| 
			
			 In addition to Doerr, MPHS students who made the journey from to 
			Costa Rica trip were: Shaylyn Inselmann, Morgan Kinnaird, Ashley 
			Houser, Madeline Moody, Elizabeth Siebert, Jaden Elliott, Peyton 
			Taylor, Eli Olson, Sebastian Scassiferro and Felipe Buenrostro. 
 How the trip came to be
 
 Their trip would not have been possible without Mrs. Grunder, who 
			just completed her second year as the MPHS Spanish teacher, getting 
			the ball rolling, thanks much in part to her son, Ben, a junior at 
			Lincoln Community High School, and his Spanish teacher, Kathy Stoyak. 
			Stoyak is a former colleague of Grunder’s and according to the MPHS 
			staff member, “Kathy organized an exchange for her students through 
			Natural Expeditions and she took a small group on an outdoor 
			adventure tour in Costa Rica a couple years ago. Kathy was so happy 
			with the experience that she wanted to take it further. When the 
			information from LCHS came home with Ben, I just knew I wanted to 
			give my Hilltoppers the same experience.”
 
 Grunder then attended informational meetings and met with Jose, the 
			director of National Expeditions, and from those meetings the Mount 
			Pulaski families decided to climb on board, much to the delight of 
			Grunder.
 
			
			 
			According to Grunder, the exchange is called the Costa Rican 
			Symbiotic Cultural Exchange. “Students from the United States and 
			Costa Rica are paired up and each spends 10-12 days in the other’s 
			home. LCHS already hosted their Ticos (what people from Costa Rica 
			call themselves) in January and it was a terrific experience,” said 
			Grunder, whose family hosted a young man named Marvin. Both the LCHS 
			and MPHS groups made the journey to Costa Rica June 8-20 and ended 
			up staying in communities about an hour apart, that is in Tico Time, 
			added Grunder. In the exchange, Mount Pulaski students will host 
			their Ticos in January of 2017. 
 Grunder said, “The flip side of the exchange program is that all of 
			these students will be hosting students in their homes. They will 
			get to be ambassadors for the United States, ambassadors for 
			Illinois and ambassadors for Mount Pulaski. Sometimes we forget how 
			special where we live is, and for me bringing this opportunity to 
			the students was not only to open their eyes to new things, but also 
			to help them appreciate what we have here.”
 
 For the group that set on this adventure by departing from Chicago 
			O’Hare International Airport bound for San Jose, the capitol city of 
			Costa Rica, in hopes of making new friends, taking in the culture 
			and improving their Spanish along the way, they certainly had an 
			“eyes-wide-open all the time” series of experiences that left their 
			Spanish teacher with a big smile and a few teary-eyed moments as 
			well.
 
 A quick connection
 
 Eager to talk about the trip, Grunder described the tight bond the 
			students and their families made right away. “I feel like the 
			biggest thing that came out of this trip, which was surprising, but 
			a very big positive, was the relationships that the students made 
			with their families. It did not take very long at all for them to 
			feel like they were a son or daughter in their homes. We stepped 
			foot on the school the very first night and they had a welcome party 
			for us. All the families were represented and the students had 
			actually worked with their music teacher and he had a song that he 
			wrote about Costa Rica and they performed the song for us. The 
			students had already made connections via social media with their 
			Ticos and their families, so they were eager to get out of there and 
			go spend time with their families, which I found surprising because 
			I thought maybe they would be a little clingy, but not at all. 
			They’re like, “Goodbye, Senora. We’re off.” Laughingly she added, 
			“Which was a good thing.”
 
			
			 
			Adding to the first night festivities was food, which is always a 
			great way to bond. Grunder added, “So we met each of our families 
			and that’s what happened and then they made us a traditional Costa 
			Rican grilled dinner. It was very simple and we sat and ate for a 
			little bit, and then everybody went home with their families.” 
			Grunder also stayed with a host family, another teacher. 
 Tico Time for school in Costa Rica
 
 “The next day we hit school right away,” said Grunder. “School 
			starts very early in Costa Rica. Seven o’clock. Some of the kids had 
			to travel quite a distance to get to school so some of them were up 
			at 4:30 in the morning. We wore school uniforms.”
 
 In Costa Rican students all wear school uniforms and the MPHS 
			students actually had school uniforms made before the trip. 
			According to Grunder, “It made packing easier, it was something they 
			didn’t have to worry about then, and I didn’t have to worry about 
			what they were wearing, whether it was appropriate or not.” Grunder 
			noted that the MPHS students blended in and that was a nice part 
			about wearing school uniforms.
 
