Dissertations relating to the Peace Corps
Dissertations relating to the Peace Corps
From Peace Corps Wiki
The following theses and dissertations were written about research on either:
- The Peace Corps organization itself, or
- Studies of the volunteers themselves – either in country or after they returned from service.
2008
A participatory approach in practice: Lessons from a Peace Corps experience
by Arnold, Amy, M.A., University of Wyoming, 2008, 118 pages; AAT 1457055
Abstract (Summary)
Selai atau selei (bahasa Inggris: jam, bahasa Perancis: confiture) adalah salah satu jems makanan awetan berupa sari buah atau buah-buahan yang sudah yang sudah dihancurkan, ditambah gula dan dimasak hingga kental atau berbentuk setengah padat. Selai tidak dimakan begitu saja, melainkan untuk dioleskan di atas roti tawar atau sebagai isi roti manis. Selai juga sering digunakan sebagai isi pada kue-kue seperti kue Nastar atau pemanis pada minuman, seperti yogurt dan es krim. Selai yang di dalamnya masih ditemukan potongan buah dalam berbagai ukuran disebut preserve atau conserves, sedangkan selai yang dibuat dan sari buah dan kulit buah genus Citrus disebut marmalade. dikutip oleh: toko bunga online
(http://www.tokobungasabana.com/) I aksesoris sparepart motor
(http://www.pedatimotor.com) I baby pink (http://www.grosirkosmetik.coml6-baby-pink-cream-pemutih-kulit)
This paper seeks to set PAR within a local context through exploring the extent to which a Peace Corps volunteer’s approach to participatory community development proved effective at a grassroots level. Through documenting an example of a participatory process and the problems incurred, this thesis challenges the generalized picture of how participatory development works.
Landscape for a good citizen: The Peace Corps and the cultural logics of American cosmopolitanism
by Schein, Rebecca H., Ph.D., University of California, Santa Cruz, 2008,255 pages; AAT 3317408
Abstract (Summary)
This dissertation examines the cultural practices of the Peace Corps as an expression of a peculiarly American vision of cosmopolitanism. Founded at the height of American liberalism and amid the global turbulence of decolonization and the cold war, the Peace Corps offered a compelling national story of continuity and coherence at a moment of transition in American society. The depiction of the decolonizing world as a “new frontier,” the testing ground for a new generation of citizens, drew a direct line between the country’s revolutionary republican past and its emergence on the world stage as a military and economic superpower. This vision of a coherent, historically stable national character contained an ideal of citizenship wrought by the intersections of class, race, and gender in U.S. culture and society. The Peace Corps represented an influential, mainstream vision of the American citizens’ participation on the world stage.
The Peace Corps not only made the world newly accessible to individual American travelers, but also produced an array of representational conventions that gave meaning to Peace Corps experiences. Volunteers enacted the successful achievement of American/global citizenship through their adoption and creation of technologies for representing their experiences: in the performance of banality in postcolonial settings; in the elaboration of “non-ugly Americanness”; in the experience of “culture shock”; in narrative performances of self-possession and subjective coherence. I explore both the cultural underpinnings that support the subjectivity of American/global citizenship and the acute contradictions that often attend the position of the volunteer abroad.
The dissertation concludes by exploring the Peace Corps’s support for liberal arts education as a the basis of American cosmopolitan citizenship. Here I explore the competing articulations of parochialism and worldliness that play out in the Peace Corps and in the internationalization of liberal arts curricula since the 1980s. The promises of “experiential learning” associated with study abroad–often a cornerstone of an international curriculum–offer students of the neo-liberal university an opportunity to fulfill a desire perhaps most richly embodied by the cultural archive of the Peace Corps: an ideal of self-actualized worldly participation was enacted experientially, corporeally, and discursively.
The American Dream through the window of Peace Corps memoirs
by Blumberg, Jeffrey S., M.A.L.S., Georgetown University, 2008,97 pages; AAT 1461108
Abstract (Summary)
This thesis focuses on whether and how Peace Corps volunteers attempt to impart the values of the American Dream to the communities where they serve. The American Dream is defined as a dual set of values. The material/conservative version of the Dream incorporates the idea that through hard work and determination, success will follow. The idealistic/liberal version of the Dream encompasses the ideas of liberty and equality. This thesis investigates whether volunteers experience similar frustrations in trying to impart the values of the Dream and what broader implications of the difficulties of development work would be revealed during this study.
To investigate this problem, the author reviews and analyzes three memoirs of Peace Corps volunteers. The author chooses the memoir as the vehicle for this study because it exposes the volunteer experience and the core beliefs of the volunteer in an expressive and pointed medium. The three selected memoirs chosen were Living Poor, drafted by Moritz Thomsen about his experience as a volunteer in Ecuador in the 1960s, The Ponds of Kalambayi, written by Mike Tidwell about his volunteer work in Congo in the 1990s, and “The Narrowest Road,” my memoir about my Peace Corps experience in Belize from 2004 to 2006.
After a review of the three memoirs, the author determines that each of the volunteers attempts to impart the values of the American Dream. They all three face disillusionment as they encounter the challenges of trying to impart these values while doing development work in poor villages with different cultures. They face disillusionment as they struggle with an experience that is significantly different from the one they originally envision.
The volunteers do not achieve their originally planned version of the Dream as noted in the conclusion to this thesis. They fail to reach this vision due to the poverty in their villages, the cultural differences they encounter, and the lasting remnants of the colonialist past. The volunteers achieve some measure of success when they modify their version of the Dream and their development projects to be more sensitive to the cultural differences they face in their communities.
2007
Peace Corps in the 21st century: A rhetorical analysis
by Maugh, Casey Malone, Ph.D., The Pennsylvania State University, 2007, 181 pages; AAT 3299024
Abstract (Summary) In 1961 John F. Kennedy founded the Peace Corps. After 45 years of continual international service, the organization has nearly 8,000 volunteers serving in 67 countries throughout the world. Throughout the years the organization has struggled to gain presidential support and funding, as well as recruit well-rounded volunteers.
After years of falling volunteer numbers, in 2003, the Peace Corps revamped its campaign to appeal to a broader volunteer audience. The recruitment strategies differ from those in the 1960s, appealing to the pragmatic benefits of service rather than the idealistic appeals used in the early years of the organization. This work includes an analysis of the organization’s recruitment strategies both textual and visual as well as an analysis of volunteer accounts of service. This study culminates in a look toward the future of the organization, in hopes of revealing the direction of the Peace Corps in the 21 St century.
2006
The message tree: A community action project and personal narrative
by Hamilton, Patricia Kay, MA., California State University, Dominguez Hills, 2006, 161 pages; AAT 1440184
Abstract (Summary)
The objective of this project is to inspire persons to volunteer and to encourage higher levels of senior volunteerism. Using first-person narrative, the author describes a senior citizen’s Peace Corps experience during 2 ½ years in Ghana, West Africa. She was assigned the task of developing a tree-seeding nursery to supply trees for reforestation. The primary methodology used to chronicle the assignment was participant-observer.
