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International Education Information @ UWM |
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Center for International Education Home of the Milwaukee Idea's Global Passport Project |
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
A publication of UWM's Center for International
Education, Global Passport
provides up-to-date information on
international education programs, opportunities, and resources,
including those offered by
Support
the CIE Center for International Education |
New Global "Travel" Program for
Children and Parents
"Travel
the Globe with UWM and the Public Library" is a new program for children
(elementary school age) and their parents to learn about different parts of the
world.
"Travel the Globe" will take place every second Saturday of the month from 10:30 to 11:30 AM in the new Washington Park Public Library (2121 N. Sherman Blvd., Milwaukee). Children and parents will listen to folk tales from the country featured that day, hear from an international student about his/her childhood, and play music or work with paper to make an artifact from the featured country. The event is free for children and their parents.
Sponsored by the Center for International
Education.
The UW System (through the Office of Academic
Diversity and Development, the Institute on Race and Ethnicity, the Women’s
Studies Consortium, the Institute for Global
Studies, and the Office of Professional and Instructional Development) is
pleased to announce a conference focusing on pedagogies of engagement. The
conference will be held on Friday, February 27 at the Pyle Center in
Madison. We invite you to join us in celebration of the work that is being
done across the UW System. There is no campus nomination procedure;
participants may register on a first-come, first-served basis with no
registration fee. The workshop can accommodate up to 150
participants.
| General
Information Location: Pyle Center, Madison Cost: No Registration fee Registration: First-come, first-served Time: 9am-5 pm; lunch will be served Agenda: The agenda is currently being constructed. At this point there are 70 UW System faculty and staff presenting in a series of panels and discussions throughout the day. Senior Vice President Cora B. Marrett will deliver the keynote and welcome. The tentative agenda will be sent to participants by late January. Workshops and panels will provide examples of Engaged Pedagogy. This includes those techniques that help students develop critical insights and awareness into their own place in systems of privilege and power, and the consequences to the world of sustained systems of inequity. The conference will highlight pedagogical connections that engage with a range of contemporary inequalities and social/cultural justice issues, by providing best practices in the ways in which faculty and academic staff have provided opportunities for their students to make these connections within traditional disciplines. Some examples of session titles are:
Many educators are developing and using pedagogical strategies and innovations which recognize that discussions of multiculturalism, gender, ability, class, ethnic identity, sexual identity, racism, and equality are important ways to engage ALL of our students in their education by making new connections to traditional disciplinary content. This conference celebrates and honors educators who take novel approaches to the teaching of race, ethnicity and related research that intersects with other markers of identity within the context of the classroom and beyond. The title of this conference, Critical Connections, references an overarching theme that links the form and methods of student learning processes to the hierarchical social orders that sustain an array of contemporary inequalities. It also recognizes that critical connections can be made between the content of our courses, who we are, and who we are teaching. The conference will have the following broad themes:
Registration: To register for the conference, simply fill out the registration form (below) and send directly to Debbie Dunn via email to: ddunn@uwsa.edu, or to fax it to her attention at (608) 262-9701. The deadline for registration is January 22, 2004. |
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Participant Registration Form Due: January 22, 2004 Critical Connections: Pedagogies of Engagement Friday, February 27th Pyle Center, UW-Madison Name__________________________________________________________________
MEALS LODGING Please return this form to the attention of Debbie Dunn, by either email: ddunn@uwsa.edu or by fax: 608-262-9701 |
Questions about the program or registration
procedures should be directed to Lisa Kornetsky, Director, Office of
Professional and Instructional Development, at lkornetsky@uwsa.edu or (608) 263-2722, or
Debbie Dunn, Office Manager, Academic Diversity and Development, at ddunn@uwsa.edu or (608) 262-9720.
We are pleased to announce that the registration period for the summer 2004 Academy on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law is now open, and we will be accepting applications through May 14, 2004. Details of this program and course listings follow. All of this information, as well as applications, are available on our web site at http://www.wcl.american.edu/humright/hracademy
For inquiries and requests for applications, please contact us at: American University Washington College of Law Academy on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Prof. Claudia Martin and Prof. Diego Rodriguez-Pinzon Co-Directors 4801 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20016-8181 USA
Tel: (202) 274-4070
Fax: (202) 274-4198
E-mail: hracademy@wcl.american.edu
Web: http:///www.wcl.american.edu/humright/hracademy
Scholarship deadlines are approaching rapidly. Deadlines for Summer departure programs are in December or January.
Students whose family hosts a Youth for Understanding - USA exchange student are eligible for an automatic $500 scholarship for summer programs and $800 scholarships for semester and year programs. For more information on hosting a YFU-USA international student, visit the website at http://www.yfu-usa.org
For a complete list of available scholarships, and
more information about the Youth for Understanding -USA International programs,
check out the website at http://www.yfu-usa.org/ao/scholarships.htm
or call 1-800-TEENAGE ( 1-800-833-6243).
