Publication Date: March 4, 2022
Publication Location: WASHINGTON
Contact: Abby Henson   |   [email protected]

World Learning is honoring its 90th anniversary since sociologist Donald Watt launched The Experiment in International Living in 1932. This flagship program focusing on intercultural exchange led to the establishment of both School for International Training and World Learning.

The anniversary’s theme, “One World, Learning,” highlights the interconnection between World Learning’s three branches, which all aim to create a more sustainable, peaceful, and just world through education, development, and exchange.

“As we honor our 90th year, our work has never been more relevant. With this anniversary comes an opportunity to honor our past, acknowledge the challenges of the present, and look with hope toward the future,” said World Learning CEO Carol Jenkins.

The Experiment in International Living began in 1932 with Watt’s innovative and modest vision – people should learn to live together by living together. He promoted peace through intercultural understanding by taking young Americans abroad to live with and learn from other cultures.

“Right from the first, the Watt trips were taken seriously, not as a form of ‘school,’ but as a different type of educational challenge – physically, mentally, and emotionally,” wrote Watt’s daughter, the late Phyllis Watt Ingersoll.

Ninety years later, that experiential learning approach remains the bedrock of The Experiment’s life-changing programs for high school students. It is also the foundational principle behind the organizations that grew from Watt’s original experiment: School for International Training, an accredited provider of undergraduate and graduate education on seven continents; and World Learning, a global nonprofit organization with education, development, and exchange programs spanning more than 150 countries.

The anniversary will include a series of events throughout 2022 that highlight the importance of intercultural understanding and inspire support for the work ahead.

World Learning Board Chairman Lawrence Cooley said that work is crucial.

“Around the world, our students and program participants, faculty and staff build innovation and hope from challenges – whether that’s conflict, the environment, or global health. Together, we are finding ways to learn and grow in our communities and countries. We are coming together to devise solutions and expand our understanding of one another. It’s clear to us that these solutions are essential, especially in today’s world,” Cooley said.

Still headquartered on a scenic campus above Brattleboro, Vermont, World Learning today also has headquarters in Washington, D.C., and program centers across the globe.

With some 70,000 alumni, The Experiment still sends hundreds of U.S. teenagers abroad each summer for life-changing experiences. SIT Study Abroad offers more than 80 undergraduate programs, including multi-country comparative programs through the International Honors Program. SIT Graduate Institute provides internationally focused graduate-level degrees addressing the world’s most critical global issues. And World Learning oversees programs with participants worldwide, including thousands of emerging leaders who come to the United States on international professional, academic, and youth exchanges.

“In the sweep of nine decades, we have grown and evolved, changed and innovated to address the critical needs and conversations of our times. We are one world, learning,” said Jenkins. “This year, we are inviting friends around the world to join us as we build on these accomplishments.”

In-person and virtual events, receptions, and programs will be held throughout 2022 and will be posted on World Learning’s 90th Anniversary website.

Moments in World Learning history:

  • Immediately following World War II, The
    Experiment begins sending groups to western Europe to help rebuild communities.
    These were some of the first-generation community service and volunteer
    programs to
    be built into intercultural education. 
  • Seeking to attract the most dynamic students
    from across the U.S., in 1940, The Experiment offers scholarships to young
    people from different geographic and socioeconomic backgrounds – a practice that
    continues today. More than 50 percent of Experimenters receive some form of
    financial support.
  • The Experiment is a founding member of
    Federation EIL, Inc., an independent nonprofit organization that brings
    together a global network of organizations in 17 countries. Federation EIL
    members promote intercultural immersive experiences through homestays, study
    abroad programs, language training, and work exchanges. 
  • In 1961, President John F. Kennedy names former
    Experimenter Sargent Shriver as the first director of the new Peace Corps. Shriver
    turns to The Experiment President Gordon Boyce to help train the first Peace
    Corps volunteers at Experiment headquarters in southern Vermont.
  • In 1964, Peace Corps training activities lead to
    the establishment of an academic institution, School for International Training.
    Later, The Experiment’s Cooperative Overseas Program, a program for university
    students, evolves into SIT Study Abroad, growing to enroll more than 2,000
    participants annually.
  • In the mid-1970s, the organization puts decades
    of experience into practice through a Projects and Grants unit that manages
    grant-funded assistance programs in developing countries. It also begins
    expanding its portfolio of international exchange programs. These two units eventually
    merge to become World Learning, the nonprofit global education, development,
    and exchange arm.