 “We found out right away school was very different in that school 
			compared to our school. Costa Ricans are known for what is called 
			Tico Time. Tico Time is not exactly punctual,” she began to smile. 
			“School may start at seven,” pausing, she added, “or not.” Grunder 
			continued to explain, “The teachers start the day off with an 
			informal staff meeting, so the students just kind of hang out until 
			the teachers get finished with their meeting every morning, if they 
			have one. Then they report to class. Sometimes there’s students in 
			the classes and sometimes there’s not. Sometimes there’s teachers 
			there in the class and sometimes there’s not. So it’s a little 
			chaotic compared to what we are used to. But at the same time the 
			students, of course, they liked it.”
 
 Hanging out, having a coffee and a snack, chilling out and waiting 
			to see what happens was something the MPHS students enjoyed, 
			according to Grunder. She likened the Costa Rican school schedule to 
			that of a college schedule here in the United States. “They don’t 
			take the same classes every hour, every day. In fact, some of them 
			have up to eleven or twelve courses in a term but they may have one 
			class once a week and they may have another class five times a week, 
			and many of the teachers work in more than one school district.”
 
			 
			The students also came to a conclusion about this concept dubbed 
			Tico Time. “We concluded as a group that Tico Time primarily exists 
			probably because transportation is very slow. They live in the 
			mountains and there is one road. There’s pineapple trucks, bicycles, 
			motorcycles, semis, all wiggling through the mountains on the one 
			main road, if you can imagine. You can measure distance all you want 
			but you cannot tell how long it’s going to take to get from point A 
			to point B because it’s the mountains and there is one road. That 
			was a huge difference for us.” 
 Hold your breath parents for the next part. “Driving was, at first, 
			umm...there was a lot of gasping on the bus, because there’s one 
			road and there’s people walking, and it’s the mountains, so there 
			isn’t a shoulder and it’s kinda crazy and you can’t see because it’s 
			the mountains. We are used to getting in our car and actually going 
			55 and seeing where our destination is, and so for many of us 
			driving was quite a shock. But we got used to it...sort of,” said 
			Grunder, who managed to laugh throughout the story.
 
 Now, breathe a sigh of relief parents.
 
 “Nonetheless, school is very different. (It is) probably the biggest 
			cultural difference,” said Grunder. “The students there have a lot 
			of freedom and liberty to come and go as they please. Now their 
			grades are impacted by their attendance, but that didn’t seem to be 
			a big deterrent. Since many of them ride public transportation, they 
			may get on the bus at 5:30 or 6:00 in the morning but it may take 
			them two hours to get to school, one way, because the traffic is so 
			bad. We just had to go with the flow.” Some kids did walk to school 
			and some were driven by their parents, in addition to using the 
			public transportation, said Grunder. The reason being, the school 
			was located in the mountains and many students lived in nearby 
			communities while some lived farther away and a few even lived 
			across the street from the school. All of these distances seemed to 
			add to the equation that summed up to Tico Time.
 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
				 
				 
Once the students were at school, they noticed a major difference in the 
schedules. “Sometimes there would be a three-hour break in the day and so they 
would just go to someone’s house and hang out, drink coffee and play soccer or 
whatever, and then come back,” said Grunder. “We had a few days of adjustment. 
My kids would say “Is it okay that I am not in school?” Since the MPHS students 
were instructed to follow their Ticos, then that is just what they did, and 
according to Grunder, “they adjusted to that very quickly.” 
			 
“But at the same time they found themselves at times bored because there were 
big chunks of time where they were just standing in school and waiting. That 
part we kind of never got over. That was a big clash of cultures,” said Grunder.
 “The other culture clash, and I talked a lot professionally with the teachers 
there, is that there is a lack of respect for teacher authoritarianism there. 
While the teacher is talking, the students are talking. Cell phones are a major 
problem there. A lot of the students were on their cell phones all the time. 
Cell phones are dinging and it is noisy.”
 
 Grunder talked about this a lot with the teacher that she lived with while 
there. “She said it’s a cultural thing. Costa Ricans believe the only people who 
can discipline children are the parents. Teachers are really limited in what 
they can do without getting fired. So it’s a problem, and they know it’s a 
cultural problem. They are trying to work on it and teachers are making subtle 
changes.”
 
 Grunder said she and the other teachers talked about assigning seats, for 
example, that is unheard of in Costa Rica. Grunder said the idea is to try to 
implement teaching strategies that would not be interpreted as disciplinary 
issues. “But you are talking about something that is cultural and it’s hard to 
change something that’s cultural. So, school was probably the biggest culture 
shock for us.”
 
 Tico Time, school and the roads, all obstacles the MPHS students had to 
overcome, and they did so with relative ease.
 
