There is a Ukrainian tradition that states that a person
will return to wherever they have left things. While this is usually physical
objects, this can also mean unfinished business. As I left Ukraine in late
February 2014, my counterpart (A), told me that I had to return, as I had left
a lot of things in my apartment. That weekend, the official evacuation order
was given, and I was home before the next week was out. Home, in this case,
being Winston-Salem.
I started talks with the University of North Carolina at Greensboro
(UNCG), where I had been accepted into the Library and Information Studies
(LIS) program in 2013. I turned them down after I received my invitation to go
to Ukraine. I called my contact, the amazing Lee Shiflett, and he got me the
forms needed to become a student for Fall 2014. I spent the end of the
2013-2014 academic year substitute teaching off and on for WS/FCS. I spent a
few weeks in July with my grandparents, and then started school in the fall.
I was offered a Graduate Assistantship from the LIS Department, and I started work in August. I started classes a week after I started my GA work. I took six classes over the two semesters. If anyone is interested in what I did in my first year of Grad School, please see http://meganpbennett.blogspot.com/ which documents what I did for assignments.
I was offered a Graduate Assistantship from the LIS Department, and I started work in August. I started classes a week after I started my GA work. I took six classes over the two semesters. If anyone is interested in what I did in my first year of Grad School, please see http://meganpbennett.blogspot.com/ which documents what I did for assignments.
After the Peace Corps evacuated us, we were given a window,
during which we would be able to go straight back to Ukraine. That window
passed before Ukraine settled down enough, and the Peace Corps post closed.
Everyone hoped that the post would reopen in time for the Volunteers to return
before the 2014-2015 school year began, but the post did not reopen until
November, a year-to-the-day that the EuroMaiden protests broke out.
We were asked if we wanted to return, and when we could
leave, but everything was nebulous, with nothing concrete. In April, just shy
of two years after my original, life-changing Invitation email and about a year
from the ending of our holding window, the Peace Corps announced that
Volunteers could go back, starting in late May.
After careful thought, and talking to many people, I asked to return to Ukraine, as of June 01. I learned that I would be going back to my school, the one I left in 2014. I will be helping with a summer camp, the first my school has done, during at least some of the summer. I will be teaching English, and hoping to run an English club for the students and instructors. I will be remaining a continuing student at UNCG, by taking online classes during the school year. I look forward to returning to my city, my region, and my school, and to reconnect with people I met while I was there.
After careful thought, and talking to many people, I asked to return to Ukraine, as of June 01. I learned that I would be going back to my school, the one I left in 2014. I will be helping with a summer camp, the first my school has done, during at least some of the summer. I will be teaching English, and hoping to run an English club for the students and instructors. I will be remaining a continuing student at UNCG, by taking online classes during the school year. I look forward to returning to my city, my region, and my school, and to reconnect with people I met while I was there.

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