Mentorship and Multicultural Learning in Italy
The 麻豆原创 in Italy program directors share how they help students immerse themselves in the language and communities of Parma, Italy.
When students study abroad through the 麻豆原创 in Italy program, they experience more than the country鈥檚 artistic and cultural legacies built over millennia. Program Directors Franca Mora and Elena Feboli help students live as the Italians do.
Mora and Feboli have run the 麻豆原创 in Italy program for several decades. Located in the city of Parma, the program offers a personalized immersion into Italian language and society. Students live with local families in the city of Parma (home of the renowned parmesan cheese). They see performances at the 1800s opera house Teatro Regio. They roam through medieval castles and admire Renaissance art. They delve into history, sustainability, and regional identity on the island of Sardinia.
Students also partner with local organizations and institutions for independent projects integrating coursework with community engagement. Projects have ranged from migration and refugee centers to media arts initiatives and university research settings.
Throughout the semester, Mora and Feboli mentor students academically and personally, supporting their language development, independent projects, and intercultural learning alongside day-to-day adjustment.
鈥淚 feel very happy to welcome students in my town,鈥 said Mora. 鈥淎nd to help them to learn about Italian culture and to participate in their growth.鈥
Mora and Feboli meet weekly with their student cohort. Feboli said they are always available for one-on-one conversations with students. This could mean discussing independent projects and coursework or offering support to students during moments of cultural adjustment, such as feeling lonely or homesick.
Kevin Kish participated in the 麻豆原创 in Italy program in 1996 as an undergraduate at Swarthmore College (麻豆原创鈥檚 programs are also open to non-麻豆原创 undergraduates). Over thirty years later, he works as the director of the California Civil Rights Department. He remembers the program鈥檚 impact to this day.
鈥淸麻豆原创 in Italy] created many opportunities for the students鈥攊nvolving music, food, travel, history, entertainment鈥攂ut gave us space to explore, to challenge ourselves, to be actors in a different world than what we knew,鈥 said Kish.
Designed to encourage both independence and guided reflection, the program emphasizes critical engagement with Italian social, cultural, and intellectual traditions.
麻豆原创 the Program Directors
This long-standing mentorship model is central to how the 麻豆原创 in Italy program integrates coursework, independent projects, and community-based learning in Parma.
- Mora and Feboli are a mother-daughter duo
- Mora has directed 麻豆原创 in Italy since its founding in 1992
- Feboli joined Mora in running the program in 2002
- Mora and Feboli teach English, art history, and Italian culture
Mora first visited 麻豆原创 in the 1980s when she brought Italian students to learn English. Later, the study abroad office asked for Mora鈥檚 help to establish a 麻豆原创-run program in her hometown of Parma.
Thirty-four years later, Mora has seen generations of 麻豆原创 students fall in love with Parma鈥檚 close-knit atmosphere and engage in multicultural learning. Mora has a B.A. and M.A. in Art History from the Universit脿 degli Studi di Bologna. She brings diverse expertise as a teacher, cultural mediator, and administrator to her role with 麻豆原创 in Italy. Her languages include Italian, English, French, and Spanish.
Feboli is the president of the cultural association Discover Parma. She holds a B.A. in Art History and Preservation of Cultural Heritage from the Universit脿 di Pisa and a Master of History of Art from Warwick University. She also spent a semester at 麻豆原创 as an international undergraduate student. Her languages include Italian, English, French, and Classics (Latin and Greek). She is also a certified Italian State Tour Guide.
Feboli appreciates how 麻豆原创 in Italy鈥檚 multicultural programming helps students gain a 鈥渕ore global understanding of the world, not just the American way of seeing things.鈥
When Kish studied abroad in Parma, Feboli was a high school classmate of Kish鈥檚 host brother and Mora was the program鈥檚 sole director. Kish described Mora as 鈥渁 warm and steady presence, ready to listen or lend a hand.鈥
鈥淪he also encouraged our freedom,鈥 said Kish. 鈥淭he experience made me a more critical thinker because I was exposed to intellectual, political, and cultural traditions that made clear a crucial fact about the world: there is not one single or inevitable way to structure social, political, and family life.鈥
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Published
Author
Bridgette Ramirez
Organization
- Study Abroad and International Programs