In the Peace Corps, the writer assumed a difficult task in a foreign culture. She detailed the struggles, adventures, and successes that occurred. Project goals will be fulfilled if these experiences inspire others, especially senior citizens, to find their own paths in service to others.
It is the writer’s hope that the Message Tree Project will be of value to young and old who desire to use their life experiences, wisdom, and knowledge to enhance the lives of others.
The reentry experience: An examination of Peace Corps volunteers’ experience of returning home after service
by Bosustow, Nicole Joanna, Psy.D., The Wright Institute, 2006,89 pages; AAT 3206361
Abstract (Summary)
This study focuses on the reentry phase of cross-cultural experiences, or when a traveler returns home from their time abroad. Despite being the least studied, research has found that this phase is often the most difficult.
This study was designed to survey Returned Peace Corps volunteers (RPCV’s) to see how they experience reentry. Using several statistical analyses, this study aimed to answer 6 research questions. (1) RPCV’s who experienced a crisis during service will feel significantly less prepared for reentry than those who did not experience a crisis. (2) The mean level of distress will be higher for those volunteers who experienced a crisis during service. (3) Whether there were differences between levels of symptoms of loneliness/isolation/disconnection and depression/sadness at four time points. (4) The mean level of distress will be higher for those volunteers who left service involuntarily. (5) The mean level of distress will be higher for those volunteers with less experience with reentry or transitions. (6) Whether four factors: age, gender, length of stay overseas and amount of support at home impacted level of reentry distress.
Results of this study show that depression and loneliness are the symptoms most experienced by RPCV’s and the factors that impact reentry include being female, experiencing a crisis and how much support one returns to at home. Support was not found for the impact of leaving service involuntarily, having less experience with reentry, the length of one’s stay overseas or an individual’s age. It was found that the experience of a crisis significantly increases one’s distress upon reentry and significantly decreases how prepared one is for reentry. It was also found that RPCV’s take, on average, longer than a year to readjust, whereas in other expatriate populations most individual consider themselves readjusted within the six months after returning home.
Recommendations are made regarding steps Peace Corps can take to strengthen their training program at the end of service and during the reentry phase so that in the future the needs of Peace Corps volunteers will be attended to at all stages of their cross cultural exchange.
2004
The impact of ethnicity on volunteerism in Sub-Saharan Africa: A look at African-American and Euro-American returned Peace Corps volunteers
by Sia-Maat, Shadidi, Ph.D., University of Southern California, 2004,262 pages; AAT 3140554
Abstract (Summary)
This study examined the significance of ethnicity for African-American RPCVs vis-à-vis Euro- American RPCVs, in their ability to accomplish Peace Corps and personal objectives in SubSaharan Africa. Historically, the paucity of African-Americans (3%) working as volunteers in SubSaharan Africa in relation to Euro-Americans (97%) served as the catalyst for this research.
This study utilized the mixed model design, in which the qualitative design served as the dominant paradigm and the quantitative design provided supplemental data.
The methodological framework for the qualitative design employed grounded theory. Utilizing computer software, MAXqda, the twenty African-American RPCVs, and four managers’ responses to the semi-structured and informal interviews were analyzed, using the constant comparative method.
The data analysis for the quantitative design was prepared using the SPSS computer software program. A descriptive analysis looked at four variables; one dependent variable, the volunteer’s perceived contributions to the development process, and three independent variables, namely, ethnicity, socio-economic status (SES), and living environment in the United States.
Overall, this study found that African-American RPCVs adapted significantly better to their Peace
Corps assignments than Euro-American RPCVs. They were more successful at achieving Peace Corps and personal objectives. The findings were delineated in three areas.
The first area conveyed the life experiences and perspectives of African-American RPCVs, prior to joining the Peace Corps. Those experiences and perspectives benefited African-American RPCVs in their adjustment to Africa, as well as in their overall success. The second area, enumerated ethnic/racial attributes of African-American RPCVs, which significantly correlated with the Africans they lived and worked with. Finally, and most importantly, the findings found that African American RPCVs vis-à-vis Euro-American RPCVs had a greater impact in the area of education, as trainers and teachers because of their ethnicity.
This study offered evidence that supports increasing the number of African-Americans sent to SubSaharan Africa by the Peace Corps, agencies for international development and Foreign Service. A replication of this research with a larger sample is encouraged, to further investigate the pedagogical success of African-Americans in Sub-Saharan Africa.
2003
Working with the contradictions of international development: Improvisational strategies of Peace Corps volunteers
by Bartholomew, Pamela Anne, M.S., Michigan State University, 2003,91 pages; AAT 1414624
Abstract (Summary) The purpose of this research was to explore and describe how improvisation is used by Peace Corps Volunteers as a strategy for negotiating and renegotiating international development. Arce and Long’s perspectives on modernity were used to situate how and why various local actors renegotiate development. Long’s perspective on the social interfaces of development was used to conceptualize the complexities and place in which development is renegotiated and Stake’s perspective on formative evaluation provided a visualization for how improvisation could occur by the simultaneous evaluation, planning and facilitation of emancipatory social change. This research was conducted using qualitative exploratory and rapid appraisal methodologies. Themes of context and improvisation emerged from the research and indicated that program implementers are able to renegotiate the contradictions inherent in development by using improvisation and that the use of improvisation was dependent upon the empowerment of the Peace Corps Volunteer.
2001
The impact of the Peace Corps experience on returned volunteers: A case study of Peace Corps Mali returned volunteers
by Sissoko, Moussa, Ph.D., University of Kansas, 2001,262 pages; AAT 3013509
Abstract (Summary)
The purpose of this dissertation was to look at U.S. Peace Corps in the context of U.S. relations with Africa. This has involved an examination of issues related to foundations, globalization, and the origins and creation of the Peace Corps as an agency. Particularly, it has involved a study of the Peace Corps in Mali as an attempt to assess the impact of Peace Corps service on volunteers who served there since 1971 in terms of changes in their worldviews, career goals, education, and perceptions of Mali and Africa. Data for the study were drawn from Peace Corps and the State Department collections housed under RG 59 and 490 at the National Archives, as well as a survey questionnaire and in-depth interviews.
The findings of the survey suggest that the Peace Corps experience appears to have had an extremely positive impact on many volunteers who served in Mali. The impact is most felt in the area of personal growth, where 76 percent of respondents felt that Peace Corps service had been a source of personal enrichment for them. All respondents reported that they had a more realistic view of Mali and Africa. More than 80 percent of Returned Peace Corps Volunteers (RPCVs) felt that their experience had enhanced their sensitivity to cultural differences, broadened their outlook, and increased their understanding of minorities. These findings are consistent with previous national surveys of RPCVs.
