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Deadlines
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Grants
for Higher Education Teachers
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How
to Apply? |
| Purpose:
The Grants for Higher Education Teachers program blends two of Rotary’s
most important emphases education and
volunteer service. The primary purpose is to further
international understanding and friendship while
strengthening higher education in
low-income countries. Low-income countries are defined in
terms of per capita GNP.
Who:
At the
wishes of District 5340, these grants are to be awarded to
higher education faculty to
teach in the fields of (1.) Food Propagation, (2.) AIDS
Prevention, (3.) Computer Education,
and/or (4.) Family Health.
Because
teachers are providing a service, Rotarians as well as
non-Rotarians are eligible. Applicants
must hold (or, if retired, must have held) a full-time
college - or university - level
position for three or more years. Further details regarding
this program may be found in
the "Rotary Grants for University Teachers" and
"Program Guide for Rotarians
Ambassadorial Scholarships and Grants for University
Teachers". Go to the Rotary website download
center.
Awards:
Multiple grants
have been budgeted for 3-5 months periods at $12,500 each.
Some are slated for Scripps
Institute of Oceanography. The other teachers can be
from any community college or
university in the 5340 district.
Where:
Teachers
will need to travel to a developing country to teach one of
the four fields listed above.
It is suggested that the teachers travel to District 9200 in
Africa or District 4400 in
Ecuador.
Application
Deadline: Applications are
generally accepted in late spring and summer. Click on the
"Deadlines" link on the left for more information
on the due dates. |
|
General
Information |
| If
you want more information on the Grants for Higher Education Teachers Program, go to the relevant
section on the Rotary International website.
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Grant
Recipients 2008-09 |
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Kamala
Balasubramanian 
Kamala
is an Associate Professor of English at Grossmont College.
She is being sponsored by La Mesa Sunrise Rotary. She will
be going to Chennai, India and spend three months during
Summer 2008 at Stella Maris College where she will teach,
train English teachers, and develop English Curriculum. She
will also be working with Rotary Clubs in Chennai and with
community projects, such as AIDS Awareness. Professor
Balasubramanian, in addition to English, speaks Tamil and
Telugu--languages in the region of Chennai, India.
Maureen
Duncan 
Maureen
is a retired administrator from the College of Alameda in
Northern California where she served as Vice President for
Instruction. Her academic field is Business and Computer
Information Systems. She is a member of Encinitas Coastal
Rotary. She will be spending Summer 2008 at Instituto
Esperanca de Ensino Superior in Santarem, Brazil. She will
be working with University professors in developing their
Small Business curriculum and the expansion of their
technology program. Maureen is fluent in Portuguese having
spent time in Brazil previously as a Peace Corps Volunteer.
In recent years she has been in Santarem, which is on the
Amazon Region and is familiar with Rotarians in that Rotary
District.
Upon
their return from India and Brazil fall of 2008 both Kamala
and Maureen will be available to share their experiences
with Rotarians in District 5340. |
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revious
Grant
Recipients |
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Dr.
Janet Mc Daniel of CSU San Marcos to study at Universidad
Catolica del Valparaiso in Chile in the Spring and Summer
2005.
Dr.
Janet McDaniel is a middle grades educator with thirty years
of experience teaching young adolescents and their teachers.
She began her career as a history teacher in junior high
school in Tacoma, Washington, and then moved to Honolulu,
Hawaii where she continued teaching 7th and 8th graders for
a decade. Upon completing her master's and doctoral degrees
in Education at University of Washington in 1991, she became
a faculty member at California State University San Marcos.
The university was in its infancy when Janet arrived in San
Marcos, and she was an active participant in creating
teacher education and graduate programs in the College of
Education. She has held several faculty leadership positions
in the college and university, and holds the rank of
Professor of Education.
Janet
is the coordinator of the Middle Level Teacher Education
Program at Cal State San Marcos, a position she has held
since the program's inception in 1992. This is one of just
three programs in California dedicated to the preparation of
teachers for grades six through eight. In partnership with
North San Diego County middle schools, the Cal State San
Marcos program has pioneered a school-based, team-taught
approach to educating future teachers of young adolescents.
The program is housed in the Gateway Center for Middle Level
Education on site at Woodland Park Middle School. The
classroom and office facility is jointly owned and operated
by the university and the San Marcos Unified School
District. The program is well-known and respected across the
nation; it was the recipient of the National Association for
Multicultural Education's Outstanding Program Award in 1998.
Janet was recognized for her contributions to the university
in 2004 when she received the Brakebill Distinguished
Professor Award, the highest recognition bestowed by the
university upon a faculty member.
