Elon Periclean Scholars

Class Notes 4/2

Freshman Induction: Thursday, April 11th

The induction will take place in the LaRose auditorium of KOBC. Food is served at 5:00PM, hopefully outside, and the induction officially starts at 5:30PM, and will run until about 6:30PM. Dress is business casual, and each member of our class will be assigned a mentee.

Omolayo will be our MC, and Cat and Elaina will be presenting our Words of Wisdom.

All of our class should be there at around 4:30PM, but your help would be very useful at 4:00PM to help set up everything.

We will be cooking food on the Wednesday beforehand, the 11th, starting at 6:30 in the kitchen in McCoy Commons. If you walk into the same Oaks building as Oaks 212, go straight past the printer, it should be right there. Suyapa will be helping us cook Honduran food, and we will have all of the ingredients ready to go!

 

We worked to edit the goals and strengths google doc and create a concise blurb for future partners as well as a tool for our own development. Check the Periclean google drive!

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Video on Immigration

http://illegalmovie.org/

This video has a lot to do with what our class has been studying, so I thought I’d share it. Hope everyone is enjoying break!

 

Here is the trailer:

 

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Amber Camp, Class of ’06 (Babies!)

My name is Amber Camp and I am member of the inaugural class of Periclean Scholars.  When Dr. Tom asked me to contribute an update for the blog, I was ecstatic!  My peers, who traveled with me to Namibia during Winter Term 2006, will see my posts on Facebook every now and then when I’m pulling photos of our trip and tagging them with messages of memories that seem like forever ago.  There is no doubt that being a Periclean Scholar impacted my life in college by opening my eyes, my mind and my heart to causes around the world.  I participated in projects of agreat magnitude; I became a fully engaged global citizen thinking outside of the box; I even traveled “half way around the world” to walk a mile in the shoes of people in a culture completely different than my own.  Not only this but through my photography, I was able to bring these images and stories home and share with not just my family and friends, but had many published in newspapers, magazines, the yearbook, etc. My photos told the stories of not just our own journey, but the journey of the lives we encountered during our tour of Namibia.  Amber C and Ben CBut what am I doing now?  Well…I am just a mom.

When I began to write this article, I was hesitant at first.  Sure, I did a lot of powerful things through Pericles.  But how would I give an update on myself, seven years later that would be as influential as my days at Elon?  After graduation, I moved away, took a corporate position with American Express, got married to my college sweetheart, Matt, and gave birth to my son, Benjamin.  I have settled down and become a wife, a mother, and a career woman.  This was far from the outlook I had in Namibia.  Opportunities like Peace Corps, Teach for America or working for a local non-profit agency would have been more my goal at that time.  Now, my college resume has been replaced with a list of recognitions and awards from my corporate job, I entertain and train a toddler, and maybe if I’m lucky have an opportunity to attend a painting class.  I am a mom.

Looking back now, I would not be the person that I am today without Pericles.   I’ll tell you this much, I am not currently traveling to third world countries or participating in Leadership Summits or having photos published or interviews of my life changing journey.  But, I will say, that now, when I take on a project, I take in on whole-heartedly and most importantly with an open mind and an appreciation for the people who are directly impacted.   I have a global view of the world.  As Rachel R, Laura I, Amber Cmuch as I am an American, I am also looking at the global picture that crosses race, religion, nationality, sexual orientation, etc. And I do not judge until I’ve walked at least a mile along another’s path.  My cause may not be HIV/AIDS in Namibia at this point in my life.  But I am active with my church, donating clothing and baby items to families in need.  I participate in a women’s group which raises money for local charities. I educate myself on topics, and I research by getting involved.   I support breastfeeding, promote suicide prevention, stand up against bullying and vote for change. I am a very passionate mom.

So, how am I still remaining connected to Project Pericles as I vowed I would in my interview into the program?  Here is how.

I keep connected by staying in touch.  My best friends now are the ones I made in Namibia.  We have attended weddings, baby showers, and kids’ birthday parties.  We talk every now and then and meet up as often as life will allow.   Even our Periclean-in-Residence, Matjiua and I communicate often.  She traveled to West Virginia when I got married, we arrange to Skype even though our time zones are worlds apart.  We send each other’s children care packages.  In fact, I have a toy ball with the continents on it for her son, Rino, headed to the post office tomorrow.

I keep connected through donation.  Every paycheck that I work hard to earn has an automatic deduction that I have arranged through my Namibia group at Dune 7company to be send electronically to Elon.  In the memo line, I added “Project Pericles” and the money then transfers to the program.  I even worked to get American Express to match each and every donation.  Even though it’s not as much as I would someday like to give, I know that every bit helps.  And one day, when I’m done paying off all of the student loans, I wi

Matjuia K and Amber C

ll hope to dedicate that monthly payment to the project too.  I know my peers know just what I mean, and I encourage each of you to give back.

And finally, I keep connected by staying involved.  Sure, I may not be able to make it to every Homecoming, but I read the Periclean newsletter, I check out the website, I read the blog.  I want to know what the future of Pericles is bringing to the table.  What the new members have learned through our initial project.  These smiling faces I see in the pictures look just like the ones in my group.  How will they be motivated nearly ten years after starting their project?  Will some become “just a mom” like me?  I blessed, privileged and honored to have had this life changing experience in my memories.