The impact of international experience on teaching with a global perspective: Reflections of returned Peace Corps volunteer teachers
by Myers, Barbara Hubbard, Ph.D., The Ohio State University, 2001,236 pages; AAT 3022545
Abstract (Summary)
Demographic, economic, political, and environmental world trends have combined to create a qualitatively different class of unavoidable world-level problems that were virtually unknown to traditional diplomacy, that are beyond the reach of national governments, that cannot fit into the accepted theories of competitive interstate behavior, that are coming increasingly to dominate affairs that cannot be wished away, and are indifferent to military force.
Because global issues are increasingly difficult to assess and solve, it is important to develop a global consciousness by developing global perspectives, understanding global awareness, and integrating global education into all facets of teaching and learning. The purpose of this study was to examine the various perceived effects of cross-cultural experiences on the subsequent curricula and instruction of returned Peace Corps volunteer teachers. The objective was to provide insight into how teachers have incorporated international cross-cultural experiences into their teaching with a global perspective.
This study utilized qualitative inquiry. Data collection methods included an initial correspondence to collect logistical data, followed by recorded interviews, follow-up telephone conversations, and notes to guide the analysis. Evidence from the study revealed that motives for joining Peace Corps were guided by different influences–most strongly, that of personal achievement and self-gain. Overall, the major findings indicated how the respondents perceived a change in their instructional practice; however, the strongest impact of change occurred within themselves rather than in their curriculum and instruction.
Further investigation of global education and teaching with a global perspective, as well as
recommendations for international experiences for perspective teachers is also discussed.
Implications from the study include considerations for the integration of Peace Corps and Global
Education with that of school curricula, to be utilized in teacher preparation.
1999
Predictors of reverse culture shock in returned Peace Corps volunteers
by Bieber. Lawrence C., M.S., University of Wyoming, 1999,64 pages; AAT EP17910
Abstract (Summary) Predictors of reverse culture shock were examined in 335 returned Peace Corps volunteers who served in third world countries for an average of two years from 1961 to 1993. While serving in the Peace Corps, volunteers live and work in the third world and are exposed to poverty. Reverse culture shock (RCS) is the returned volunteers’ adjustment and reaction to the home culture. Participants completed a survey that measured acculturation and reverse culture shock. It was hypothesized that greater acculturation, younger age, longer Peace Corps service, and greater influence of poverty predicted greater RCS. Being in a romantic, living together relationship was hypothesized to reduce RCS. Simple regression indicated that acculturation did not predict the RCS. RCS was best predicted by a combination of acculturation variables, demographic characteristics, and sojourn variables using separate stepwise regressions for men and women. Results revealed weak support that younger age and longer Peace Corps service increased RCS. Increased reaction to poverty predicted greater RCS for men and women probably because volunteers’ values concerning affluence and materialism are at odds with American norms and values. Being in a romantic, living together relationship reduced RCS for women. For men, greater contact with other returned Peace Corps volunteers reduced RCS. An unexpected finding was that difficulty with culture shock was the strongest predictor of RCS. The most likely explanation for this finding is that younger volunteers have greater difficulty with crosscultural transitions. Identity with the host country culture also predicted RCS.
1998
Perceptions of female Returned Peace Corps Volunteers regarding the participation and empowerment process for rural African women: A model
by Au, Hassan, Ph.D., Iowa State University, 1998, 226 pages; AAT 9826508
Abstract (Summary)
The purpose of this study was to interview female Returned Peace Corps Volunteers (RPCVs) who, within the last five years, had set up, implemented, and managed an agriculturally-based, participatory and empowerment program for rural and village women, during their overseas assignment in Africa. An interview schedule of open-ended questions was used to document descriptive data regarding participation and empowerment.
Participation occurs when facilitators or international development personnel establish self-help programs that permit women to organize, design, implement and manage their own development programs; therefore, members of the target population can have direct involvement in the process of improving their lives. Empowerment is defined as increasing the control of individual(s) over decisions, resources and institutions that may affect them.
The purpose of this study was to determine how to improve the delivery methodologies in international extension programming for women at the village level. By interviewing selected RPCVs in this study, a comprehensive list of strategies, suggestions and helpful hints was compiled to facilitate and improve the implementation of programs that help women become directly involved in the process of solving their own problems. The objectives for this study were twofold:
(a) to identify methods to enhance the effectiveness of participatory and empowerment activities for rural women, and (b) to identify strategies that may be used to attract rural/village women to participate in these self-help development programs.
Five general conclusions were reached: (a) to achieve a successful participatory and empowerment program, a credibility stage must be completed; (b) the village women must come together as a group and work as a team to complete program activities; (c) the female clients need to expend “sweat equity” to reap program benefits; (d) participation and especially empowerment needs to adhere to village norms (i.e., they must conform to local village protocols); and (e) only “badly needed programs” (as identified by the female clients) should be initiated, and whenever possible these programs should be fun and enjoyable for the participants. Finally, a model for implementation was developed to implement a participatory and empowerment regime that emerged based on the findings of the study.
Self-efficacy and cultural awareness: A study of returned Peace Corps teachers
by Cross, Mary Catherine, Ph.D., The Catholic University of America, 1998, 343 pages; AAT 9829288
Abstract (Summary)
Statement of problem. Peace Corps volunteers who return to the U.S. to teach are often viewed as having special qualities that enhance their teaching. Returned Peace Corps teachers are consistently characterized in positive terms because of their spirit, their can-do attitude, and their ability to triumph in the face of difficult school situations. This ability to thrive is very much like what Bandura termed self-efficacy: the belief that one is capable of carrying out the actions needed to manage situations, even in the face of difficulties. Teachers with high self-efficacy believe they affect student learning positively. Returned Peace Corps teachers are also credited with having cultural awareness which helps them succeed in teaching students from diverse backgrounds. The purpose of this study was to explore how returned Peace Corps teachers viewed the Peace Corps experience and its impact on their self-efficacy and cultural awareness.
Method. The study consisted of a questionnaire, interviews and observations. Participants for this study were 154 teachers representative of approximately 30,000 returned Peace Corps volunteer teachers, by country and decade of service. A random cluster sample of teachers who were members of two regional returned volunteer associations completed the questionnaire. The questionnaire contained demographic questions, the Sherer et al. (1982) General Self-Efficacy scale and the Gibson and Dembo Teacher Efficacy Scale (1984). Interviews were done with a smaller subset of 15 teachers. Cultural awareness, self-efficacy, teacher efficacy and the importance of the Peace Corps experience were explored in the interviews. Six teachers in this smaller sample were also be observed in their classrooms. The observations focused on practices that are associated with high self-efficacy teachers and effective multicultural teachers.
Results. Questionnaires were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Interviews and observations were taped, transcribed, and analyzed. Data from questionnaires and interviews indicated that these teachers had high self-efficacy. A developed sense of cultural awareness was indicated in the interviews, but was not always observed in classroom visits. The data from the questionnaire and the interviews indicated mixed results in the area of teacher efficacy. The Peace Corps experience was ranked highly by teachers in its effect on their self-efficacy and cultural awareness, and less highly in its effect on their teaching.