Janet
began studying Spanish in 1996, and has taken 15 language
classes at Cal State San Marcos and spent six summers in
language institutes with home stays in Spanish-speaking
countries. She has studied in Cuernavaca and Oaxaca, Mexico;
Nerja and Santiago de Compostela, Spain; Antigua, Guatemala;
and Cuzco, Peru. As a recipient of the University Teachers
Grant, Janet will be associated with the Catholic University
of Valparaiso (UCV) in Valparaiso, Chile from May through
August, 2005. UCV is establishing the first middle school
teacher education program in Chile, and Janet will be active
in teaching and consulting on this program.
See story and pictures... |
|
Professor
Chris Charles of Scripps Inst. of Oceanography to study at
University of Sri Jayewardenepura Nugegodo, Sri Lanka from
October 2005 to Feb. 2006.
Dr.
Christopher Charles is currently Associate Professor in the
Geosciences Research Division of the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, University of California, San Diego. He
received his B.A. from University of California, Berkeley in
1984 and his Ph.D. from Columbia University (Lamont Doherty
Earth Observatory) in 1991. Before moving to Scripps in
1992, he also completed a one-year postdoctoral fellowship
at the NASA/ Goddard Institute for Space Studies. His area
of research specialization involves the geological record of
recent climate change, and he emphasizes stable isotopic
tracers in the ocean/atmosphere system. Along with former
and current students in his group, he is helping to build a
detailed record of the El Niño phenomenon extending through
the last few millennia, using fossil corals. This work has
taken him to coral reefs throughout the tropical oceans,
including the Indian Ocean, where he developed a keen
interest in the controls on coral reef vitality. (The reefs
of Sri Lanka represent a principal focus for his tenure as a
Rotary Teaching Fellow). He also has a long-standing
interest in the Southern Ocean deep sea sedimentary record
of climate, and he has helped orchestrate several sediment
coring campaigns in the South Atlantic Ocean. In his 13
years on the faculty at SIO/UCSD, he has taught at all
levels of the University of California system including
lower division courses in Earth and Environmental Science,
upper division courses in Environmental Systems, and
graduate courses in Marine Geology and Climatology. |
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Water
Pros Team with 5340! |
|
In
September 2002 and thanks to the spearheading of La Jolla
Sunrise Rotarian, Grant Deane, discussions began with Dr.
Lisa Shaffer and John Evey of the world-famous Scripps
Institute of Oceanography. The three to five month program
of Rotary’s Grants For University Teachers was recognized
as the key fit to partner Rotary with Scripps by sending
professors from Scripps to teach in developing countries.
Drs.
Wolf Berger and Alexander (Sasha) Gershunov will teach in
Chile and Russia, respectively, in early 2004. Water quality
problems in developing countries require better education to
facilitate corrective measures to bad situations impacting
health and environment. Berger’s Rotary Host Club is La
Jolla Golden Triangle with Rotarian, Irwin Rubenstein, as
Host Club Counselor. Alexander (Sasha) Gershunov has La
Jolla Sunrise as Host Club and Rotarian, George Dewhurst, as
Host Club Counselor. The Host Clubs and Host Club Counselors
are responsible for the orientation to Rotary of both
scholars prior to their departure.
This
Rotary Foundation program is funded through Annual Giving
donations to The Rotary Foundation by donors within District
5340. Two more short-term scholarships, valued up to $12,500
each, have been approved by our 5340 SHARE Committee for the
2004/05 year…to continue our connection with the Scripps
Institute.
If
your club wishes to be a Host Club for one of the 2004/05
scholarships, please contact PDG Wayne Cusick at
858-550-8106 or email mrgoodgas@aol.com.
Dr.
Wolf Berger
Dr.
Wolf Berger is currently Professor of Oceanography at
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD. His educational
background is in geology and paleontology. His main
interests focus on ocean history and climate history, with
emphasis on the last three million years. Within this
framework, he concentrates on the origin of ice-age cycles.
He also has research projects on climate cycles of the last
2000 years, and on ocean productivity. He has published on
the ocean's role in long term climatic change, on the carbon
cycle and related geochemical subjects, and on mammoth
extinction. He has an amateur's interest in mythology as a
means to store earth knowledge.
Professor
Berger is a Fellow of three professional societies the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, the
American Geophysical Union, and the Geological Society of
America. His many honors include the Bigelow Medal
(Oceanography), the Humboldt Award, the Ewing Medal (Marine
Geophysics), the Prince Albert Medal (Oceanography). He is a
Foreign Member of the Europena Academy of Sciences.
In
1993 Professor Berger was awarded the Balzan Prize for his
pioneer work in oceanography and paleontology. Previous
awardees of this Prize include Pope John XXIII, Charles
Gillispie, and Mother Teresa.
Dr.
Berger is currently Director of the California Space
Institute, a multi-campus research unit of the University of
California. |
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items to be published in the Foundation Section of the website,
please contact Philippe Lamoise
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