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Future Veterinarian Carolina Vicario Talks Cultural Awareness

The BBC recently about the increasing importance of teaching ā€œglobal competenciesā€ in schools as the world becomes interconnected. Starting next year, cultural awareness will be incorporated into the PISA Test ā€” a standardized exam that measures the efficiency of international education systems. According to the BBC article:

ā€œEducators have been struggling with how to prepare students for the culturally diverse and digitally-connected communities in which they work and socialize. In the past, education was about teaching people something. Now, it is also about making sure that children develop a reliable compass, the navigation skills and the character qualities that will help them find their own way through an uncertain, volatile and ambiguous world.ā€

The importance of teaching global competencies is reflected in the international opportunities at the , from which Carolina Vicario just graduated. During her schooling, Vicario did veterinary work in Nicaragua and South Africa, collaborating closely with the internationally focused . As a leader on the Nicaragua trip, she developed a unique perspective on the educational, professional and personal benefits of traveling abroad.

I was excited to speak with Carolina about her experience working in different cultures, and how it has shaped her personal and professional goals.

Q: When did you decide to join the ?

A: I went to a lunch talk during the first few weeks of my first year in veterinary school. Some second-year students were presenting their new . Their guiding principles of cultural sensitivity, information-exchange rather than unidirectional teaching, and sustainability resonated strongly with me. I had previously shied away from some international health care opportunities because I was embarrassed by the social impact they caused, often perpetuating perceptions of Americans as arrogant, entitled and self-serving. I later became one of the student directors of the Nicaragua project, which is still active today.

Two veterinarians speaking with a farmer.
Carolina Vicario (left) and classmate Blanca Camacho (right) discuss the health concerns for family-owned cattle with Hilario, an animal health worker and farmer in Sabana Grande, Nicaragua. (Students for One Health Club, UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine photo)

Q: How did you prepare for the work you did in Nicaragua with Students for One Health?

A: I reviewed past projects, who the community leaders are, and what is important to them. I also prepared by learning the social norms ā€” how to fit in and be respectful. It is OK to stand out for being different because as a visitor you are different, but by ā€œfit inā€ I mean honoring social codes, language, customs, dress, manners and making an effort to learn Spanish.

The group leader the year before me, who started this project, had a document that community leaders in Nicaragua had sent her. It had information on all of the women in the community who had signed up to host foreign students. I made sure I knew everyoneā€™s names before I went, and I think that made a big difference.

Q: You were a project leader in Nicaragua. What do you think were the biggest challenges for students?

A: The trips were emotionally, mentally and physically demanding for everyone, and the preparation throughout the academic year was time intensive. Some opted not to return for a second trip. Itā€™s important to honor that. People should be involved in activities because they want to be, and not due to external pressures, because that doesnā€™t produce good work or feel good for the participant.

You canā€™t always prepare for things you havenā€™t seen or experienced, so you have to allow yourself the time and privacy to sit with those feelings on a daily basis during the trip. Being raised in affluent regions of the U.S., it can and should be difficult to witness hardships that other communities face.  

Q: Have your international travels affected the way you approach your developing veterinary career?

A: In school we get into the details of things like tertiary referral cases, advanced imaging and advanced disease. Then you go to a place where basic vaccines and anti-parasitics would make such a big difference. I just thought, ā€œWow, Iā€™ve been over-trained in really fancy stuff and under-trained in how to make things practical.ā€ Itā€™s a reality check in terms of what veterinary medicine would look like elsewhere. 

I have a lot to learn about what I can contribute as a veterinarian in different regions of the world. I used to place more pressure on myself, feeling that I need to do whatever the world needed most. While there is good intention in that sentiment, I was placing undue pressure on myself, which sometimes left me feeling defeated and powerless. This quote made me cry when I first read it:  

ā€œDonā€™t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive, and go do that, because what the world needs is people who have come alive.ā€
ā€“ Howard Thurman

I donā€™t know exactly what that will be. I have a strong interest in the , but before I enroll I want to be clear what my goals are and what type of project I would pour my heart and soul into. I feel a deep-seated calling to work in wildlife conservation and global health, and as I look for opportunities, I am open to how that path will unfold.

Q: How do you think, moving forward and practicing veterinary medicine, these experiences abroad have shaped you?

A: South Africa in particular left me feeling frozen and hyper-self aware on various occasions. The value was in waking up with a peek into a significant part of our worldā€™s rich human history, wildlife biodiversity, endemic diseases and resource management. As a human, I feel like it is absolutely necessary to make an effort to experience that. Once I did, I was able to better appreciate what it could add to my life.

I really want to go to new places and see how they make me feel. I think traveling has broadened my horizons. I want to maintain California as my home base but definitely see what else is out there. I want to feel more like a global citizen based in California rather than an American first. I want to feel like I am human first and a Californian second.

Leila Haghi ā€˜16 is an intern at the .

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