In a classroom in Iraq, a professor finds that language instruction helps to minimize cultural divides.

In a classroom in Iraq, a professor finds that language instruction helps to minimize cultural divides.

We have these things to offer each other that we haven’t thought of before.

WHEN ETHEL SWARTLEY, associate professor in the University of Denver’s English Language Center, was called on by the U.S. Department of State to teach in Iraq, she didn’t hesitate. She was eager to put her skills to work in a country that had long held her interest. Even as security and bureaucratic issues changed the course of her trip, she remained unshakably excited. 

Swartley’s two-week class in the northern city of Erbil taught more than 20 Iraqi professors strategies for integrating language teaching into the STEM classroom and for supporting students through that journey. “We talked about some of the challenges in using English as a medium of instruction,” Swartley recalled. “There are universities all over the world that are beginning to use English as their language of teaching, and it is interpreted in many different ways. We talked about some of those different ways it’s being used and then what would work for Iraq.”

In those two short weeks, the professors under Swartley’s tutelage each received a certificate, but the lessons extended far beyond that piece of paper. 

“I think in Iraq in particular, and in a lot of war-torn areas where the relationship with the U.S. is checkered, the more they can meet Americans, working women, people of different faiths—I think that helps to build bridges,” she explained. 

Swartley’s class was diverse, with women and men of different religions, cultures and languages. Erbil is situated firmly in Iraq’s Kurdish region, and tensions between Arabs and Kurds are far from a thing of the past. Still, the two distinct groups came together for a common purpose. “Kurds and Arabs got to sit in a classroom space for two weeks together. They really became friends. They really came to respect each other as colleagues,” Swartley said. 

During her time in Erbil, Swartley learned lessons that will help her better serve her Arab students at DU. “I have a deeper connection with those students [now] and just a better understanding of the educational systems they may have been through and some of the cultural factors.”

As she was teaching Iraqi professors to support students through language learning, Swartley realized that here at DU, those strategies could also have a significant impact for international students. “If our faculty here can be more aware of some strategies that will help those students learn the language they need to really be contributing and successful students in their fields, that would be great.”

With the Iraq experience behind her, Swartley hopes to continue building bridges between America and Erbil. “It seems so simple, but it’s just the idea that we can learn from each other. We have things to offer each other that we haven’t thought of before,” she said.