Information can be found on the CLACS website: http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/CLACS/scholarship.htm
The Center also seeks Faculty Leaders to lead small groups during the January seminars and convention programs, perhaps even bringing pre-formed groups as part of a class. Talented instructors will spend one or two weeks in January and/or two weeks in Boston (Democratic Convention) or New York (Republican Convention) next summer to help with the academic side of the programs.
For more information about the faculty leader
positions, please e-mail us at: seminars@twc.edu.
For fellowship conditions: http://www.aiys.org/conditions.html
An application form is available at: http://www.aiys.org/application.html
For more information:
Dr. Maria deJ. Ellis, Executive Director
American Institute for Yemeni Studies
P.O. Box 311
Ardmore PA 19003-0311
(610) 896-5412, fax (610) 896-9049
E-mail: aiys@aiys.org
It has been well over 30 years since the Asian American Student and Anti-War Movement and Third World Strike to found Asian American Studies began yet we are far from reaching justice for many Asian and Pacific Islander Americans. The sovereignty movement of Native Hawaiians, the Wen Ho Lee case, Filipino airport screeners, and on going legal battles for citizenship, illustrate how many Asian and Pacific Islander Americans have been fighting for justice in the United States.
Stereotyped as "apolitical," we want, instead, to highlight the struggles and triumphs of Asian and Pacific Islander Americans in relation to quests for justice. For this issue of Peace Review, we invite both historical and contemporary works that focus on past and on-going projects to attain justice for all those of Asian and Pacific Islander ancestry.
Peace Review is a quarterly, multidisciplinary, transnational journal of research and analysis, focusing on the current issues and controversies that underlie the promotion of a more peaceful world. We define peace research to include human rights, development, ecology, culture, race, gender and related issues. Our task is to present the results of this research and thinking in short (2500-3500 words), accessible and substantial essays.
For writer's guidelines or to send essay
submissions by email attachment to Robert Elias, Editor eliasr@usfca.edu or Anne Hieber, Managing
Editor hieber@usfca.edu. Or send
correspondence to Peace Review, University of San Francisco, 2130 Fulton
Street, San Francisco, CA, 94117. Telephone: 415-422-2910 or Fax:
415-422-5671, Attn. Elias or Hieber.
In recent years, the Learning Conference has been held in Malaysia (Penang, 1999), Australia (Melbourne, 2000), Greece (Spetses, 2001), China (Beijing 2002) and the United Kingdom (London University, 2003).
The overall theme of the Learning Conference 2004 will be “Learning Today: Communication, Technology, Environment, Society.” Critical issues to be addressed include education for local and global cultural diversity, the impact of new technologies, changing forms of literacy, and the role of education in social and personal transformation.
The conference welcomes presentation proposals addressing a broad range of themes across the humanities and social sciences. Conference papers will be published in print and electronic formats in the peer refereed International Journal of Learning. If you are unable to attend the conference, virtual registrations are also available allowing access to the full text of the electronic edition of the Journal for that year. Virtual registration also allows you to submit a paper - which will appear in the conference program, be included in the refereeing process and, if accepted for publication, be published into the International Journal of Learning as a fully refereed academic journal article.
The deadline for the first round of the call for
papers is January 30, 2004. Full details of the conference, including an
online call for papers form, are to be found at the conference website: http://www.LearningConference.com.
Web address: http://www.hicsocial.org
Email address: social@hicsocial.org
The 3rd Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Social Sciences will be held from June 16 (Wednesday) to June 19 (Saturday),
2004 at the Sheraton Waikiki Hotel in Honolulu, Hawaii. The conference
will provide many opportunities for academicians and professionals from the
social sciences fields to interact with members inside and outside their own
particular disciplines. Cross-disciplinary submissions with other fields
are welcome.
| Topic Areas (All Areas
of Social Sciences are Invited)
The Hawaii International Conference on Social Sciences encourages the following types of papers/abstracts/submissions for any of the listed areas:
Format of Presentations:
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Applications are due January 31, 2004 for Fall 2004 study.
For more information visit the website: http://www.aed.org/nsep or contact the
Overseas Programs office at (414) 229-5182.
The TEA Program was established to provide an opportunity for award winning US teachers to utilize their talents and expertise to improve the quality of secondary education in Eurasia and to create linkages and learning partnerships between US and Eurasian schools. Participants
Take part in a three-day summer cross-cultural symposium, "Celebrating Teaching Excellence Across Cultures" and a two-week exchange program with teachers from Eurasia who won the TEA program in their country. Funds for this program were provided through a grant from the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.
For more information, please contact:
Marilee Muchow
Program Officer
US-Eurasia Awards for Excellence in Teaching
American Councils for International Education
1776 Massachusetts Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20036tel: (202) 833-7522
fax: (202) 293-0037
After the scholarship, participants must work in a U.S. government agency involved in national security affairs or in U.S. higher education. The duration of the service requirement will be equal to, but not greater than, the length of the scholarship support under NSEP auspices. The NSEP scholarship is to be used for study abroad and awards will range from full scholarships (covering tuition and other program costs, round-trip airfare on a U.S. flag carrier, health insurance, and local transportation) to minimum awards of $2,500 for summer, $4,000 for a semester or $6,000 for an academic year.