 

Oh, and one more thing.  There is another baby on the way!

 

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Steering Committee 3/21

Members of the inaugural Class of Cuidadanos Globales from the University of Monterrey will be visiting with their founding director Professor Hector Gomez de la Paz on April 9th-12th (overlapping the Class of 2016  Induction). We would like to host them with members of the Class, instead of putting them up in a hotel. Perhaps we could find members of current Periclean Classes that has the capacity to provide them a place to sleep and store their belongings. By visiting, we hope to show what it’s like to be an Elon Periclean

 

Funds for Excellence: anyone can apply, students or faculty, for up to $5,000 for programming. Last year, we used it for the week of reflection on human trafficking during the ’15’s Induction, and we have it again for a week of reflection on corporate responsibility. So far, one day is for environmental corporate responsibility. For the induction, Tesla Mellage works for Cargil International, which has a good history in partnering and development as far as sustainable outreach goes for corporations. She is also Honduran and will speak about what it will be like to work in that area.

 

’06’s did a film called, “Testing Positive,” and their screening raising money for Alamance Cares here in Alamance County. It was based on a short story, and told the story of  a student who finds out that she is HIV+.  A second narrative film what produced in 2008 entitled A River’s Reach that focused on students’ transformation from apathy to awareness and eventual global citizenship. We  could use these resources to create another project similar to the ’06’s  and ’08’s films. We could use students in the Theatre program who don’t necessarily get as much screen cover as they would like, and Communications students get to put their skills into a real-world application. There are many venues that Pericleans can reach an audience, and perhaps we should further explore artistic venues. We would be contributing ideas for a screen play. This could be especially pertinent to the Restavek situation, as it’s easier to talk about sensitive topics through a fictional story than directly addressing the current issue. The idea isn’t just for particular classes; it could be a Pan-Periclean project. Toxic Charity may be a good starting point.

 

Class Updates:

’13: The Class is currently doing pods for Global Experience classes this week. The class is also looking into how to make their project sustainable by bringing in more students to work with the Hispanic women. Creating presentations for Elon courses is a great feat as well as a great service, and lays down a great path for future classes.

’14: The Class’s main focus is grant-writing. They have reached out a member of AppVoices and is coming to talk about the topic and the process associated with it. They’re also starting to plan a trip after their graduation. They also revamped some of their committees to focus and move forward on various projects.

’15: The Class is moving forward in planning the Freshmen Induction. They have plans for preparing food, the program, and the flow of the event. They are also in a formative stage in their partnership development, but are making great progress in not only identifying possible projects, but deciding on their own strengths and goals.

 

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Tess and I at the beginning of the Debating for Democracy Conference in New York at the New School! Excited to start the day.

Tess and I at the beginning of the Debating for Democracy Conference in New York at the New School! Excited to start the day.

So far, it has mostly been free time with a brief orientation with the other students here. Today is the official beginning of the Conference and we are really looking forward to hearing Eugene Lang, founder of Project Pericles, come and share with us.

Posted in Class of 2015: Haiti | 1 Comment

Class of 2014: 3/19/13 and 3/20/13 Minutes

Recap 

  • Upcoming Grant Workshop 4/13
  • Lateral Applications
  • Intersection of “Toxic Charity” and our Class Goals
  • Trip Planning

Tuesday Minutes: http://periclean.wordpress.com/2013/03/19/31913-minutes/

Wednesday Minutes: http://periclean.wordpress.com/2013/03/20/32013-minutes/

 

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Class Notes – 3/19

We are in communication with various local and Haitian organizations, and continuing to develop each of these relationships.

When we come back from break, we will focus on what specifically we plan to get out of and contribute to our partner organizations.

There is a possible event we could hold next fall in collaboration with Triad Ladder of Hope and a documentary entitles Nefarius: Merchant of Souls. We could host the documentary as well as have the woman as a speaker. We could also collect donations, get the event on the cultural calendar, and use GST classes to promote the event. The trailer seemed very eye-opening and compelling.

We MAY be able to find a way to organize a university trip to Haiti before the travel advisory is listed.

A possible idea: putting together something like the ’14’s week of events that pulls together many different aspects of human trafficking. This would fit better in the fall.

Freshmen Induction is Thursday, April 11th, 5:00-6:30pm.

We also have a website on the way, and are investigating the idea of getting an official elon.edu email for our class.

slaveryfootprint.org: an eye-opening estimate of how many slaves support YOU.

We could organize another debate, similar to the presidential debate from last semester, revolving around gun control. The event would be available for both Elon students and the surrounding community. It would encourage Periclean civic engagement, but if we decide to take this project on, we need to recognize that it will require a lot of work and commit to putting forth this effort. Student will apply to participate in the debate, and we would review the applications as a class.

We should plan an event in the second half of the semester to bring everyone back in. Perhaps we could revisit the idea of visiting the Warner household? Grilling on a warm day?

