How being tech-savvy can make you life-savvy.

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Things change. This is a very obvious truth that, if not observed enough, can pass us by. Our understanding of a place or the people there might remain static while the reality on the ground is changing. In the beginning of 2015, while working full-time before university, I had a month-long stay in Amman, Jordan. Whether it was my Arabic language skills then or my lack of local context, I was challenged by the difficulty of doing online research about the city. It turned out, the best way to discover a new spot was to meet people and to get their suggestions. Of course, this can present a catch-22 for students abroad; how can you find good places to go if you donโ€™t know people and how can you meet people you like if youโ€™re not at places where you are comfortable? Thankfully, by the end of that trip I had pieced together a good experience. But I thought that many steps to enjoying the city as a foreigner could be streamlined by a better connection between the online world and real life.

Updating.

This notion changed when I got a ride in an Uber instead of a taxi for the first time in Amman. I was able to summon a driver who knew exactly where I wanted to go all without worrying about how much I was paying. Hallmark, but oftentimes trying, Jordanian experiences like taking a taxi are smoothed by technology. Without this update in my mind, I would have wrongly believed that Jordan is more disconnected from the net than it actually is. This lagging of understanding is certainly a factor in personal biases and even poor foreign policy decisions. Technology is a tool that can be used to make easier accomplishing goals. Contrary to the negative sentiment about social media, I have found that many technologies improve my ability to connect me with my real life interests.

Pictured: Streamlining a hallmark, but oftentimes trying, Jordanian experience.

Tech-life connection.

Technology connected me with a group traditionally outside of my normal sphere, in this case Jordanian society. I actually made a Jordanian friend simply by following and eventually talking to him on Instagram. By a stroke of luck, we were able to meet in-person in Washington because of a work trip he had. A month later, we met up again in Amman when I came for my study abroad trip. I learned so much about little cultural norms that color Amman in that one meeting. I feel fortunate to have this new connection which has given us both friendship and intercultural understanding. This solidified my belief about technology being a tool – meaning that those who are tech-savvy can make themselves life-savvy.

Pictured: My Jordanian friend and I enjoying a baseball game in Seattle before my trip to Jordan.

Sean Coffman

<i>Hello in your host country language</i>: ู…ุฑุญุจุง (Marhabaan) <i>University</i>: University of Washington Bothell <i>Expected graduation year</i>: 2019 <i>Destination</i>: Amman, Jordan <i>Program Provider</i>: CET Academic Programs <i>Major / minor</i>: Law, Economics, and Public Policy <i>Language of Study</i>: Arabic <i>Demographic background</i>: First-generation, Community College <i>Future career aspirations</i>: Foreign Service Officer, Immigration/Refugee Officer <i>Top 3 goals for study abroad</i>: learn the culture of the Arab work place; practice and use my Arabic in a professional setting; practice using research skills like polling, data gathering, see the effects of public policy in a Middle Eastern context