Séeligman goes to India to teach Spanish
Campbell University professor, Dr. Tatiana Séeligman, conducted a foreign
language workshop teaching Spanish in India over the summer. Although it may not
seem readily apparent, Séeligman said there is a very real demand for
Spanish-speaking employees in a country known for its international business
ties.
“Once known for its production cotton and coffee,
India’s main industries now are computers, programming and customer support for
these international companies,” said Séeligman. “Indians are training in Spanish
so that they can provide that customer support.”
Begun this summer by Anna Gonzalez, a Costa Rican
friend of Séeligman’s living in India, the Pablo Neruda School of Spanish and
Latin American Studies in Chennai, India, has four teachers and up to 50
students. Séeligman visited India during July and August and was invited to give
a lecture on Latin-American culture at the school. After the lecture, she
conducted a workshop with the faculty on Spanish language teaching methodology.
“The experience was enriching for all of us, and I was
excited to find that Spanish had reached such far corners of the globe,”
Seeligman said. “We’ve decided to continue developing this new relationship, and
I’m looking forward to more projects such as workshops and teaching
demonstrations, as well as publishing some of the reflections that resulted from
this experience.”
This was Séeligman’s third visit to India. Her husband,
associate director for Sales Operations for a biotech company in Research
Triangle Park, is an Indian national.
Dr. Séeligman graduated from the University of
Louisville with a Bachelor of Science degree in Elementary Education. She went
on to earn a master’s degree in Spanish from Pennsylvania State University and a
Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to coming to
Campbell as an assistant professor of Spanish, Séeligman served as a Spanish
instructor at the Georgia Military College in Fort Gordon, Ga., a Spanish
lecturer at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C., and an education
lecturer at the Universidad Cristiana in San Salvador, El Salvador. In 1990, she
won a Fullbright Scholarship from the University of Louisville to the Central
American Program for Undergraduate Studies (CAMPUS) at the University of
Louisville. Séeligman was also selected to participate in the Future Faculty
Fellowship program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a program
that prepares graduate students for their teaching experience as faculty at
higher education institutions.
Photo Copy: Dr. Tatiana Séeligman, assistant professor of Spanish at Campbell
University.
Bulletin 0019-9/25/06 |