Abilene Christian College issued the following announcement on Mar. 3
It’s been a while since Dr. Sarah Easter (’06) was working on a master’s degree in business administration, but not so long that she doesn’t remember two specific classes, one in domestic consulting and one in international consulting.
“Those were my favorite classes,” Easter, an assistant professor in ACU’s Department of Management Sciences, said.
Remembering that experience, Easter worked with colleague Dr. Laura (Cleek ’88) Phillips, associate professor of management, to create a hands-on class that was socially focused. They came up with an elective course, Social Enterprise Consulting, which debuted in spring 2019. As part of this course, the two professors led a group of students on a Spring Break trip to Costa Rica, where they worked with a network of female entrepreneurs, Red de Emprendedoras del Turismo Sostenible de Turrialba or RETUS, to assist them in understanding the U.S. market for rural experiential tourism in Costa Rica.
The initial class was so successful that Easter and Phillips now are co-teaching a second iteration of the course and preparing students to take the same trip over spring break March 7-14.
“We are building on the consulting work the students completed last year,” Easter said.
The course, an elective that is open to all students who are at least juniors, is the perfect example of experiential learning that ACU emphasizes. That emphasis was highlighted in Fall 2019 when the new Center for Careers and Experiential Learning opened just inside the east entry to Brown Library.
The university’s focus on experiential learning helped ACU earn accolades from U.S. News & World Report for 2020. ACU was the highest-ranking university in Texas in the magazine’s new benchmark based on student success. Nationally, ACU achieved top 20 status in three of eight high-impact categories.
Kennedy Guerra and Riley Simpson are two of the latest students to benefit from that emphasis. Both are enrolled in the Social Enterprise Consulting class and both are looking forward to the Spring Break trip to Costa Rica.
Kennedy, a global studies and Spanish major from Austin, is a veteran of international travel and understands the importance of experiential learning, especially in another culture.
“You become an ambassador for your country,” Kennedy said, “and it’s important to think about that.”
Riley, a management and marketing major from Dripping Springs, Texas, studied abroad in Germany in Fall 2019 and loved that experience. He met two students who went on the 2019 trip to Costa Rica, and they convinced him that he, too, would benefit from that experience.
“They were super excited I was going,” Riley said.
He is looking forward to learning about consulting with clients in a different country and culture. With an entrepreneurial spirit, Riley already has his own small media production company and will put his expertise in video and still photography to use on the Spring Break trip.
Thanks to assistance from the College of Business Administration, Southwest Airlines, Griggs Center for Entrepreneurship and Philanthropy, and other benefactors, the 10 students signed up for the class will travel at minimal expense. In Costa Rica, this year’s group will again work with RETUS and Centro Agronomico Tropical de Investigacion y Ensenanza (CATIE).
CATIE is a university is dedicated to research and graduate education in agriculture and the management, conservation and sustainable use of natural resources. RETUS is an organization of female entrepreneurs focused on experiential rural tourism as a means of helping provide sustainable livelihoods in three Costa Rican communities.
The ACU class is helping RETUS better understand the U.S. market for experiential rural tourism in Costa Rica, and a certain amount of flexibility is required. The project they are tasked with in Costa Rica isn’t a nice, tidy assignment, Phillips noted.
“It changes as you go,” she said.
The class is divided into three segments – classroom preparation for the trip, the Costa Rica experience, and development of consulting deliverables for the client afterward. Topics covered in the classroom vary, among them serving in God’s work, experiential tourism, cultural context, and understanding and reaching target markets. The topics are designed to prepare students to be as effective as possible in their consulting assignment to support the female entrepreneurs.
After the trip to Costa Rica, the students will spend the rest of the semester assessing their experience and preparing a final consulting project for the clients. The emphasis of the class is on experiential learning for the students, Easter and Phillips said, and that means turning out high quality deliverables.
“We want to ultimately deliver a great final project to their clients,” Easter said.
Focus on Student Success
Student opportunities, such as service-focused Study Abroad trips, helped ACU earn accolades in U.S. News and World Report’s 2020 benchmark based on student success. ACU was the highest-ranking university in Texas in the magazine’s new category, “A Focus on Student Success.” Nationally, ACU achieved Top 20 status in three of eight high-impact categories:
- Service Learning – #4
- First-Year Experience – #9
- Learning Communities – #11
- Study Abroad – #35 (tie)
- Undergraduate Research/Creative Projects – #42 (tie)