Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Change of Travel Plans

Bay of Panama, with yachts in foreground and skyscrapers behind; storm rolling in

Change of travel plans: 
Now-July 10 Panama City
July 10-17 Ecuador
July 17-July 23 El Salvador
July 23-August 7 Panama City
August 7-August 13 Peru 
And then I am back to DC and then up to Maine for a relaxing vacation with the family. What a summer!


Sunday, June 26, 2011

Work and Such


Now for a little bit about the actual work I am doing at Plan’s regional office.  So far we’ve begun our desk review of many of Plan’s capacity studies and background research on the topic of education during emergencies.  This includes reading Plan strategy documents, past performance reviews, country priority documents, etc.  There are 12 country offices within the umbrella of the Plan Regional Office of the Americas: Guatemala, Nicaragua, Haiti, The Dominican Republic, Peru, Ecuador, El Salvador, Brazil, Colombia, Honduras, Bolivia, and Paraguay.  We are specifically looking at Peru, Ecuador, and El Salvador for the Needs Assessment/Evaluation of education in emergencies programs.  

 The outside entrance door to Plan's Regional Office of the Americas 

We also conducted our first interview with a woman from the UN’s Panama office of the International Strategy for Disaster Relief (ISDR/EIRD en espanol).  She was very eager to help and gave us a good overview of what the region and what Plan specifically has been working on in terms of disaster reduction and prevention.  Talking to experts I think will really help give us the background we need before going out in to the field. 

Next week the plan is to continue working on translating questionnaires to Spanish, coming up with templates for interview notes, reading background information, and creating a coding strategy for all of the information we will collect.  We also have a tentative travel schedule for our visits to the country offices.  They are planned around when the country staff can host us, as well as what activities such as workshops and trainings are going on during the period.  

So far, our schedule looks like this:
June 17-July 10 Panama City (prepare materials, background, expert interviews)
July 10-17 Ecuador (information gathering interviews)
July 17-23 El Salvador (information gathering interviews)
July 23-August 1 Peru (information gathering interviews)
August 1-August 12 Panama City (to wrap up the research/write the report) 

 Standing along the "Cinta Costera", running, biking, and walking path near the bay in Panama City

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Packing

Now, let me just make clear before the ridicule begins that these are not all my bags! They are James' bags as well, from when we were both leaving for the airport on June 17, me for Panama and James headed for Haiti.  This post is slightly out of order but I thought I'd still share this photo in case anyone is wondering what it looks like when two people pack for a collected total of 6 different countries over the course of 9 weeks.  This is the type of craziness I guess we can expect if we both keep working in development.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Gold Cup Games & Ciudad del Saber


Almost a week as passed here in Panama, and not a single day without clouds and/or rain! I had no idea how gloomy rainy season could be here in the tropics. It sure does make the grass and the palm trees grow really green and lush, though.

Our days have been spent at Plan’s Regional Office of the Americas, or ROA in NGO acronym-speak (pronounced “row-ah”). The office is on the outskirts of Panama City, in a humongous office complex called “Ciudad del Saber” (City of Knowledge) that used to be U.S. army barracks back when the U.S. still controlled the canal here. The buildings are a simple beige with the classic Spanish tile roofing, lined up in neat rows across the campus. It seems like every NGO in the world has a regional headquarters here, including the Red Cross, Special Olympics, ChildFund, CARE, all the United Nations Agencies, and Doctors without Borders. Then of course there are the finance institutions, the foreign corporations, etcetera. Not only that, the campus also houses the families of many of the expat workers here, in ranch houses with modest carports and jungle gym equipment out back. The complex also houses barber shops, laundry services, restaurants, and cafes. A private international school is called Balboa Academy is also housed here. The gym and outdoor Olympic-size swimming pool are only about a quarter mile down the road in the complex. Soccer fields and tennis courts also make an appearance. Everything that an ex-pat worker could want or desire away from home (with the big exception of Starbucks—bummer) is here in this ex-pat complex.

View of the Panama Canal (on a hazy and rainy day) from the office window

Plan’s offices themselves are rather small but well-decorated and brand new looking inside, with the same style of plastering cute children’s faces all over the office as in Plan’s DC location. The office has a modern and comfortable feel to it, with new laminate hard wood floors, a nice kitchen with a coffee and espresso machine, and about 20 or so employees. From my office area I can look out over the barges going through the Miraflores locks of the Panama Canal. It is surreal.


Wednesday was the Gold Cup semifinals, Panama versus the USA. You can guess the kind of reception we received in the office (as the only Americans here) on Wednesday before the game. I have a feeling people knew that Panama was likely to lose and therefore the heckling wasn’t as bad as it could have been. We went out to the game Wednesday with a young co-worker and her husband. She said to meet them at a bar called (this is what we heard—“Pit Bull”) along the uber-hip and trendy Calle Uruguay. It turns out that instead of Pit Bull the bar was actually (thank goodness) called “People”. And it wasn’t actually a bar; I’d call it a dance club, complete with music blaring, neon lights, fog machines, the whole 9 yards. It was packed. Clearly the it was the true Panamanian way to watch a big game.

Leilani (who is clearly trying to get her passport stolen), Noras (a co-worker) and I at "People"


In the background they were playing the game, and everyone would stop dancing to stare at the TV whenever a play was about to be made or the game looked serious. Occasionally they would throw up their hands after a bad play or a foul, or something they thought should have been called a foul. Afterwards when Panama lost our new friends weren’t too mad at us, thankfully, and they took us out to the “Amador Causeway” for a late dinner.

