Global Citizen Year
What did you do between high school and college? Work at the mall for the summer? Try to read all of your college books ahead of time? Play your videogames in the air conditioning? Or instead did you go to a developing country and lend your hands and your mind in an unparalleled experience in service and leadership? Yeah I didn’t do that either. But eleven Class of 2009 grads have, embarking on the pilot of Global Citizen Year.
Global Citizen Year is a fellowship program that invites high school seniors to take a “bridge year” before starting college and to serve overseas. From their site: “By providing intensive training and support, we ensure that our Fellows develop an ethic of service, the ability to communicate across languages and cultures, and a deep commitment to becoming agents for social change.” I think this is a really powerful idea. So few Americans travel, and even fewer ever develop a second language, and a program like this can provide a really incredible perspective.
Global Citizen Year (GCY) is just starting up this year and its first round of fellows have recently embarked for Guatemala and Senegal. I had the good fortune to speak with them before they left about documenting their experiences abroad. I invited them to share some of their experiences with us here to the Current News Blog and we’ve got some of their responses back already. I’ll be highlighting them this week: starting with Alec Yeh, Ian Zimmerman and Laura Keaton.
Laura Keaton / Guatemala:
Alex Yeh / Senegal: Q: What are some of the local issues facing the community your in?
Ian Zimmerman / Nebaj:
Recently on the Current News Blog:
- Silvio Berlusconi gets hit in the face - What's next for No B Day?
- Copenhagen: Walkouts continue
- Iran to try three hikers for espionage
- Top 10 stories of 2009: Obama, Afghanistan, Pirates, and more (Video)
- Copenhagen round-up: Walkouts, Wind farms, Monckton, Climategate and Video
Global Citizen Year is a fellowship program that invites high school seniors to take a “bridge year” before starting college and to serve overseas. From their site: “By providing intensive training and support, we ensure that our Fellows develop an ethic of service, the ability to communicate across languages and cultures, and a deep commitment to becoming agents for social change.” I think this is a really powerful idea. So few Americans travel, and even fewer ever develop a second language, and a program like this can provide a really incredible perspective.
Global Citizen Year (GCY) is just starting up this year and its first round of fellows have recently embarked for Guatemala and Senegal. I had the good fortune to speak with them before they left about documenting their experiences abroad. I invited them to share some of their experiences with us here to the Current News Blog and we’ve got some of their responses back already. I’ll be highlighting them this week: starting with Alec Yeh, Ian Zimmerman and Laura Keaton.
Laura Keaton / Guatemala:
My first impression of Guatemala was that the place I was living in was not “rural” as I had expected because everything in the little town in which I live is concrete and cinder block. There’s an internet café, and buses thundering past all the time. Also one thing that struck me the very first night was that they’re much more tolerant of noise here-- there was music blaring until at least 2 am that Saturday. But now I don’t even notice it, so I guess it’s just what they’re used to.
Alex Yeh / Senegal: Q: What are some of the local issues facing the community your in?
That's easy. Unemployment. Everybody here wants a job. Yet there are so many young, able bodied men here, that simply can't get a job. People just lounge here. They sit around and make tea and talk. And it's not their fault at all. They're so incredibly bored, and they yearn to do something.
Ian Zimmerman / Nebaj:
Guatemala Looking outside of Nebaj into the surrounding communities, one of the biggest problems is malnutrition. Beans, rice, and tortillas are great and all – but they frankly don’t make up a balanced diet. In an attempt to raise awareness to this issue, one of our projects is to begin a vegetable garden with kids at a community center called El Centro Explorativo in La Pista. We hope this project will lead families to start their own vegetable gardens as a means for which to improve the local diet.
Recently on the Current News Blog:
- Silvio Berlusconi gets hit in the face - What's next for No B Day?
- Copenhagen: Walkouts continue
- Iran to try three hikers for espionage
- Top 10 stories of 2009: Obama, Afghanistan, Pirates, and more (Video)
- Copenhagen round-up: Walkouts, Wind farms, Monckton, Climategate and Video
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