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Dr Terry Sullivan
Associate Professor Pep Serow
Ms Madeline Fussell Nauru Teacher Education Team
Dr Sujana Adapa
Dr Sarah Lawrence
Dr Janelle Wilkes
Professor Neil Taylor
Associate Professor Darryl Savage
Volunteer Guatemala Quetzaltenango: Teaching Program: July 2013: Anna M'Gucken: "This experience provided me with a great opportunity to really learn more about another culture, and opened my eyes a lot of new things and perspectives. I am so glad to have been able to volunteer and live with a host family and take Spanish lessons, it made the travel experience sooo much more valuable".
www.abroaderview.org/programs/teaching-education/guatemal...
Painting on the first day of school?!?
Sure, why not? It's washable!! =D
On a more somber note:
I had a rather hectic but very good first week of school (outside of the fact that my two guys were miserably sick!)
However, all during this past week of teaching I was cognizant of the fact that countless numbers of children in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast did not or will not have a first week of school. For many, their schools are under water or have been swept away.
In the midst of such unfathomable devastation, the immediate concerns for them and their families are finding food, shelter and lost loved ones. It is so incredibly heartbreaking! It brings tears to my eyes to see the images of devastation and pain brought on by Hurricane Katrina.
All I can say is we must do whatever we can in the days and weeks ahead to help provide donations, resources, support and love to those afflicted by Katrina.
I pledge to do whatever I can.
Part of the outer teaching building complex, made up at the moment of about 7 difference courtyard buildings. Eventually we'll move to a completely new complex as the new south campus quadruples in size to accommodate 30,000 students.
Always learn something from nature. Because nature is the best teacher in our life. www.quoteschart.com/teaching-quotes/
Wild cats of Dubai, Mother and kitten,shots taken and resized with permission via email from a friend in Dubai, United Arab Emirates
The courtyard behind Cultivate provides a fairly unusual opportunity to establish a street level roof garden, making it very accessible. While street level for Cultivate, it is roof level for the Smock Alley Theatre facing the River Liffey. As a city centre location it also serves to educate passersby on the possibilities for urban agriculture.
Planted just two years before this picture was taken, virtually all the stock as planted at seedling sizes (raised at my house from seeds sourced around the world), but the soil in the raised beds was pure compost. Just look at the growth.
The plants are mostly economic species used in various cultures for foods, medicines, dies and fibre. There are one or two which specialise in facilitating "conversations with the gods" as well.
There are many surprises flourishing in the protected micro climate: cyphomandra, psidium, brugmansia, sparmannia, colocaisia, cymbidium, cussonia, even a monstera !
John's first teaching post was in Oxfordshire. He told me:
"I took a job at Kingham Hall in Oxfordshire, which was a boarding school for maladjusted children (boys). Maladjustment covered a multitude and included some boys who had been through the courts."
John, back row, second from the left.