This Causeway connects three separate islands on the Panama Canal are connected to the mainland by long bridge and the view from everywhere on the islands of the city lit up at night was unbelievable. We sat outside at a restaurant on the water and watched the boats go by in the Canal. It was a great experience, especially with the heat lightening in the humid night air and the lovely $3 chicken dinners. Although I wish Panama had won so we could have see the crazy fiestas that would have followed, it turned out to be a great night.

Now back to work, but more about the actual project I am working on here soon to come!

Monday, June 20, 2011

Arrival

Live from Panama City!


After a very harrowing airplane ordeal, we finally arrived in Panama City late on Friday night. Or I should say, rather, very early Saturday morning.

My flight was from DCA (Reagan) to Newark and then direct to Panama City. Apparently there were awful storms with hail and lightening over most of the NYC/Newark area, and right as we were about to take off from DCA they put a ground hold on planes taking off for Newark. So we sat on the tarmac for about half an hour before they decided it was going to be a long time before we could leave and it would be better to de-board us from the airplane. You can imagine the plethora of angry passengers at the Continental desk trying to figure out how to make their connecting flights—not a pleasant sight. Since there is only one Continental flight to Panama City each day I knew if I missed my connection in Newark, which seemed likely given that at this point the flight was scheduled to take off in an hour, I would have to take a flight out the next day. This was quite ironic, especially given the fact that I had given the only set of keys we now have to our apartment (because the subletter who arrives in a few days has the other set) to James before I went through security, meaning that even though our apartment is approximately five minutes from the airport I would have had to get a hotel for the night. The guy at the desk seemed to think this was the best option but also said that there was a chance the connecting flight might be delayed as well due to the weather.

I decided to risk it, figuring I could always spend the night in the Newark airport if I had to. My crazy optimism paid off, and despite the fact that we waited on the runway through another second ground delay at Newark, arriving a total of 3 ½ hours late to Newark, the second flight to Panama City was delayed even longer and I sprinted across the various Newark terminals to get to the gate, backpack flapping behind me, with what I thought was minutes to spare, but actually turned into about a half hour to spare. Even my bags arrived safely in Panama City. It was an airport miracle!

The poor Plan driver who agreed to pick us up at the airport seemed quite grumpy to be awake at 1 am to pick up two young and bedraggled girls. Finding our hostal/guesthouse was not without drama but once we arrived in the “Casa Cangrejo” we felt right at home. For the moment Leilani and I are sharing one room, but it’s quite roomy for a hostal and has a large desk, mini-fridge, and adjacent bathroom. I think we will be quite comfortable here.

Saturday and Sunday we spent orienting ourselves to the new city, getting cell phones here, going to the supermercados, etc.  Sunday we decided that one of our goals is to stay motivated to work out despite our travels this summer, and we got gym memberships to a local gym. This gym is by far the nicest gym I’ve ever seen in my life! The treadmill can talk to you in 12 different languages. I watched Glee on Fox while I ran yesterday morning. Panama City is blowing me away with how international and modern it is.

We also went to a bar this afternoon to watch the Panama versus El Salvador game on their flat screen TVs. The PanameƱos were really into the game, and the crowd went wild when Panama won, of course. All in all, we had a great weekend of settling in, and I’m super impressed with the city. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before in Latin America. At least in the El Cangrejo neighborhood, it kind of feels like we are just hanging out in Columbia Heights, DC.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Un Verano de Aventuras


I am going to be working with Plan International on a research evaluation of their education in emergencies programs in El Salvador, Peru, and Ecuador this summer.  Besides travel to these countries for about 10 days at a time for the actual primary data collection, I’m also expected to conduct desk research and regional interviews in Panama City, where I’ll be staying at first for a few weeks.  

This is a great opportunity to get consulting experience on program evaluations and also to get to travel and use my Spanish a lot.  I’m also lucky enough to be traveling and conducting the evaluation with a fellow graduate student from my program, Leilani, who is focusing on education.   It’s always nice to have company when traveling, especially when doing something this complicated and new for the first time! I feel very lucky to have this opportunity, and although I’m sad to be saying goodbye to James (who is going to spend the summer working at Fonkoze’s office in Haiti) and my friends in D.C., I’m confident it will be a great summer. I leave on Friday, so at the moment I'm concentrating on getting final papers for class written and everything that needs to be packed packed. I’ll try to write soon and often and share my experiences with you as I go along!

Below is a snippet from the Terms of Reference about what I’ll be doing while abroad: 

PROJECT:  Evaluation of Plan’s Regional Office for the Americas’ Work on Education in Emergencies
TASKS:
  1. Conduct a desk review of previous evaluations, reports etc… that include education in emergencies in El Salvador, Ecuador and Peru.
  2. Based on previous mapping exercise conducted, interview key Plan staff at the regional and country levels.
  3. Work with Education in Emergencies Specialist and Plan’s Regional Disaster Risk Management Manager to design a detail plan for the research as it pertains to each of the above-mentioned countries.
  4. Collect data on the impact of Plan’s Education in Emergencies response in 3 countries: El Salvador, Ecuador and Peru. This will include qualitative and quantitative methods.
  5. Compile and analyze data, pulling out key results and patterns for each country and then for the region.
  6. Develop case studies on the innovative approaches to education in emergencies within El Salvador, Ecuador and Peru.
  7. Other Tasks as required by the regional office.
DELIVERABLE(S):
1.    Report on the key results and patterns for each country and the region.
2.    Short Case studies on Best Practices/Innovative approaches
3.  Short report to present to potential donors