Conclusions. Results indicated that the Peace Corps functioned as a mastery experience. The volunteers described the experience as difficult for a variety of reasons, but credited the Peace Corps with developing their enhanced sense of self-efficacy. Feelings of self-confidence, willingness to take on challenges, and the ability to thrive in difficult situations were attributed to their experience in the Peace Corps. Most volunteers reported increased cultural awareness as a result of the Peace Corps experience, especially a modified view of the world. The results indicated that most volunteers had a strong belief in their ability to teach. However, they also believed that a student’s learning was affected not only by their teaching, but also by factors outside their control. The teachers ranked the Peace Corps experience as very important in affecting their personality and as somewhat important in affecting their teaching.
1996
Returned Peace Corps volunteers who teach: A profile of teachers who serve their country and their students
by Hammerschlag, Judith Ruth, Ph.D., The Claremont Graduate University, 1996, 142 pages; AAT 9703839
Abstract (Summary)
This study investigates ways that learning and behavior, especially teaching behavior, are based upon upbringing, education, and lived experiences. Returned Peace Corps volunteers (RPCV5) were chosen as the study’s subjects because they share in common the experiences of volunteering and teaching.
Certain characteristics were common to volunteers and effective teachers, including: commitment; self-reflection; respect for cultural differences; an ethic of care; autonomy; resourcefulness; adaptability; and, concern for a larger world community. Certain features were found in common between Peace Corps service and teaching, including: job success cannot be measured in terms of monetary rewards; working cooperatively with cohorts improves the job conditions; the ability to remain flexible and deal with the unexpected will likely assure job satisfaction; successful candidates are not afraid of working with populations whose culture, religion, and economic position are different than their own.
A mail survey collected information from 100 RPCVs. Case studies were conducted in 40-minute telephone interviews with 5 representatives of the mail survey group and provided opportunities to go beyond the quantified results and focus upon what was seen as the meaning of experiences.
Eighty-two percent of the RPCVs who teach surveyed in this study did not do their undergraduate studies in the field of education. Fifty-one percent of the respondents were male which is higher than the national average of men in teaching. The respondents indicated that there were aspects of their Peace Corps training and experiences which they utilize in their teaching that they never learned in teacher training programs in the United States.
A phenomenological approach to the research permitted a systematic study of interrelationships among life experiences. RPCVs who teach are individuals whose actions are synchronized with their belief systems and who view their positions as Peace Corps volunteers and teachers as service to others.
1995
Development and use of an instrument for assessing the social environment of Peace Corps training programs
by Styes, David James, Ed.D., University of Massachusetts Amherst, 1995, 174 pages; AAT 9606569
Abstract (Summary)
Over the last 25 years, researchers have made a strong case for a better understanding of the role of the social environment in formal classroom educational settings. Much of the research in this area has centered around the relationships between students’ perceptions of their classroom social environment and various educational outcomes, such as achievement. Numerous instruments have been developed and used for assessing the social environment in various formal classroom settings. Unfortunately, parallel research has not occurred in adult training settings despite the assumption by many, if not most, trainers that the social climate in a training program impacts the outcome of the program.
The purpose of this study was to develop and use a social environment assessment instrument in an adult training setting in order to demonstrate the viability of such an instrument development procedure for adult training programs. In addition, this study sought to demonstrate the utility of information collected by the assessment instrument developed. The US Peace Corps’ preservice training program was selected as a setting for the development of the procedure and to demonstrate uses of the information collected.
A social environment assessment instrument for the Peace Corps’ preservice training programs was developed and the development process documented. It was apparent that the same instrument development procedure could be used in other adult training settings. The information generated from uses of the assessment instrument developed, both draft and final versions, proved to be useful to both training program managers and to trainers in their work. These uses were also documented.
This study also found that the theoretical fr4mework upon which formal classroom social environment assessment research is based is applicable to an adult training setting, as are the commonly used instrument development procedures for assessing classroom environments.
One particularly interesting conclusion of this study was that assessment instruments must be kept simple in adult training settings. Trainers and training managers are reluctant to use a longer version of the instrument developed even though it was shorter than some widely-used similar instruments designed for formal classroom settings.
Peace Corps fellows enter the urban classroom: Learning to teach by the authority of experience
by Bombaugh, Ruth, Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1995,282 pages; AAT 9542797
Abstract (Summary)
This self-study by a beginning teacher educator focuses on the clinical supervision of three secondary science teachers in urban classrooms. The study is premised on the belief that reflective practitioners are researchers in the practice context and that teacher educators, no less than teachers themselves, need to engage in systematic, intentional self-reflection in order to improve their own practice.
Both the author-supervisor and the teachers are part of an alternative certification and masters degree program custom-designed for returned Peace Corps Volunteers called The Peace Corps Fellows/USA Program. The dual worlds of the public-innercity-science classrooms and the large- midwestern-university-education classrooms constitute the context of the study and interface with three significant areas of educational research: science education, teacher development and urban education.
The study is informed by multiple sources of data collected over an eighteen month period: 20 interviews, 5 focus-group sessions, over 60 classroom observations, portfolios, and journal entries. The results are reported in a series of critical vignettes, or short stories. This experimental format is in keeping with a phenomenological stance of describing events with attention to the details as a way of conveying a situation as accurately as possible. Such attention to the details is deemed absolutely essential for capturing the nuances of the atmosphere, the feeling of the reality of the present and the mood, i.e. Heidigger’s Befindlichkeit.
Findings of the study challenge the implicit assumption that overseas teaching experiences in the Peace Corps enhance return volunteer’s first semester transition in U.S. urban teaching, document constraints imposed by the large bureaucratic high school against efforts of the teachers to establish science learning communities in their classrooms, and describe the conceptual change which took place in the three teachers’ understandings of the nature of science and student-centered teaching. From these findings, the author makes the practical proposal that peer critiquing and collaboration such as focus groups may be an effective alternative or addition to one-on-one clinical supervision.
1994
Acculturation in international development: The Peace Corps in Costa Rica. (Volumes I and II)
by Tsatsoulis-Bonnekessen, Barbara, Ph.D., University of Kansas, 1994,475 pages; AAT 9504064
Abstract (Summary)
In its thirty years of service, the Peace Corps has acquired a well-founded international reputation for successful grassroots development assistance through the unpretentious lifestyle of American individuals living and working in a single community. Clouding this success is the high rate of early terminations of trained volunteers, which not only causes financial loss to the organization, but also questions the ability of American volunteers to successfully transplant into another culture.
This study determines the loss of volunteers to be a symptom of unsuccessful bicultural acculturation. Detailed case histories show that all volunteers undergo a sequence of preparation, cross-cultural contact, conflict, adaptation, and separation, whereby the stages of contact-conflict- adaptation repeat with each contact. The choice of adaptation strategy of the successful volunteer varies with the area of conflict; conflict in the professional area induces adjustment, while conflict in the social area causes reaction or withdrawal. The unsuccessful volunteer is one who has been placed succeeding another, feels overwhelmed by the expectations of the community, and has low social language skills. This individual cannot adjust successfully in either area and sees withdrawal and separation as the only solution.
