Dominican Republic: Learning at Home

Get creative

Organize your art supplies and get to crafting. Consider painting faceless dolls in varying sizes and colors—they’re faceless because the Dominican people represent a variety of racial and ethnic groups with a mixture of the native Taino, Spanish, French, and African backgrounds.

Need more inspiration? Check out these famous Dominican Republic museums.

Pick a film

Watch a movie that relates to your destination. Some ideas for the Dominican Republic include:

  • Ponchao (2013)
  • Ballplayer: Pelotero (2011)
  • Lotto Man (2011)

Study some history

Dive deep into the history of specific sites you’ll visit on tour. Santo Domingo’s Colonial City—the first urban settlement in the New World—houses excellent museums providing insight into the Spanish colonial days, from the Alcázar de Colón palace to the Museo de las Casas Reales. The city also boasts a museum complex at Plaza de la Cultura, showcasing history and modern art, while the latest offering in the city is all about Dominican chocolate.

In Puerto Plata, you can learn about national heroes and precious stones, while Samaná offers an insightful small museum on its humpback whales, and Sosúa has a fascinating Museum of Jewish Heritage. La Romana’s Altos de Chavón is home to the most comprehensive display on the Taino at the Regional Museum of Archeology. Whether covering history, geography, precious stones, chocolate, baseball, rum, or architecture, among other topics, there’s a Dominican museum to fit all ages and interests.

Choose a book

Read and discuss a book that takes place in your destination or describes the local culture. Pick from titles like:

  • Caribbean by James A. Michener
  • Little Heroes: Boys of the Barrio by Raimund Johannes Wild
  • How the García Girls Lost Their Accents by Julia Alvarez

Fill up your plate

Arrange a potluck and encourage your friends to bring a traditional dish from your destination. Know a chef? Hold a virtual mangu cooking class with your travel group, or support a local restaurant that offers delivery/take-out of your destination’s cuisine. Try sancocho (seven meat stew), arroz blanco (white rice), pollo guisado (braised chicken), tostones (twice-fried plantains), and habichuelas con dulce (sweet cream of beans).

Learn the language

Call up a friend or set up a group video chat and practice your language skills. It helps to make flashcards with Dominican slang to use on the phone or throughout your travels (think about ordering at restaurants, buying souvenirs, and chatting with locals).

Did you know?

Santo Domingo is the oldest city in the Americas!


Meet Your Partner in Travel

Maya has traveled to the Dominican Republic twice, where she had the opportunity to explore Santo Domingo and spent time relaxing on the beach in Punta Cana with a good book. She used her spare time to travel extensively around the island and grew to love the food as much as the landscapes and sights she encountered. Now back in the U.S., Maya maintains her love of all things Dominican by cooking sancocho with her friends and family at least once a month.