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The Dominican Experiment - A Teacher and His Students Explore a Garbage Dump, a Sweatshop, and Vodou (Hardcover): Michael... The Dominican Experiment - A Teacher and His Students Explore a Garbage Dump, a Sweatshop, and Vodou (Hardcover)
Michael D'Amato, George Santos
R635 Discovery Miles 6 350 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Dominican Republic is the most visited country in the Caribbean and, according to CNN, the second-happiest place on the planet. However, most of its workers make less than fifteen dollars a day, it has around two million stateless people, and 70 percent of its schools do not offer students safe drinking water.

The island is certainly a fascinating place for students to research, so why not take a social justice trip there so they can see it for themselves? That was what Kevin LaMastra had in mind when he took his students to the DR for some snorkeling, horseback riding, and waterfall jumping, but also to check out a garbage dump, a sweatshop, and an HIV/AIDS orphanage.

We learn the most when we step outside our comfort zones. That's not exactly LaMastra's sales pitch when he's looking for students to sign up each year, but it becomes the leading philosophy of the trip when he takes them to bond with survivors of Haiti's 2010 earthquake, to visit communities hidden deep inside sugarcane fields, and to witness an actual Vodou ceremony.

The Dominican Experiment - A Teacher and His Students Explore a Garbage Dump, a Sweatshop, and Vodou (Paperback): Michael... The Dominican Experiment - A Teacher and His Students Explore a Garbage Dump, a Sweatshop, and Vodou (Paperback)
Michael D'Amato, George Santos
R404 R340 Discovery Miles 3 400 Save R64 (16%) Out of stock

The Dominican Republic is the most visited country in the Caribbean and, according to CNN, the second-happiest place on the planet. However, most of its workers make less than fifteen dollars a day, it has around two million stateless people, and 70 percent of its schools do not offer students safe drinking water.

The island is certainly a fascinating place for students to research, so why not take a social justice trip there so they can see it for themselves? That was what Kevin LaMastra had in mind when he took his students to the DR for some snorkeling, horseback riding, and waterfall jumping, but also to check out a garbage dump, a sweatshop, and an HIV/AIDS orphanage.

We learn the most when we step outside our comfort zones. That's not exactly LaMastra's sales pitch when he's looking for students to sign up each year, but it becomes the leading philosophy of the trip when he takes them to bond with survivors of Haiti's 2010 earthquake, to visit communities hidden deep inside sugarcane fields, and to witness an actual Vodou ceremony.

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