The group connected with another NRT program based at the University of Arizona to develop an itinerary for the trip. The trip included visits to tribal parks like Monument Valley, national monuments on tribal land like Canyon de Chelly, meetings with Navajo Nation officials, and a trip to Benally's family land and former high school. Through these activities, students gained firsthand experience and ecological and environmental insights from the Navajo Nation, providing them with the unique opportunity to understand Indigenous perspectives on the environment and society.
During their visit, the group toured the DigDeep Navajo Water Project work site. There, students interacted with water engineers and local farmers. This was a particularly interesting stop for graduate student Marina Howarth, who is studying water resources engineering with a minor in biogeochemistry.
“I really care about human rights, and I’m interested in water quality and water rights,” Howarth said. “I was really interested in going to the Navajo Nation and learning their perspectives, especially around water, but also just meeting people and making connections. I'm about to start a job with the Army Corps of Engineers. While I'll be working in Mississippi, which is very far from the Navajo Nation, I think wherever I am remembering Navajo values and remembering that they have this incredible history of being on the land and living with the land and realizing the importance of partnering with Indigenous people for engineering disaster resilience is really impactful and important.”
Emma Chiaroni, who is pursuing a dual-title doctoral degree in rural sociology and TREES, was also interested in the trip because she is researching collaborative management schemes of marine-protected areas with Indigenous people in California.
Chiaroni said she looked forward to comparing environmental justice issues and energy sovereignty faced by tribes in different areas, but one of her favorite parts of the trip was visiting Benally’s alma mater, Ganado High School, where the Penn State students shared their educational journeys and answered questions about college with a class of seniors.
“Tim talks a lot about an Indigenous way of seeing things and seeing the world,” said Chiaroni. “I think on this trip for us non-Indigenous students, we got like an ounce of what that might be like. Seeing the high school kind of brought home the importance of education and how with the research or collaborations we do, the future of Indigenous people are at the center of it. Talking to the youth and getting to know them was really critical in that.”