Hilton College Offers Joint Tourism Class with Bethlehem University 2/21/2011 2/21/2011
Students on opposite ends of the world have opportunity to learn about cultural diversity
HOUSTON, February 21, 2011 — Through a new class offered at the University of Houston's
Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management, students on opposite
sides of the globe have the chance to study in the same room.
For the first time, Hilton College is offering a joint tourism class with Bethlehem
University's Institute of Hotel Management and Tourism. Lydia Westbrook, director
of international and external programs and a tourism/cruise industry lecturer at Hilton
College, and Hanna Mousallam, tourism management lecturer at Bethlehem University
in the West Bank, co-teach the class via videoconference. Currently, 34 University
of Houston students and 22 Bethlehem University students are enrolled. The classes
meet separately once a week and by videoconference once a week in the University of
Houston's M.D. Anderson Library, and the students are partnered with each other on
activities and projects throughout the course.
In each joint class, students have the opportunity to interact face-to-face with their
counterparts in another country, bridge cultural differences and learn from each other,
Westbrook said.
"This class is a natural forum for meeting new people and learning about new cultures,"
she said. "We're increasing our students' global competencies and their network of
contacts from around the world … we're building a community."
The idea for this joint class sprang from a visit to the Holy Land (Israel/Palestine)
in summer 2010, when Hilton College Dean John Bowen and assistant vice chancellor
for international studies and programs Jerald W. Strickland traveled as guests of
the U.S.-Palestinian Partnership and the Telos Group. Both universities expressed
an interest in creating a joint course that would connect Hilton College's hotel and
restaurant management courses with Bethlehem University's programs, and the tourism
teleconference class was born.
The class benefits both universities in numerous ways, Mousallam said.
"It's a great opportunity for students from both universities to learn about the international
tourism industry from different perspectives, to learn about diversity and experience
the spirit of international tourism," he said. "The students are very excited."
The students said they are interested in learning about daily life in another country
and making friends from a far-away land.
"It's surreal because you're actually talking to people on the other side of the world,
in a place most of us have never seen," said University of Houston student Annabelle
Villela. "Through our partners, we have first-hand insight into another culture. We
stay connected through e-mail and Blackboard—the technology has been great for our
class."
It's modern technology that makes the whole experience possible, and that's thrilling,
the co-lecturers said.
"I'm very glad we're in the same room, even if it's a virtual room," Westbrook told
both classes at the first lecture.
Topics being covered in the course include attractions, transportation and accommodations
in both countries and the political, economic, environmental and social elements of
the travel industry, Westbrook said.
Villela, who is planning to switch her major from business to hotel and restaurant
management, said she's received a thorough introduction to the tourism industry so
far in the class.
"I just think of it as traveling, but it's on a much bigger scale than that. Tourism
affects so many industries and lifestyles, and there are so many new developments
in technology, for example," she said. "It's a much wider industry than I would have
thought."
Bowen said he thought the class was a perfect vehicle to teach tourism.
"What better way to study tourism than to study it in two parts of the world at the
same time?" he said.
Contact:
Debbie Maurer
713.743.5594
dkmaurer@uh.edu