The results of this study suggest that more volunteers could be retained by raising their professional satisfaction, improving social language skills, and by placing volunteers into communities without a recent volunteer.
This study follows fifteen volunteers of the Peace Corps through their service experience in Costa
Rica. They entered training in November 1990 and were scheduled to serve from February 1991 to
January 1993. The group consisted of six women and nine men, ranging in age from 23 to 69 years.
The volunteers were interviewed and tested before and during training, during the first six months
of service, after one year, and shortly before they left Costa Rica.
Americans in the Third World: Peace Corps volunteers in the 1960s
by Fischer, Fritz, Ph.D., Northwestern University, 1994,410 pages; AAT 9433834
Abstract (Summary)
This dissertation examines Peace Corps volunteer attitudes during the 1960s and explores the relationship between these attitudes and official agency policy. Most historians, without examining the volunteers, have stuffed the Peace Corps into traditional Cold War explanations for post World War II foreign policy. Analyzing the volunteers points towards a broader understanding of America’s relationship with the world as well as American society at home.
The first Peace Corps Director, Sargent Shnver, and the men he chose as his top deputies, rejected previous models of dealing with the developing world. They were not Cold Warriors, and tried to ignore the Cold War agenda. They insisted on breaking from past western colonialist models, and felt they could do so by creating an anti-bureaucratic bureaucracy. This agency would respect local values, while at the same time promoting universal humanistic ideals. They took Kennedy’s New Frontier rhetoric seriously, launching a program which would help developing countries by sending them people who knew how to conquer frontiers–a new brand of American pioneer, the Peace Corps volunteer. They designed an exhaustive training regimen to mold young Americans into new pioneers and prepare them to encounter frontier conditions.
The volunteers found a reality differing from their expectations. Many lived in clean, comfortable, modern housing. Some had servants. Some rarely interacted with their hosts, and their work provided unexpected pitfalls. Many volunteers were women, yet the pioneer image was male. Peace Corps leaders had difficulty understanding why few minorities joined the Corps, but the mythic pioneer was white. Despite their best efforts, the leaders failed to prevent the growth of a bureaucratic wall between the agency and the volunteers in the field. Volunteers also found tremendous difficulties trying to live with the contradictions of accepting local culture while promoting universal humanistic values.
In the end, the volunteers developed their own philosophy about their projects, a philosophy of democratic, egalitarian independence that had little to do with either Kennedy’s Cold War ideals or Shriver’s ideas of the new pioneer.
1991
Peru and the Peace Corps, 1962- 1968
by Sheffield, Glenn Francis, Ph.D., The University of Connecticut, 1991,428 pages; AAT 9221536
Abstract (Summary)
Peru hosted one of the largest Peace Corps contingents in the world. In many respects, most notably in its rural and urban community development programs, Peace Corps/Peru served as a model for Peace Corps activities throughout Latin America. This thesis argues, contrary to prevailing interpretations, that Peace Corps programs were intimately linked with and broadly conditioned by United States foreign policy and development assistance objectives in Peru. They were also shaped by many aspects of Peruvian social and political reality for which the Peace Corps proved largely unprepared and often incapable of understanding. Consequently, despite published claims of success in promoting social change and development in Peru by the Peace Corps and by researchers affiliated with Cornell University’s Peru Project experiment in applied anthropology, this thesis finds that most Peace Corps volunteers and Peace Corps programs failed to contribute to the organization’s statutory goals of providing middle level manpower assistance to Peru, and increasing mutual understanding between the people of Peru and the U.S. The evidence suggests that these conclusions also hold for other Latin American countries.
Through its focus on the nexus between Peace Corps’ ostensibly non-political development assistance programs, U.S. foreign policy, and Peruvian development strategies, this thesis contributes to the social and political history of the little understood first administration of Fernando Belaunde Terry (1963-1968), especially through its examination of Belaunde’s agenda for social and economic development and his troubled relations with the U.S. It also advances a thoroughgoing re-interpretation of the political role of the Peace Corps. Additionally, it provides evidence for a revision of significant aspects of U.S. policy toward Peru, particularly in relation to the slowdown in U.S. assistance to that country in the Alliance for Progress years.
The study is based on extensive research in primary sources, including hundreds of recently declassified documents at the presidential libraries of Lyndon B. Johnson and John F. Kennedy. Other sources include a wealth of unpublished Peace Corps documents, published reports and documents in Peru, and many oral history interviews, including seventeen conducted by the author in Peru.
The impact of a transition workshop on reentry anxiety of Peace Corps Volunteers
by Hartzell, Nedra, Ph.D., University of Maryland College Park, 1991, 191 pages; AAT 9222692
Abstract (Summary)
This study assessed anxiety about re-entry (returning to the U.S.) among Peace Corps Volunteers (PCVs) abroad who were preparing to return to the U.S. The re-entry transition for PCVs has four major components: losses associated with leaving the country of service abroad; employment change; cross-cultural readaptation; and changes in expectations.
The re-entry transition has been described as more disruptive than the initial cross-cultural transition abroad by Peace Corps and other populations. Anxiety has been identified as a variable in cultural transition states. Several authors have hypothesized that systematic preparation for an anticipated re-entry transition can result in smoother transitions.
In the present study, it was hypothesized that a transition intervention based upon a transition model conceptualized by Schlossberg would significantly reduce re-entry anxiety among PCVs in comparison to re-entry anxiety among PCVs completing the standard Peace Corps re-entry intervention. The standard Peace Corps re-entry intervention offered consideration of the re-entry transition alone. The experimental workshops addressed re-entry in a broader context, considering past transition behavior and future plans for the re-entry transition.
Participants completed the State Trait Anxiety Inventory before and after the interventions, and the Adult Career Concerns Inventory. One hundred twenty-three PCVs in six countries participated in the study.
Both experimental and comparison group participants reported less re-entry anxiety after their respective workshops. No significant differences were reported between re-entry anxiety scores of the experimental and comparison subjects, however.
Female subjects expressed more anxiety than male subjects at each level of measurement on the
State Trait Anxiety Inventory. The differences were significant for posttest state anxiety, F(1, 114) =
4.107, p $<$.05.
Subjects in the study were most concerned with career exploration, the first of Super’s career development stages (mean = 3.41, SD =81). When compared to provisional national norms, subjects overall expressed less career concern.
A significant negative correlation (r = $-$.2544, p $<$.01) was reported between age and pretest
state anxiety, suggesting that age and experience with transitions reduce anxiety about transitions.
A significant positive correlation (r =.3405, p $<$.001) was reported between levels of posttest state
anxiety and levels of difficulty in initial adjustment to the Peace Corps site.
1990
The international economic order and the evolution of the United States Peace Corps
by Dee, Michael J., M.A., University of Wyoming, 1990, 114 pages; AAT EP24103
Abstract (Summary) Abstract not available.
