From: Sheryl Day <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Fri, 4 Jan 2013 21:48:15 +0000
To: "'[email protected]<mailto:'[email protected]>'" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, 
"'[email protected]<mailto:'[email protected]>'" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [dub] Study overseas in Tahiti and earn UW credits - Summer 2013

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Please forward widely and distribute through your networks. Thank you!
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Hello, UW Students. Welcome back and Happy New Year!

This summer, Chris Rothschild (Researcher with Technology & Social Change Group 
– TASCHA) and I are directing an Exploration Seminar in Tahiti, French 
Polynesia. In this seminar, we will explore information within oral traditions, 
the value of oral traditions as knowledge systems, and the intersection of oral 
traditions and technology. This 6-credit seminar is open to all UW graduate and 
undergraduate students. The program description is below, and the online 
application along with more info are on the website: 
http://studyabroad.washington.edu/index.cfm?FuseAction=Programs.ViewProgram&Program_ID=11117

Applications are due February 15th.

We will be scheduling information sessions soon with more details but are happy 
to answer any questions in the meantime, so feel free to contact us at:

Chris Rothschild ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)
Sheryl A. Day ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)

~Sheryl

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PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:
The Pacific Islands have a very long and rich culture of oral traditions. These 
manifest themselves in their spiritual practices and relationships with the 
environment and people through song, dance, chant, and storytelling. This 
program will look at understanding the different systems of oral traditions and 
how to understand information they contain. The focus will be on Tahiti and the 
Pacific islands and will attempt to help students understand the value of oral 
traditions as valid, critical, and credible sources of scientific information 
and not just cultural "stories".
This course will investigate the following questions:

  1.  What are oral traditions and what types of information do they contain?
  2.  How are oral traditions used and what purpose do they serve in the 
Polynesian context?
  3.  How have oral traditions been historically viewed as "credible" sources 
of information by western scientists?
  4.  In what ways can the information in oral traditions be viewed as 
"scientific"?
  5.  How does technology impact oral traditions?
In addition to a comprehensive course reader on oral traditions in general and 
Polynesian traditions in particular, to gain a better contextual understanding 
of the questions above, we will visit noted oral historians and "tupunas" 
(elder teachers) who will speak on Tahitian oral traditions in astronomy, 
geology, agriculture, political history, and fishing. We will also meet with 
university representatives of the University of French Polynesia who will 
discuss research in Polynesian oral traditions and how the information 
contained in them are used not only as inherently important "stories" of old, 
but as historical and scientific information that can be used in modern 
scholarship. Students will also be exposed to Tahitian customs and traditions 
through cultural and dance classes that will be conducted throughout the 
program.
COURSE:  INFO 498 or INFX 598: Oral Traditions, Knowledge, and Science (6 
credits)

APPLICATION DEADLINE:  FEBRUARY 15, 2013
Apply online at: 
http://studyabroad.washington.edu/index.cfm?FuseAction=Programs.ViewProgram&Program_ID=11117


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Sheryl A. Day, PhD Candidate
Box 352840, Seattle, WA 98195-2840
Cell: 206.930.1409<tel:206.930.1409> | Fax: 206.616.3152<tel:206.616.3152>
UW Information School<http://ischool.uw.edu/>
IIRG: Indigenous Info Research Group<http://iirg.ischool.uw.edu/>
NOIS: Native Org of Indigenous Scholars<http://students.washington.edu/noisrso>
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