2006.08.05: August 5, 2006: Headlines: COS - Thailand: Metrowest Daily News: As a member of the Peace Corps, Seth Spiro traveled to Thailand to train teachers in an American, student-centered style of education, and taught students about nutrition, HIV prevention and resisting the urge to drink and drive
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2006.08.05: August 5, 2006: Headlines: COS - Thailand: Metrowest Daily News: As a member of the Peace Corps, Seth Spiro traveled to Thailand to train teachers in an American, student-centered style of education, and taught students about nutrition, HIV prevention and resisting the urge to drink and drive
As a member of the Peace Corps, Seth Spiro traveled to Thailand to train teachers in an American, student-centered style of education, and taught students about nutrition, HIV prevention and resisting the urge to drink and drive
Living in New York City during the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Spiro was inspired to join the Peace Corps "to show the good side of America," he said. "I started thinking about it, and just the way that America’s viewed is not always accurate," he said. "I would like to do my part to show what’s right about America."
As a member of the Peace Corps, Seth Spiro traveled to Thailand to train teachers in an American, student-centered style of education, and taught students about nutrition, HIV prevention and resisting the urge to drink and drive
A world away
By Tyler B. Reed/ Daily News Staff
Saturday, August 5, 2006 - Updated: 12:57 AM EST
FRAMINGHAM -- Imagine being dropped into a tiny village in southeast Asia, knowing not a word of the native tongue and being handed the task of teaching kids who were petrified at the sight of you.
That’s what Framingham native Seth Spiro faced when he joined the Peace Corps two and a half years ago.
"It’s incredibly lonely," said Spiro, 28, recalling his first days in Thailand.
"I couldn’t speak Thai," he said. "You’re supposed to drop into this town and you sort of have to learn it. You’re like a baby. Out of necessity you learn it."
As a member of the Peace Corps, he traveled to Thailand to train teachers in an American, student-centered style of education, and taught students about nutrition, HIV prevention and resisting the urge to drink and drive.
Spiro’s two years in Thailand ended in March, and he misses it already.
"When I got there, (the kids) were petrified of me," he said. "When I left, they hugged me."
Living in New York City during the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Spiro was inspired to join the Peace Corps "to show the good side of America," he said.
"I started thinking about it, and just the way that America’s viewed is not always accurate," he said. "I would like to do my part to show what’s right about America."
Spiro applied, writing East Timor in Southeast Asia as the place where he’d most like to travel. "I wrote it down because it was a brand-new country," he said. Civil war has since erupted in East Timor.
The application process took more than a year.
"I got the call in August 2003 saying, ’You’re going to Thailand,’" he said. "Thailand’s like the dream spot for Peace Corps."
He spent three months living with a family, learning the language and the culture. Then moved to a village called Wang Thong, where he taught side by side with a Thai teacher.
He was there during the tsunami that destroyed portions of the Thai coastline in December 2004. He later toured the area, and remembers seeing a boat a mile inland.
His best memories are the people he met and friends he made. "My best friend sold noodles from a little shack," he said. Many of them had never seen an American before.
Spiro now lives in Washington, D.C., where he is looking for a job in the nonprofit sector. He wants his Thai friends to come experience American culture, but said it would shock them.
He said it would be hard to gauge the impact he made in the village.
"Since I was working with kids, I don’t know what effect I had," he said.
"I think my biggest accomplishment was my kids didn’t run away from me anymore."
(Tyler B. Reed can be reached at 508-626-4423 or treed@cnc.com.)
When this story was posted in August 2006, this was on the front page of PCOL:
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Story Source: Metrowest Daily News
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