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Pathway between Exploration Place, Wichita's science center. The building on the left is on an island in the Arkansas River.
These three pictures were taken at half hour intervals as the tide receded. Not the best of lighting but...
Eighteen students completed Anniston Army Depot’s Pathways High School cooperative education program May 17, 2018.
Nine alumni came to campus January 20th, 2013 to share stories of their “pathways” since graduating from Deerfield. Thank you to Asha Echeverria ’96, Josh Greenhill ’96, Rob Hale ’84 P’15, Leslie Hotchkiss ’06, Sean Keller ’86, Stephanie Lazar ’94, Adam Lubinsky ’89, Rafi Mottahedeh ’02, and Benjamin Patton ’83.
Nine alumni came to campus January 20th, 2013 to share stories of their “pathways” since graduating from Deerfield. Thank you to Asha Echeverria ’96, Josh Greenhill ’96, Rob Hale ’84 P’15, Leslie Hotchkiss ’06, Sean Keller ’86, Stephanie Lazar ’94, Adam Lubinsky ’89, Rafi Mottahedeh ’02, and Benjamin Patton ’83.
Global Citizenship Program (GCP) 67 | Pathways to Global Citizenship: Roots and Routes
City University of New York (CUNY), Salzburg, Austria (April 4 to 11, 2015)
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Tomorrow's leaders must think and act as global citizens in order to address the challenges facing humanity. Broadly defined, global citizens are people who are consciously prepared to live and work in the complex interdependent society of the 21st century and contribute to improving the common global welfare of our planet and its inhabitants. The program aims to engage participating students as global citizens, helping them develop the knowledge, skills, values, and commitment to:
Understand the nature of globalization, including its positive and negative impacts around the world, and realize how it is transforming human society;
Appreciate the diversity of humanity in all of its manifestations, from local to global, and interact with different groups of people to address common concerns;
Recognize the critical global challenges that are compromising humanity's future and see how their complexity and interconnections make solutions increasingly difficult; and
Collaborate with different sets of stakeholders, by thinking globally and acting locally, to resolve these critical challenges and build a more equitable and sustainable world.
The session format includes lectures and discussions with an international faculty as well as formal and informal work in small groups. Topics addressed in plenary lectures and discussions include globalization and global responsibility; the social, economic, and political aspects of migration; the historical legacy of the Holocaust, human rights, humanitarian intervention; sustainable development; and the implications of the United States' influence around the world.
Participants will consider how these issues relate to their current situations and future personal, educational, and professional plans. They will also have the opportunity to develop projects and activities related to the session topic that can be implemented at their colleges and universities, in their local communities, and beyond.
The 2.8 mile path around Greenlake in Seattle was lined with luminaria. Hundreds of people walked around the lake listening to music and enjoying the holiday lights.
Topaz Vintage Grunge Filter
If you visit the Dingle Peninsula you must visit the Gallarus Oratory. It's an early Christian church, possibly built in the 6th century. There is a visitor centre but don't be fooled into paying the entrance fee. The building is a national monument and the public have a right to see it. Your entrance fee does pay for a crummy video in a dark and musty room but to be honest it's not worth it! Continue up the road and you'll find a path leading directly to the church. Your taxes pay for the upkeep of the building so why pay another charge to see it?
Eighteen students completed Anniston Army Depot’s Pathways High School cooperative education program May 17, 2018.
Eighteen students completed Anniston Army Depot’s Pathways High School cooperative education program May 17, 2018.
Nine alumni came to campus January 20th, 2013 to share stories of their “pathways” since graduating from Deerfield. Thank you to Asha Echeverria ’96, Josh Greenhill ’96, Rob Hale ’84 P’15, Leslie Hotchkiss ’06, Sean Keller ’86, Stephanie Lazar ’94, Adam Lubinsky ’89, Rafi Mottahedeh ’02, and Benjamin Patton ’83.