Going global

Stricklin takes Internet tools to Brazilians

By Peter Marhoefer
Daily Nebraskan

Professor Mike Stricklin must have fallen victim to the Kiss of the Spider Woman in Brazil as a member of the Peace Corps in the ’60s.

The UNL journalism professor returned to Brazil last spring to spin the World Wide Web to the students and faculty at the State University of Piauí, a rural farming area.

Stricklin and his wife, Chere, spent two years in Brazil as Peace Corps volunteers from 1966-68, teaching community planning and development to residents of Brejo Grande. Stricklin said the experience changed his life.

He returned this year to Brazil to teach a course called, “The Internet: Communication Tools for the 21st Century.”

“Piauí students talked about the world much more than Nebraska students,” Stricklin said. “We’ve got to fix that.”

He taught more than 170 students, ranging in age from 11 to 70, about the Internet, which he calls “an uncharted territory.”

In Brazil, that description is especially true. The Internet is a new phenomenon in Brazil and has just recently made its way to the rural state of Piauí.

Stricklin had to use Portuguese, the language of Brazil, to teach the course. The speaking part wasn’t a problem, he said, but he left the writing to a teaching assistant.

Stricklin said he thought Brazil was charting a course to become a world economic power.

“Globalization is a buzz word now in Brazil,” Stricklin said.

The challenge is Brazil itself, a country of 180 million that has an illiteracy rate above 25 percent.

Still, Stricklin thinks Brazil can be-come one of the great powers of the next century.

As an elected member of the Federal University of Piauí faculty, Stricklin will return in May 1997 to continue teaching.

Stricklin’s trip was just the first part of a broader exchange.

Professor Gustavo Said of the Federal University of Piauí came back to Nebraska with Stricklin for training. Said took what he learned about the Internet in Nebraska and returned to Brazil.

The experience of helping to open a new frontier in Brazil did not cause Stricklin to forget his duties back home, however.

He is adding more Internet exposure to the College of Journalism and Mass Communications curriculum. He said he thought it was the key to giving students a global perspective.>

In addition, Stricklin has started a program that will allow UNL and Piauí students to interact in this spring’s cyber-space in mass media class.

Steve Reichenbach, interim chairman of the College of Computer Science and Engineering, said Stricklin’s efforts were important to the two universities. Reichenbach said he was enthused about the application of technology to education.

Computer-aided instruction, he said, could change technology and education everywhere.

While in Brazil, Stricklin also worked with the Federal University of Piauí faculty to develop a masters program in social communications.