The special concerns of African-American Peace Corps volunteers
by Helms, Loretta Ann, EcI.D., Columbia University Teachers College, 1990, 123 pages; AAT 9033849
Abstract (Summary)
African-Americans serving as Peace Corps volunteers (PCVs) have concerns which are peculiar to them as an ethnic group. During pre- and in-service training these concerns are not addressed, leaving the African-Americans with unrealistic expectations and essentially ill-prepared for service.
For this study the subjects were 15 African-American returned PCVs, five from each of the three designated Peace Corps regions of service (Sub-Saharan African; Inter-America; NANEAP or North America, the Near East, Asia and the Pacific). The sample was purposefully selected to ensure heterogeneity since it was logically concluded that any common outcomes which emerged from variation in the sample would be of importance in capturing the central concerns of the subject. Data were collected through in-depth, open-ended interviews with the researcher using a combination of the informal conversational interview and an interview guide. Analysis was inductive with the central concerns of the subjects drawn from the data generated by the open- ended interviews.
The data indicated that there were four major concerns common to all the subjects, namely, perceived discrimination by host nationals, including Black on Black discrimination and fairskinned against dark-skinned; labeled nigger by host nationals; stereotypical views of AfricanAmericans held by host nationals; and mistaken for host nationals or nationals from neighboring countries. Two other concerns which were expressed by the subjects who had served in SubSaharan Africa are: labeled White by host nationals and perceived as racists by White volunteers.
In view of these findings several recommendations are made to Peace Corps regarding future training as well as recruitment strategies to increase the total number of African-American PCVs.
1989
The Peace Corps: A study of the transition to bureaucracy
by Manno, Joseph Ralph, Ph.D., University of Maryland College Park, 1989,232 pages; AAT 9021543
Abstract (Summary)
This is a study of a federal government agency, the Peace Corps, that was created with the concept of being a uniquely non-bureaucratic government agency. The founders of the agency were a group of high-spirited and idealistic persons. Their purpose was to create a federal agency completely different from the others. In the words of Sargent Shriver, the first director of the Peace Corps, it was sui generis.
The founders not only wanted to create a non-bureaucratic agency, they wanted to provide a mechanism to keep bureaucracy from the agency in perpetuity. Employees were not to consider the Peace Corps a career. Significantly, to guarantee control of bureaucracy and to minimize self- interest, they persuaded the United States Congress to pass a law limiting staff tenure to five years. One of the Peace Corps staffers commented that this was the first time ever that an agency moved to limit the tçnure of its staff in order to avoid “bureaucraticsclerosis.” The five-year rule for turnover of staff by a federal government agency is a novel concept.
The study measured the following classical characteristics of bureaucracy as defined by Max Weber: (1) the existence of rules and regulations to govern daily operations; (2) the existence of a professional administrative class of employees with technical competence; (3) the existence of division of labor, and (4) the existence of authority levels arranged in a hierarchy.
The conclusion of the study shows that the Peace Corps did become more bureaucratic in spite of the founder& wishes and the five-year rule. It shows how the Peace Corps started with volunteers in both its administrative and volunteer structures and how it went from voluntansm to professionalization; how the division of labor, recruitment and training functions, which were to be contracted to other organizations, were done by the Peace Corps as soon as possible; and how the five-year rule was modified.
The sojourning experience: A study of Peace Corps EFL volunteer/teachers
by Linse, Caroline Teresa, Ed.D., Harvard University, 1989, 166 pages; AAT 9000870
Abstract (Summary)
The study examined the crosscultural adaptation process experienced by Peace Corps volunteers as sojourners. Sojourners are individuals who travel to another culture to live and study or work. The study examined the process of adaptation from the perspective of former English as a Foreign Language (EFL) Peace Corps volunteers.
Much of the sojourner literature has focused on the crosscultural adaptation of Peace Corps volunteers. The sojourner literature has dealt with crosscultural adaptation process models and factors which influence adaptation. The current sojourning literature does not include the perspective of participants in the sojourning process. In the literature describing crosscultural adaptation process models, there are theoretical frameworks stating what should take place during adaptation.
The sample consisted of returned Peace Corps EFL teacher volunteers who had served after 1969 and have taught English as a foreign language. The questionnaire consisted of three sections:
background information, reflections on the personal Peace Corps experience, and the Peace Corps experience for others. Fifty-four (Returned Peace Corps Volunteers) RPCVs returned questionnaires. The data were analyzed to determine the influencing factors and overall adaptation process. After the initial data were analyzed 10 RPCVs participated in follow-up interviews to triangulate the data.
The study revealed four factors which influenced the experience; crosscultural knowledge and crosscultural understanding; language; task effectiveness and task importance; and relationships. According to RPCVs crosscultural knowledge is: knowing the locally acceptable rules, understanding is a respectful attitude towards members of the local culture. Crosscultural knowledge and understanding also encompassed recognition of the differences in the ways men and women are treated in Third World countries. Teaching as ajob was an important aspect of the sojourn and influenced the Peace Corps experience. Language and acquisition of the local language(s) influenced the experience. Three types of relationships influenced the experience; relationships volunteers had with their loved ones, relationships with members of the host country and relationships with other volunteers.
1988
An ethnographic study of female Peace Corps volunteers in Sub-Saharan Africa
by Swartz, Marsha Rae, M.A., University of Oregon, 1988,203 pages; AAT 1335238
Abstract (Summary)
This qualitative study describes and analyzes the replies of 29 female Peace Corps volunteers who served in Sub-Saharan Africa for one to three years during the years of 1967-84. The respondents were located by networking efforts of the author around the United States. Fifteen returned mail questionnaires, nine were interviewed in person and four were interviewed by telephone. The replies were categorized, studied, and related to relevant literature. The work and social environment of the volunteers were scrutinized in order that their effects on volunteer performance and perception of the results of service might be ascertained.
A high number of volunteers commented on the fact that the cultural knowledge of and the ability to successfully communicate with their counterparts at their sites was what made the greatest difference to their enjoying and feeling successful about their work. The importance of sharing of themselves with their new friends was crucial.
The Peace Corps: Origins and performance in Cameroon
by Amin, Julius Atemkeng, Ph.D., Texas Tech University, 1988, 291 pages; AAT 8908499
Abstract (Summary)
In 1960, John F. Kennedy accused the Eisenhower administration of allowing America to lose momentum in the Cold War. Under the Republican administration the country had grown conservative, fat and lazy. There were many problems: Sputnik, a missile-gap, Castro’s Cuba and the neglect of the Third World countries. These problems, Kennedy noted, resulted from reacting to Soviet activities instead of initiating new policies. Kennedy promised “to get the country moving again” by offering new directions in foreign policy.
As president, Kennedy acted on his promise when on March 1, 1961, he signed Executive Order 10924 establishing the Peace Corps. This agency quickly became part of U.S. governmental support for Third World development.