Life outside of school in Costa Rica
 The itinerary the students followed while in Costa Rica not only included school 
and spending time with the host family, but also several side adventures. While 
in the various biomes of Costa Rica the students enjoyed visiting volcanoes, 
waterfalls, whitewater rapids, hanging bridges, jungles and the Pacific Ocean. 
The students also visited a nearby city for shopping and dining. Grunder said 
one of the larger communities they visited was Ciudad Quesada, and that gave the 
students a taste of city life.
 
 
In terms of size Grunder equated the larger community and the smaller community 
life to that of a Lincoln versus Mount Pulaski. Shopping, eating and hanging out 
in the plaza with their Ticos were just some of the activities the students 
enjoyed in Ciudad Quesada. 
 The students also went to the river one of the first nights there, and Grunder 
thinks it was a highlight for her students. “For many of them, that was the 
first time doing something like that without (a lot of) grown ups around. They 
had never had that freedom,” she said. She noted that many of the students on 
the trip had just gotten their drivers’ license and were just beginning to get a 
taste of freedom.
 
 “It was hard to beat that one. The river was beautiful and they were just 
hanging out with just a bunch of kids.
 
 "I mean it is beautiful there. The landscaping is so green. I’ve never seen 
green so green. It rains everyday. It’s just beautiful and they loved that,” 
Grunder said.
 
 Moving on to more adventurous excursions, the students traveled into the jungle. 
“We did ziplining in the jungle at the base of the volcano, and that was a 
really great experience,” said Grunder. “The views were great and you were 
literally flying through the jungle. It was beautiful. There was a Tarzan swing 
there where you jumped off and I don’t know how many kids would say they liked 
that,” she said laughing. “It was rather frightening but we all did it and we 
all survived. We did hanging bridges and we hiked a lot that day, it was very 
hot. The bridges probably gave you the most beautiful views. We walked right 
into the wide open and you could see forever into the beautiful countryside and 
the beautiful jungles.” How far below was the fall from these suspended bridges 
one might wonder? “Pretty far...pretty far,” answered the American Spanish 
teacher.
 
 Wow! What a group of daring kids along with a very brave teacher.
 
 The trip also included an island visit for the students. “Our first outing was 
the most memorable. We went to an island. We drove for a long time, it seemed 
like five hours to get there. We drove for about three hours and then we took a 
catamaran party boat to the island for an hour and half. What a blast,” Grunder 
said excitedly.
 
 
“Nine o’clock in the morning and the kids just jumped in. We had live 
entertainment. The kids danced and sang. We had so much fun. They brought us 
fresh fruit and all the juice the kids would want. We were on the island with 
people from all over the world. Then at the island we got to snorkel and that 
was fun. The kids liked that. We road on these big banana boats which were just 
big inflatable bananas pulled by the boats. We got to enjoy the beach for a 
while and had a big meal.” 
 On the way back from the island, Grunder said it rained and even though the kids 
got soaked, everyone still had a good time. “We spent an hour and a half all 
squished in the bottom of the boat because, of course, it rained. We made due. 
We danced as much as we could and we had fun. We were soaked. We were tired. But 
they were playing great music and the kids just made it really fun.”
 
 Another day was saved for going whitewater rafting. “We went whitewater rafting 
on the river the last day. That was really fun, plus just a different view of 
Costa Rica because you were on the river and you could look up at everything 
instead of looking down at everything. So we got to see the jungle through a 
different perspective,” Grunder recalled.
 
 “The water, of course, was just beautiful. The rafting was just right and it was 
almost everybody’s first time, so the rapids weren’t too crazy. That was really 
fun.”
 
 Thinking back on the trip, Grunder came up with another excursion the group 
took. “We hiked the (Arenal) volcano very quickly. We got up there. We didn’t 
get to the top, obviously we’re not going to do that.”
 
 Grunder explained that the hike up the volcano was a quick 30 minute run on a 
path through the jungle in the heat with the Lincoln students, who were pushed 
for time and had to be somewhere else.
 
 “We got up just high enough that we could look out at the lake that was at the 
base of the volcano. We got close enough at that point to still see the path of 
the lava flows and the trees that are still there. We sat on lava rock to look 
out. That was fun.
 
 
 
"We were tired that day,” Grunder admitted. “We did a lot of beautiful things 
and we took advantage of nature as much as we could.”
 
 People do hike the volcano to the top and that takes about 6 hours, the group 
learned. Even without going to the top, the teacher was pleased to squeeze in 
yet another adventure and add this one to their list of amazing cultural 
experiences.
 
 [Teena Lowery]
 
 This marks the halfway of Mount 
Pulaski students amazing adventures in Costa Rica. Be sure to catch Part 2 of "MPHS 
Spanish students experience an adventure of a lifetime" on Tuesday. Learn how 
arts and sports are developed in youth in this other culture, and how family 
time is spent. Also learn more about the foods these Central Americans enjoy, 
and what is mamon?
 |