Learning from students: How to face the COVID-19 pandemic

March 2020

As I write this, the reality that we are connected through our personal, professional, and familial relationships, has never been more clear. Like many of us, I wake up to daily reports from friends and family members in different time zones, countries, and continents, sharing the lived experiences that COVID-19 has had on us, our loved ones, and our communities. 

In winter 2020, I was lucky enough to work with nine undergraduate students who were already deeply aware that our actions, ideas, and sentiments transcend borders. Last quarter, these students - among them anthropology, Asian American studies, human development, and environmental design majors - participated in the Poverty Alleviation Through Action (PATA) Grant Writing seminar. We gathered every week for two hours to share ideas about how students could make a difference in communities beyond the university’s borders. Their proposals were insightful and informed, demonstrating both critical thought and compassion. 

Unoma, Araceli, Gisele, and Sena had been working with Environmental Conservation and Agricultural Enhancement Uganda to support sustainable agricultural and community health initiatives in Western Uganda’s Hoima District. Karla and Annette’s proposals focused on supporting migrant families in Buenos Aires, Chile, and San Jose, California, respectively, through storytelling and advocacy initiatives. Rowen, Cat, and Kanwal had designed projects that supported health initiatives among vulnerable communities in the Philippines and India. 

Throughout the ten-week quarter, what impressed me most about these students, beyond the clarity of their motivations and writing, was the enthusiastic mutual support they showed each other. Whether celebrating the meeting of small writing milestones or spending hours peer-reviewing each others’ writing, the students consistently demonstrated their desire for all of their classmates to succeed and thrive in their project, despite the competition that is structured into any grant proposal opportunity. 

Together, they learned to break initially daunting assignments (multi-page grant proposals) into incremental pieces, moving from identifying and reaching out to potential community partners, drafting abstracts, responding to review criteria, to finalizing itemized budgets and timelines. By breaking down this process, collectively, by taking risks to ask questions, every student emerged with a compelling proposal, all of which I believe would have merited funding.

Unfortunately, because of the global impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, these students will not be able to travel this summer. Of course the challenges the pandemic confronts us with go far beyond missed summer experiential learning opportunities; more immediately, many students are justifiably concerned about their physical and economic well being and that of their family. In navigating the existential uncertainty that surrounds us, I’ve looked to the wisdom expressed in closing reflections by two of the seminars’ students, and echoed by others: 

“One important thing I’ve learned through this seminar is how valuable it is to take things step by step…”

“The most important thing I have learned over the course of this seminar is the power of collaboration…”

Step by step. With collaboration. This is how we navigate the uncertainty and precarity ahead.