The Peace Corps, though a major innovation of the Kennedy administration, is often ignored in the Kennedy literature. The few studies which focus on the Peace Corps expound it as an example of American idealism. This study, while not rejecting the idealism theory, attempts to show that more pragmatic reasons were at work when the Peace Corps was established. Additionally, the study goes beyond the agency’s creation by examining the performance of the volunteers in Cameroon, West Africa. The study covers the period from the establishment of the Peace Corps agency to 1966, when Sargent Shriver, the agency’s first director, was reappointed to other functions. Also, after 1966, the volunteers were no longer trained in the United States.
My hope is that this study will add something new to the interpretations of the Peace Corps agency, demonstrating the agency’s importance in post-World War II American foreign policy, and illustrating the rocky path volunteers traveled in executing their duties. Finally, the author wishes to encourage other studies of the Peace Corps in action.
1985
A HISTORY OF THE VOLUNTEER SELECTION PROCESS IN THE UNITED STATES PEACE
CORPS (TRAINING)
by SMITH, ROBIN MCCOLLOUGH, Educat.D., Indiana University, 1985, 155 pages; AAT 8520487
Abstract (Summary)
The purpose of this study is to trace the historical development of the Volunteer selection process in the United States Peace Corps from its beginning in 1961, through 1984. Sources for the data gathered in this study were located primarily in the library archives of the Peace Corps national headquarters in Washington, DC. Additional sources of information were obtained through conversation with Peace Corps employees and the published works of certain individuals.
Utilizing a methodology which combined the chronological and thematic approaches to historical research, the study documents events in three major areas: (a) legislation which led to passage of the Peace Corps Act, (b) selection models utilized between 1961 and 1984, and (c) training strategies employed over the 24 years.
The study found three distinct periods in the history of Peace Corps selection. For the first seven to nine years, the agency employed psychiatrists and psychologists as key personnel in the field. The presence of these mental health practitioners impacted enough on the quality of selection and training to be designated the psychiatric model period. At the turn of the decade, around 1970, a new model was initiated which minimized psychiatric input and gave more responsibility to the individual applicant to participate in the decision to qualify as a Volunteer. Finally, during a third period in selection history, the Peace Corps sponsored events called stagings which gave prospective trainees an opportunity to participate in selection and training activities prior to making the two-year commitment.
Conclusions drawn from this study acknowledge the Peace Corps as a unique federal agency which has historically modified its selection and training strategies in an effort to attract and prepare the best possible Volunteer force for overseas service. The study’s recommendations are for the Peace Corps to continue its growth and relevancy through at least three activities: (a) expansion of the information available to policy makers through in-house review of Peace Corps history, (b) more involvement of those who have had first-hand experience with the agency through consultation boards, and (c) application of parts of the Peace Corps model to the academic and business sectors.
1982
THE PEACE CORPS IMPACT
by SALAS, GLENDA CORDES, M.A., California State University, Fullerton, 1982, 133 pages; AAT 1318582
1981
CROSS-CULTURAL ADJUSTMENT AMONG PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS
by COSTANZO, RICHARD JOSEPH, Ph.D., The University of Chicago, 1981; AAT T-28058
Abstract (Summary) The study examines the process of cross-cultural adjustment experienced by Peace Corps volunteers. The research attempts to determine if there is a U-shaped culture shock pattern which is experienced by most individuals across a wide variety of situations. In addition, the study examines those variables which may moderate the shape and general level of the adjustment pattern. The data are from four cross-sectional surveys of volunteers, each with about 4,000 respondents. The primary dependent measures are Bradburn’s Affect Balance Scale and a work satisfaction index. Evidence for the existence of a U-Curve, or perhaps W-curve, was found. In addition, three major variables were identified which moderate the adjustment process among Peace Corps Volunteers. In general, it was shown that specific groups of volunteers can be identified for whom adjustment does and does not follow the U-Curve pattern. It is apparent that a complete understanding of culture shock requires a theory which addresses the large number of variables which moderate adjustment to any major life change such as a new job or a divorce. However, a simple cognitive model is useful in understanding the effect of those moderating variables which distinguish one culture from another and which are peculiar to the adjustment process called culture shock.
1980
ENGLISH TEST AND ATIITUDE MEASURES AMONG KOREAN STUDENTS OF UNITED STATES PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS
by KAILIAN, GREGORY SHAHAN, Educat.D., University of Southern California, 1980; AAT 0534003
Abstract (Summary)
Purpose. To determine effects of the U.S. Peace Corps/Korea English (TEFL) Education program by providing causal data on host student and co-teacher proficiency levels and attitudinal changes in relation to type and amount of host student and co-teacher exposure to Peace Corps Volunteer (PCV) teachers and English teaching methodologies.
Null Hypothesis. There would be no significant difference in mean levels of performance among control and experimental groups on measures of (a) reading comprehension, (b) pronunciation and intonation, (c) grammar and translation items as functions of school and teacher characteristics.
Methodology. Experimental Group 1 (N = 30) was selected from former schools and co-teachers of Peace Corps/Korea (PC/K) Volunteers. Only former co-teachers teaching seventh grade students and using the PC/K developed Methodology For Teachers instructional method met final selection criteria. Experimental Group 2 numbered 30 PCVs currently working with Korean teachers. Schools received lesson plans covering the contents of the Korean Middle School English textbook, chapters 13 to 18, in order to standardize teaching methods. Ten Experimental schools and five Control schools (total student N = 4043), assigned as a third, comparison group, were selected on the basis of teacher/school background to receive the instrumentation developed: Teacher Background Questionnaire, Teacher Attitude Questionnaire, Peace Corps Specific Questionnaire; Student Background Questionnaire, Student Attitude Questionnaire (Reliability Coefficient Alpha = .87), Peace Corps Student Specific Questionnaire (Reliability Coefficient Alpha = .77). The dependent variable was a comprehensive English cognitive instrument (Reliability Coefficient Alpha = .85) covering grammar/translation reading comprehension, and pronunciationlintonation items.
Findings. PCVs and Peace Corps developed teaching methodologies had statistically significant effects on Experimental Group test scores. However, when these same PCVs and teaching methodologies were associated with teachers who perceived themselves to be minimally qualified, negative effects resulted.
Conclusions. (1) Although negligible English achievement test differences were found, highly significant interactions were taking place among the variables involved. (2) Teacher characteristics seemed to be the critical factor. (3) Students exposed to PCVs and the PC/K developed spoken English teaching methodology consistently had higher test scores than students not so exposed, but only under certain conditions. (4) PC/K TEFL seemed most effective in the co-teaching context with Korean teachers if the following conditions applied: urban sites, private schools, Korean coteachers who were English majors in college, and who felt well qualified to teach English.
