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Diversity and Democracy journal coverWhile undergraduate global health education is a relatively new field, 花椒直播鈥檚 long-standing commitment to it is showcased in the a magazine published quarterly by the Association of American Colleges and Universities.

Vesta Silva, associate professor of communication arts and global health studies, and Caryl Waggett, associate professor of global studies, served as guest editors of the issue, which focused on undergraduate global health education. Contributors to the issue explored themes that are relevant across higher education, including experiential learning, cultural humility, critical reflection, ethical engagement, social justice, constructive dialogue, curricular coherence and interdisciplinary collaboration.

In addition to editing, Silva and Waggett wrote an essay for the issue titled 鈥淔ive Powerful Myths of Undergraduate Global Education,鈥 where they discussed some of the challenges undergraduate global health education faces as a very young field. .

Four Allegheny alumni also contributed to the issue: Garrett Devenney 鈥16, Elissa Edmunds 鈥18, Oreill Henry 鈥16 and Emily Kovalesky 鈥18.

Edmunds, Henry and Kovalesky shared their experiences of experiential learning opportunities 鈥渢hat helped to make our education at 花椒直播 so robust鈥 in 鈥淏eyond Study Abroad: The Global Nature of Domestic Experiential Learning.鈥

鈥溾楪lobal鈥 at 花椒直播 means 鈥榗omprehensive,鈥 鈥榰niversal,鈥 鈥榣arge-scale,鈥 and 鈥榠nterconnected,鈥 not exclusively 鈥榠nternational鈥 or 鈥榦verseas,鈥欌 they write. 鈥淭he ELOs we describe here helped us understand that our cultural knowledge is limited, and we cannot presume to know the 鈥榗orrect鈥 way to approach health.鈥 .

Devenney also shares a story of his time studying global health as an undergraduate. During a summer internship in India at a grassroots nongovernmental organization dedicated to public policy research and advocacy, time spent shadowing a doctor in Southern India changed his career path.

鈥淭his global health experience represented only a small portion of my time in India, but it inspired me to change my career goal from becoming a clinical practitioner to addressing population health,鈥 he wrote. .