international service
Submitted by monkeykelci on Sat, 04/12/2008 - 23:08.
You're invited!
To celebrate a world wide Christian fellowship, the growth and strength of YMCA, national and cultural diversities!
To participate in creating a week long Festival village demonstrating new ideas for living together!
To experience the challenges that matter to young people all over the world!
To have the chance to share experiences and to see the connections with the experience of others!
To experience a new YMCA idea: Global Youth Work!
To strengthen your national and local movements through new sources of motivation, new projects and new resources!
To exper
Submitted by intlprofs on Fri, 03/28/2008 - 16:24.
A new type of professor: mobile, international, for teaching......or otherwise assisting poor, almost poor, developing and undeveloping countries: support network of ultimately 3000 Project Fellows and ading up to 100 board directors, to make a new convention of the mobile professor. Profesors and lecturers, board directors and Fellows can come from any country.
Submitted by dtkeyx on Sun, 07/08/2007 - 16:20.
The William and Mary Bequia Sunshine Project hopes to improve the current education conditions of the schools on the island of Bequia in the Caribbean. The trip involves two weeks of painting the local high school, tutoring children with special needs and high school students, and helping to run after school activities. This is the first year that the trip will be run totally by students from the College of William and Mary. In the past the program has been run through the Education Department and has focused on tutoring and evaluating.
Submitted by Sunshine_Girl on Wed, 05/30/2007 - 19:40.
The Bequia Sunshine Project, a College of William and Mary student-led, international service learning trip was established to address both the superficial and underlying educational needs in Bequia. Bequia, one of the St. Vincent and Grenadines islands, is a small 5 ½ mile long island whose drastic needs, like many other Caribbean islands, are often overlooked, due to its small population and poor economy.