Independent Study Project Outline

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Title: โ€œOthers Before Self: Case Study of Tibetan Childrenโ€™s Village Selakuiโ€

Goal: How does Buddhism influence Tibetan Childrenโ€™s Village Selakui (TCV)?

1.      What are the Buddhist elements present at TCV? How do they manifest in the approaches to teaching, residential life, the social environment and the physical space of the school and the classroom? Are they implicit or explicit?

2.      In turn, how do these influences manifest themselves in students? How do they affect the studentsโ€™ social and emotional well being?

3.       Does compassion play a role in the influence of Buddhism at TCV? What is the relationship between this type of compassion and the definition of compassion according to the dharma?

Outline:

1.      Background

1.      Brief history of education in Tibet (Bernstorff, Saklani, Pema)

2.       History of all TCV schools and TCV Selakui (Vahali, Pema, Bernstorff)

3.       Review of anthropological literature on TCV

2.      Fieldwork at TCV

1.       Introduction โ€“ size, mission, Selakui in relation to other TCVs

2.       Buddhist influences on the school

1.       How does the institution implement Buddhism at TCV?

1.      explicit examples

2.      implicit examples

2.      How do these influences affect the students?

1.      studentsโ€™ view on Buddhist influence

2.      adultsโ€™ (parents, faculty) view on the effects

3.      observation of behavior

3.      Are the students developing compassion?

1.      observations/evidence

2.      studentsโ€™ understanding of compassion

3.      relate to Buddhist understanding of compassion (Dalai Lama, Sogyal Rinpoche, Chokyi Nyima Rimpoche, Shantideva)

3.      Analysis

4.      Conclusion

Conceptual Framework: Anthropological perspective of Buddhist influences on TCV, with a more focused, philosophical approach to compassion

Methodology: Literature review of anthropological research on TCV, review of Tibetan Buddhist texts relating to compassion, classroom observation and participation, interviews with students, teachers and faculty

Resources: Through arrangements with the Principal and Secretary of TCV, I hope to interview TCV faculty, staff/administrators, and TCV students. Outside of the school, through meals with families nearby (arranged by Secretary), I hope to interview TCV parents and alumni. At the Burmese Vihar, through setting up appointments, I hope to gain some insight into Tibetan Buddhism through Punya and Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche.

Bibliography:

Past projects: 2008, Alex Pfieffer-Rosenblum on compassion; 2011, Alyssa Barba on compassion; 2010, Greer Dent on TCV Upper Dharamsala; 1994, on TCV Upper Dharamsala.

Books:

Vahali, Honey O., Lives in Exile: Exploring the Inner World of Tibetan Refugees โ€“ psychological factors relating to Tibetan Children

Pema, Jetsun, Tibet: My Story โ€“ history of the TCV schools and Tibetan exile

Saklani, Girija, The Uprootes Tibetans in India โ€“ education in exile

Nowak, Margeret, Tibetan Refugees โ€“ explicit and implicit Buddhist education

Sogyal Rinpoche, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying โ€“ compassion practices

HH Dalai Lama, My Land, My People โ€“ history and mission of TCV schools

HH Dalai Lama, The World of Tibetan Buddhism โ€“ compassion in Tibetan Buddhism

Shantideva, The Way of the Bodhisattva โ€“ compassion practices

Bernstorff, Exile as Challenge: The Tibetan Diaspora โ€“ education pre-exile and TCV

Method of Evaluation: Paper

Alexx Temeรฑa

<i>*BASAA Scholarship</i> Hi! My name is Alexx Temeรฑa and I am currently a sophomore undergraduate at Brown University concentrating in cognitive neuroscience with the hopes of attending graduate school in clinical psychology. My primary academic interest lies in the intersection between the brain sciences and contemplative studies. Through my battle with anxiety, I was led to seek help from an advisor at my boarding high school who taught me the principles of meditation through the lens of neuroscience. Since then, I have found an interest in the personal and scientific inquiry of meditation and hope that by studying abroad in Bodh Gaya, India, I will gain more insight about the Buddhist history and philosophy that underlies the practice. This fall semester, I will be living in a monastic community and abide by the Buddhist precepts as I learn about Buddhist meditation traditions from Eastern and Western educators. I am most looking forward to the combination of rigorous academic study and first-person meditative practice, a pursuit for both academic knowledge and personal well being. At my home community at Brown, I serve sixty students in a first-year dormitory as a Woman Peer Counselor and sixty students as an undergraduate teaching assistant for a West African dance class. I am also a performer and choreographer in a dance theater company that explores international dance forms and movement improvisation. As a <a href="https://fundforeducationabroad.org/applicants/#basaa">Boston Area Study Abroad Association (BASAA) scholarship recipient</a>, I am excited to work with BASAA to increase global awareness by encouraging students in the Boston area to study abroad.