The application deadline is February 12, 2004 for the 2004-2005 application cycle.
For more information visit the website: http://www.iie.org/programs/nsep/nsephome.htm#overview
or contact the Overseas Programs office at (414) 229-5182.
The Centre for the Study of Global Governance
http://www.lse.ac.uk/Depts/global/
Established in 1992 at the London School of
Economics and Political Science, the Centre for the Study of Global Governance
with a substantial grant from the Maurice Laing and Rufford Foundations. As the
website notes, the centre's mission is "to inquire into the origins and nature
of urgent problems facing the globe, to inform by way of public lectures,
seminars, and discussion, and to influence agencies and organizations engaged in
seeking and implementing solutions to these urgent problems." From the homepage,
visitors can learn about the various leaders and fellows at the Centre, learn
about ongoing research projects on global civil society and other topics, and
view selected discussion papers and transcripts of public lectures. Some of the
rather compelling papers available for consideration here address topics as
diverse as the role of international criminal prosecutions in reconstructing
divided communities and the impact of globalization in southeastern European
countries.
Observatory of the Information Society: An International
Gateway
http://portal.unesco.org/ci/ev.php?URL_ID=7277&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=1048272936
As heralded by academic and popular works of the
past several decades, much of the world is entering what some have called the
Information Age, and some have noted that the access and availability to
knowledge in a variety of forms will determine the success of national and
regional development in this century. This particular site, organized and
maintained by UNESCO, brings together hundreds of resources on the development
of the Information Society from around the world, including various reports on
the digital divide, online governance, e-commerce, intellectual property rights,
infostructure, and virtual libraries. Visitors to the site can browse the
available materials by region, country, or by thematic topic of interest. The
homepage also provides a frequently updated news section that contains links to
related events, recently released studies, and other materials generated by
UNESCO and partner agencies.
World Values
Survey
http://www.worldvaluessurvey.com/
Started in 1981, the World Values Survey is an
ambitious worldwide investigation of sociocultural and political change being
conducted by an international network of social scientists at universities
across the globe. Since its inception, a total of four waves of representative
sample research have been conducted producing "evidence of gradual but pervasive
changes in what people want out of life." The survey shows that the basic
direction of these changes is, to some extent, predictable. Following from this
intriguing (and perhaps contestable) thesis, the website provides access to a
number of the publications that have been generated from the group's
scholarship, along with information about ordering various monographs and other
publications. Visitors can also view the various questionnaires used to sample
the different population groups, and read news updates about their work. As
mentioned, the site also allows visitors to download some of the most recent
work done by the scholars at the World Values Survey, including papers dealing
with democratic aspirations and ideals in East Asia and postmaterialism.
The Atlantic World: America and the Netherlands
http://international.loc.gov/intldl/awkbhtml/awkbhome.html
Released as part of the Global Gateway online
series from the Library of Congress, this fine collaboration between the Library
of Congress and various archives in the Netherlands explores the various aspects
of the Dutch presence in America from the early 17th century up to the post
World War II period. This first stage of the online project largely explores the
period between 1609 and 1664, when the Dutch established the colony of New
Netherland, which was largely confined to the Atlantic coast in what is now New
York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Connecticut. In this section, visitors can read
extended essays on various aspects of the Dutch presence in the region, along
with perusing various primary documents and looking at a number of unique maps
from the period. Some of the themes that will be added to the site over the
coming months include explorations of 19th century Dutch migration and
Holland-Mania. Many of the materials on the site (and many of the primary
documents) are available in Dutch, as well as English.
Russia
Engages the World, 1453-1825
http://russia.nypl.org/
Designed to coincide with the 300th anniversary of the most
cosmopolitan city, St. Petersburg, this lovely online exhibit on Russia's
emergence as a modern empire that began with the fall of Constantinople in 1453
and continued unabated for three centuries. The exhibit itself was underwritten
by the Boris Jordan Family, with additional support from the Samuel H. Kress
Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Appropriately, each
section of the exhibit has been divided largely by various rulers (such as
Catherine the Great and Emperor Alexander I), and includes an essay that
provides viewers with a broad portrait of the various cultural, political, and
technological transformations made within each era. The essays are well
complemented by a number of visual accompaniments, such as an intricate
17th-century view of Moscow from the New York Public Library and a portrait of
the Muscovite ruler Tsar Mikhail Romanov.
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graphical and hypertext elements. Previous issues may be accessed
at: http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/CIE/GlobalPassport/newsletter.html
To subscribe or unsubscribe to Global Passport, send an e-mail message to Dr. Robert J. Beck, the CIE's Director of Academic Technology: rjbeck@uwm.edu To submit a contribution for potential publication in Global Passport, simply send an e-mail message to rjbeck@uwm.edu |
| Materials
reprinted here may be subject to this or other copyright
provisions:
Copyright (c) Internet Scout Project, 1994-2003 http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/ |
Center for
International Education
http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/CIE
University
of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53201
Tel: 414-229-3757
Fax:
414-229-3626