has been encouraging more student exchanges with 
Latin American countries in recent months, declined to comment.
For now, the numbers of students exchanged between the U.S. and Cuba is 
small.
During the 2013-14 school year, just 69 Cuban students studied in the 
United States, down from 76 students the year before, according to the 
Institute of International Education, which tracks study abroad figures.
In the 2012-13 school year, the U.S. sent 1,633 students to Cuba. Prior 
to the Bush administration's restrictions, more than 2,000 students 
studied in Cuba, a figure that tanked to fewer than 300 following the 
restrictions.
Peter Hakim, a Cuba expert with the Inter-American Dialogue think tank 
in Washington, D.C., agrees the news is positive for people hoping to 
study in Cuba.
"I think there will be more exchanges with Cuba," he said, "and there 
certainly will not be the kind of ridiculousness whereby a professor at 
Harvard has to prove he's going to Cuba to do research or a student has 
to prove they're taking courses or fulfilling a degree requirement to go 
to Cuba."
The benefits stand to be numerous, Whalen said. The changes will allow 
more students to learn Spanish and gain cultural knowledge about an 
island that is geographically close but about which many young people 
know very little. There will be opportunities to study musical 
traditions and the arts, as well as immigration and politics.
"I have a good friend…who is an expert on community gardening," he said, 
"and Cuba is apparently quite a leader in that, so there are certain 
content areas where students stand to benefit in learning in Cuba."
Hannah Levien, a current senior at Marist College in New York, studied 
in Havana last fall, and said she gained a cultural understanding of 
Cubans and their take on the embargo.
"There is no animosity against Americans and that's something I wasn't 
sure of when I went there," she said, adding that she knows many young 
Cubans who will likely be interested in studying in the U.S.
"All the Cuban students I talked to," she said, "would joke about coming 
to the U.S., but it wasn't really a joke. They'll be excited with the 
prospect of maybe coming."
The easing of restrictions could be even more eye-opening for Cuban 
students, provided the government allows them to travel, Hakim said, a 
move that could be risky for the island.
Source: Studying abroad in Cuba is about to get easier | Fusion - 
http://fusion.net/story/34694/studying-abroad-in-cuba-is-about-to-get-easier/
 
 
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