Recommendations. (1) This study be replicated with more teachers. (2) Present and future Peace Corps project planning and implementation take into consideration the implications of the present study to increase program impact and effectiveness. (3) Since the assignment of PCVs may actually create results completely opposite those intended, PCV placement policy be carefully reviewed in light of present study results. (4) PCV site assignment criteria be reviewed in light of the potential lowering of student performance under conditions where host teachers appear unable to integrate unfamiliar, new, teaching techniques. (5) Peace Corps develop a means for periodic, systematic measurement of host student performance and attitudes to determine whether any negative unintended effects occur in other knowledge/skills program areas. (6) Newer teaching methodologies be developed and tested for use with less qualified host country teachers if Peace Corps/Education program emphasis moves to stress upgrading presently weak teacher instructional skills and English-speaking ability.
PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD: A QUANTITATIVE STUDY
by COLEMAN, TERENCE DEAN, M.A., The American University, 1980,83 pages; AAT 1315397
Before 1980
(Note: Abstracts for these dissertations were unavailable from source, see below. As such, they are listed as one group ‘Before 1980’)
A STUDY OF THE ATTITUDES OF AFRO-AMERICAN STUDENTS AND FORMER VOLUNTEERS TOWARD THE PEACE CORPS
by THOMPSON, LISBETH SHARON, M.S., Howard University, 1979, 138 pages; AAT 1313606
MAJOR ADMINISTRATIVE PROBLEMS OF THE TEACHER CORPS I PEACE CORPS PROGRAM AND THEIR PRIORITIES
by GUZMAN, JOHN EDWARD, Ph.D., Washington State University, 1976,90 pages; AAT 7702861
INTERCULTURAL TRANSMISSION OF WORK VALUES IN A TEACHER RETRAINING SITUATION: A CASE STUDY OF THE PEACE CORPS IN THE PHILIPPINES
by HERRING, RONALD BYER, Ph.D., Stanford University, 1973,348 pages; AAT 7314907
THE DEVELOPMENT OF A REGIONAL PLAN FOR THE NORTH AFRICA, NEAR EAST, ASIA AND PACIFIC REGION OF THE PEACE CORPS
by BALLENDORF, DIRK ANTHONY, Ph.D., Harvard University, 1973,53 pages; AAT 7318224
INSTRUCTIONAL EFFECT ON QUESTION ASKING BEHAVIOR OF PROSPECTIVE PEACE CORPS SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS VOLUNTEER TEACHERS
by ADHIKARY, POORNA KANTA, Educat.D., Indiana University, 1972, 117 pages; AAT 7306962
ROLE STRAIN, TRAINING SHOCK, AND CULTURE SHOCK: TOWARD THE OPERATIONALIZATION OF A THEORY OF ROLE STRAIN IN THE EVALUATION OF ADJUSTMENT AND PERFORMANCE AMONG A GROUP OF NEW DIRECTIONS PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS
by JUAREZ, LEO JOSEPH, Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1972,291 pages; AAT 7320596
THE FIRST PEACE CORPS: THE WORK OF THE AMERICAN TEACHERS IN THE PHILIPPINES, 1900-1910
by MANIAGO, JO ANNE BARKER, Ph.D., Boston University Graduate School, 1971,324 pages; AAT
7126450
CROSS-CULTURAL ENCOUNTER AND PERSONALITY CHANGE: PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS IN THE PHILIPPINES
by STARR, JEROLD MARTIN, Ph.D., Brandeis University, 1970,460 pages; AAT 7024660
PSYCHODYNAMICS OF VOLUNTEERS SERVING OVERSEAS: RELIGIOUS VOCATION WORKERSAND PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS IN A NORTH AFRICAN COUNTRY
by FITZGERALD, OWEN RAY, Ph.D., Boston University Graduate School, 1969,212 pages; AAT 6918431
THE IMPACT OF PEACE CORPS TEACHERS ON STUDENTS IN ETHIOPIA
by BERGTHOLD, GARY DENNIS, Ph.D. [Ethopia 1962–64], Harvard University, 1969; AAT 0220052
THE PEACE CORPS AS A VALUE-ORIENTED MOVEMENT
by ZUNIGA, RICARDO BURMESTER, Ph.D., Harvard University, 1969; AAT 0221551
A PROGRAM FOR THE TRAINING OF TEACHERS OF PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY FOR SERVICE IN THE PEACE CORPS IN THE SECONDARY SCHOOLS OF ENGLISH SPEAKING AFRICA
by BENJAMIN, THEODORE DAVID, Educat.D., Columbia University, 1968,362 pages; AAT 6908067
PEACE CORPS/PHILIPPINES: IMAGE OR PERFORMANCE?
by ZIMMERMAN, ROBERT FREDERICK, Ph.D., The American University, 1968,441 pages; AAT 6813609
THE PEACE CORPS, 1961-1965, A STUDY IN OPEN ORGANIZATION
by BUSH, GERALD WILLIAM, Ph.D., Northern Illinois University, 1968, 224 pages; AAT 7003447
THE PEACE CORPS: AN ANALYSIS OF THE DEVELOPMENT, PROBLEMS, PRELIMINARY EVALUATION, AND FUTURE
by JONES, CHARLES CLYDE, Ph.D., West Virginia University, 1967,270 pages; AAT 6711789
THE ORGANIZATION AND OPERATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES PEACE CORPS PUBLIC INFORMATION DIVISION
by MARTIN, DONALD 0., M.A., The American University, 1966, 117 pages; AAT 1300975
THE RELATIONSHIP OF HIERARCHICAL NEED LEVEL TO SUCCESS OF PEACE CORPS TRAINEES
by HANDY, DEIRDRE CATHLEEN PATRICK, Ph.D., The University of Texas at Austin, 1966, 112 pages;
AAT 6703289
THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND THE PEACE CORPS
by MACFARLANE, RUTH, Ph.D., The Claremont Graduate University, 1965, 323 pages; AAT 6603374
DIFFERENTIATION, DEMAND, AND AGENCY IN PROJECTIONS OF THE PERSONAL FUTURE:
A PREDICTIVE STUDY OF THE PERFORMANCE OF PEACE CORPS TEACHERS
by EZEKIEL, RAPHAEL SAFRA, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1964,203 pages; AAT 6502977
THE DEVELOPMENT OF A PEACE CORPS TRAINING PROGRAM TO MEET THE REQUEST OF
LIBERIA FOR FIFTY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHERS, 1963
by BINSWANGER, ROBERT BARNET[, Ph.D., Harvard University, 1964; AAT 0256759
Source
ProQuest Digital Dissertations database. (http://www.ProQuest.com)
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THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND THE PEACE CORPS
by MACFARLANE, RUTH, Ph.D., The Claremont Graduate University, 1965,323 pages; AAT 6603374
I notice that all dissertations focus on American volunteers in various roles and locations, or the agency that sent them. I saw only one (Gary Berthold, Harvard University, 1969) which focused on the impact of Peace Corps volunteers on host-country nationals. This would be a rich vein of research to explore. Can anyone find a bibliography of dissertations or books, preferably written by scholars and authors from the countries where the Peace Corps was active?
John, the only book by an HCN that I know of is “The Peace Corps in Cameroon” by Julius Atemkeng Amin published in 1992 by Kent State University.