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"CNR students can study anywhere in the world. In
the past ten years, my
students have studied in Spain (Alicante and Granada), France (Tours
and Paris), Switzerland (Geneva), United Kingdom (London and Belfast),
Republic of Ireland (Cork), Republic of South Africa (Cape Town),
Mexico and Semester at Sea (U. of Pittsburgh)."
Dr. Anne McKernan
Associate Professor of History
School of Arts & Sciences
The College of New Rochelle
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Dr. McKernan, tell us a
little about your academic background and your current research
interests.
I am Associate Professor of
History and Director of the International Studies Program. My academic
background spans the gamut from the small liberal arts college to the
huge ‘Big Ten’ university. My B.A. in History is from Marymount
Manhattan College in NYC. Later I took a few graduate courses at
Columbia University before settling on the University of Michigan in
Ann Arbor, Michigan, for both my M.A. and Ph.D. in History. At the UM I
developed a research interest in early industrialization
(protoindustry) and deindustrialization in the context of pre-Famine
Ireland. The Center for European Studies awarded me its
pre-Dissertation Grant to develop my project in Ireland. This
opportunity developed into a two-year research project on site in
London, Dublin and Belfast, Northern Ireland, underwritten by several
fellowships including a Fulbright and British university bursary. So,
from 1982-1984 I lived in Belfast where I was a Research Associate in
Economic and Social History at The Queens University of Belfast, and a
member of the Institute of Irish Studies.
I have a long-standing
interest in Human Rights education that led to a $124,000 grant from
the U.S. Department of Education (Title VI) to the School of Arts and
Sciences for the project entitled “Human Rights as a Catalyst”. As
grant co-director, I oversaw a faculty committee of eleven from
disciplines across the curriculum revise or create fourteen courses
with a human rights lens or focus. In conjunction with the project, a
CNR junior and I participated in the first International Human Rights
Exchange program in Cape Town, South Africa. As a supporter of
experience-based education, I have collaborated to develop a
study/travel course on Contemporary Issues in Native American Society
and worked with the political party Northern Ireland Women’s Coalition
(NIWC) in Belfast during the 1998 Peace Process.

What do you teach here at
CNR?
I teach both survey and upper
division topical courses that focus on Europe, Africa and the World,
either separately or as they interact/ed across time. For example, last
year I taught the “Medieval History” survey with Medieval Spain as the
historical center of a Europe whose indigenous peoples and settlers
were in the process of becoming Europeans. In these centuries Spain
became the site of a rich culture created by the interaction of Romans,
Goths and Arabs. Survey courses that I teach regularly include Africa
the Continent, Reformation and Renaissance, The Rise of Europe, Modern
Britain and Twentieth-century Global Issues. Courses with a topical
approach include Divided Societies: South Africa and Northern Ireland,
Women in the Revolutionary Tradition (French, Russian and Chinese
revolutions), Ireland’s British Problem, Nationalism and The Immigrant
Experience. In addition to these history courses, I participate in the
First-Year Program teaching a section of INS 101 The Self in Context:
Women, College and Society. As a member of the Social Science Division,
I also teach the Junior Reading Seminar and the Senior Research
Seminar, courses that majors need to prepare them for the Senior
Thesis, some of which I mentor.

Why do you think that CNR
is a good College for young women?
Every young woman at this
college is taken seriously and presented with opportunities that will
help her develop her potentialities. She will enhance the knowledge
base and skills she brings with her and develop new competencies and
skills necessary for professional women. As importantly, she will find
“herself,” explore and evaluate those values she takes for granted and
emerge as an educated woman with confidence in herself, respect for
others and a willingness to participate with others in creating better
human spaces.
For young women who expect to
interact with the world community, CNR offers regular visits to UN
briefings on “hot” topics. For example, last year a member of the UNHCR
recently returned from the Sudan briefed us on Darfur, and in December
the Palestinian Observer to the UN will update us on progress toward
creating the state of Palestine. In addition to access to UN services,
students have easy access to the headquarters of such organizations as
Human Rights Watch, Safe Horizon, Amnesty International, Human Rights
First and Breakthrough, where they can intern.

You direct the
International Studies Program here at the College. Tell us about that
program.
The International Studies
Program is an interdisciplinary course of study that offers students
the opportunity to build their knowledge and understanding of the
global community. It is designed for women interested in careers in
government, public service, international business, journalism and
language education to name a few. Based on a core knowledge of
Political Science, Economics and History (12 credits), the major
requires at least 30 credits, competency in a Modern Foreign Language
and a capstone project to be divided between a primary field of
concentration and a secondary field; a major selects these fields from
Business/Economics, History and Political Science. The International
Studies Program sponsors a student chapter of the United Nations
Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), provides travel grants for
students doing internships with an international organization and
provides visits to the United Nations for briefings every semester as
well as other off-campus opportunities.

Is it possible for
students to major in this area?
International Studies is an
interdisciplinary program that offers both the major and minor.

What students are
attracted to international studies?
Recently I’ve noticed a wider
spectrum of students who choose to major or minor in International
Studies. Until two or three years ago, the typical major who declared
International Studies in her first two semesters was a student with
international experience; she was either an international student or
born abroad. American-born majors usually found the program in their
junior year; International Studies was not one of the traditional
majors that incoming students sought out, that is until about two years
ago. Since then the program has attracted larger numbers of both
U.S.-educated and international students so that the program is
booming.

What has brought about
that shift in American students being interested in International
Studies?
There are
probably several factors that account for the change, one of them, that
some highly motivated American high school students see themselves as
global players; they understand that their destinies are connected with
those of other nations and they want to make a difference.
Where have your students studied overseas?
CNR students can study
anywhere in the world. In the past ten years, my students have studied
in Spain (Alicante and Granada), France (Tours and Paris), Switzerland
(Geneva), United Kingdom (London and Belfast), Republic of Ireland
(Cork), Republic of South Africa (Cape Town), Mexico and Semester
at Sea (U. of Pittsburgh).

What are some of your
graduates doing today?
Graduates keep in touch; I
count on them to serve on career panels and as mentors to current
students. Their experience ranges widely. Losira Okelo is a Programme
Director for I*EARN, a network of International Education, Cindy
Bastien intends to do international medicine and was accepted into
Upstate Medical School (NY), where she started the M.D. program this
fall. Maya Georgieva completed her M.A. at Columbia University’s School
for International and Public Affairs last spring and is a consultant at
the UN (UNDP); she also does work in international education.
Jacqueline Maxwell, who for years worked for the International Y and
developed the position as liaison to the United Nations, completed her
M.A. at NYU and currently manages 22 projects with budgets totaling $2
million for the City of New York. Some program alums have worked in the
Sister City Program for the Japanese government, in various
international businesses, and at a school of music in Beijing, China.
Other graduates pursue an
advanced degree. Six students who come to mind have graduate degrees
from Columbia, Johns Hopkins, NYU, Iona, George Washington University,
and Upstate Medical School. Our students, I am happy to say, have done
very well after they finished their undergraduate work here at The
College of New Rochelle.
