Global Policy Students Take Their Studies to India

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Its one thing to work in a 窪做惇蹋厙 classroom to understand the issues surrounding economic reform in a nation as complex as India. It is something entirely different to meet with leaders in Indias rural villages, government agencies, and industrial centers to draft workable policy proposals for change.

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Joseph Singh 14 shakes hands with a local guide

Joseph Singh 14 shakes hands with a local guide, who tells him how silent bids are made in the vegetable market in Ahmedabad, India. (Photo by Charles Wheelan 88)

The students in the Global Policy Leadership Practicum, taught by , experienced both.

The program, run by , combined a full semester of study with a two-week long trip during the interim period after classes finished at Thanksgiving. Students met with Indian government officials and policy leaders during the trip, and worked together to draft a task force report on Indian economic reform.

Writing from India with two other students, Amy Couture 14 called the experience an absolute whirlwind.

Weve gone from the chaos of Mumbai to the peace of a distant village and from one of Asias largest slums to fancy business high-rises. Throughout, weve had discussions and dinners with politicians, academics, CEOs, schoolteachers, doctors, and entrepreneurs.

Lorelei Yang 15 says approaching a problem intellectually is very different from seeing it firsthand.

Talking to villagers about the problems they see in their areas, hearing working economists observations about potential reforms, and seeing the work that various organizations are doing to address the very problems that we are working to understand has been an incredible experience.

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Global Policy Leadership students

Global Policy Leadership students debrief after a meeting with elected leaders in a rural village five hours south of Mumbai. Students are, from left, Ashneil Jain 15, Joseph Singh 14, Kevin Wang 14, Brandon DeBot 14, and Shoshana Silverstein 15. (Photo by Charles Wheelan 88)

Wheelan, a senior lecturer and policy fellow at the Rockefeller Center, connected his students with expert sources developed through his prior work in India as a journalist and academic. He built the class around a public policy proposal his class will produce as a team at the end of the trip.

The idea is that students will work together to synthesize their studies, interviews, and real-world experiences into a report that is substantive, politically nuanced, and historically and culturally sensitive, and that offers specific and actionable recommendations, Wheelan says.

The students challenge is to master the substance of the topic, and to come up with a process that enables the group to work together effectively, he says.

Like much of life, this is a group exercise, Wheelan says.

Joseph Singh 14, who won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford, says the trip has convinced him of the value of experiential learning.

The opportunity to meet with experts on the ground has enabled us to temper our policy recommendations within the broader political environment within which the Indian government operates. In turn, weve learned valuable lessons about crafting workable, pragmatic policies within tough political environments, Singh says.

Couture says she has come to understand that public policy cannot be created in a vacuum. This course has been an exercise in asking the right questions, compiling large swathes of information, and prioritizing recommendations, she says. And while were learning so much about India, Professor Wheelan also likes to say that were learning how to learn. 

Bill Platt