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PODs this week

Our class met for about three hours today to finalize the POD presentation and figure out what else we have to do before the big day(s). We present Wednesday at 9:25 and 12:15 and Thursday at 8 and 2:20. It’s a Powerpoint with mostly pictures and then quite a few video clips of Skype sessions with Isra and segments from a 10-minute video he made on his own and sent to us, narrating his story. It’s been a lot of work, so we’re excited to present the finished product. Wish us luck!

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Events during Induction Week

Class of 2016 Induction Week.

There are Lots of Great Events come up — please try to attend

Tuesday April 9                                               College Coffee Focus on Corporate Responsibility

Featuring Info from NetImpact and Weekly Event Program

Wednesday April 10                                                  Panel on Corporate Environmental Responsibility

(MCs from NetImpact)

Scott Williams from Chargepoint

Pam Jordan from Color Landscapes

Janice Spearbeck – Student assisting Color Landscapes with Green Plus

Susan Inglis –  Ex. Dir. of the Sustainable Furnishings Council

                                                4:00-5:30 Lakeside 212

Snacks after the event in Lakeside 213

Thursday April 11                                                       Panel on Corporate Social Responsibility

(MCs from Periclean)

Tesla Mellage from Cargill-Periclean Class of 2008

Other Speakers TBA

KOBC 101 Digital Theatre

3:00-4:30

Social Event at KOBC Fountain (rain location KOBC Atrium) starting at 4:45

Periclean Scholar Class of 2016 Induction

Invited Speaker Tesla Mellage-Periclean Class of 2008

KOBC Digital Theatre

                                                                                                           5:00-6:30

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Class resume.

 

Periclean Scholars – Ghana Program

       We are 42 members of the Elon community (41 student, 1 faculty) committed to building sustainable partnerships

Webpage:http://org.elon.edu/pericleanscholars2010

 

To support our projects contact:                                                                                                                             In Ghana contact:     Dr. Heidi G. Frontani, Campus Box 2335, Elon, NC 27244                                                                                             Dr. Francis Amedahe

Tel: (336) 278-6462; E-mail: glaesel@elon.edu                                                                              Email: fkamedahe@yahoo.com

 

PROJECTS

Kpoeta Health Services Planning Center                                                             April 2007-Present

  • Enabled 10,000 rural Ghanaians in Kpoeta-Ashanti region to have year-round access to healthcare through a community partnership that resulted in the construction and staffing of the Kpoeta Community Clinic that opened in January 2009
  • Enlarged the clinic complex in 2010 to include housing for Government of Ghana paid medical staff
  • Incorporated into the Government of Ghana’s healthcare network in 2011, enabling the Center to receive regular shipments of medical supplies from Ghana’s Ministry of Health and additional staff

 

Sokode Kindergarten

  • Responded to community request for a large multi-room kindergarten with amenities to supplement the current basic one-room building. Construction of the structures is underway.

 

Heifer International’s Livestock and Beekeeping Project #21-1037-01                        Jan. 2008-Jan. 2010

  • Raised nearly 6% of the funds needed for a $247,869 project that provided 113 families in Sokode and Kpedze with bees and small edible animals called grasscutters and training on how to breed them

 

Sokode Schools and Abor Elementary School Libraries                                        Sept. 2007-Present

  • Engaged in book drives and school supply drives that added 500-Afro-centric books for children to the Abor Elementary School library and over 500 novels and textbooks to Sokode school libraries
  • Our partnerships enabled all items to be delivered free of charge (school supplies via the WT Ghana program and books via the US Navy)

 

Elon Footprints of Africa Festival                                                                             Nov. 27-Dec. 1, 2007

  • Hosted guests Dr. Roger Gocking (author of The History of Ghana), Different Drum (musical group), Healing Force (offering African dance lessons), HIV/AIDS activists Dr. Jane Stevens (Kenya) and Anita Isaacs (Namibia), our campus Gospel Choir and others to raise awareness of the culture, history, and medical issues facing Ghana and Africa

Solar Cooker Initiative                                                                                            Nov. 2009-Jan. 2010

  • We demonstrated the use of these alternative energy devices at Elon and in Kpoeta and Sokode

 

PARTNERSHIPS

  • Elon University’s Ghana Winter Term Abroad Program                                              Jan. 2008-Present
  • Dr. Francis Amedahe and the Kpoeta Development Association (Ghana)                     April 2008-Present
  • Local Elon and Burlington Businesses (more than a dozen)                              Jan. 2008-Present
  • St. Andrews Church, TN and United First Methodist, TN                                             Jan. 2008-Dec. 2009
  • First Presbyterian Church (Raleigh, NC)                                                                       2009-Present
  • U.S. Navy’s Project Handclasp                                                                         2009-Present
  • Duke University’s Medical Warehouse                                                             2011-Present
  • Elon Partners in International Development, Friends of Ghana Chapter                      2011-Present

 

FUNDRAISING

Grants

  • $10,000 from Johnson & Johnson for a drug store and medical supplies for the Health Services Center
  • $5,200 Fund for Excellence Grant in the Arts & Sciences, for ‘Footprints of Africa’
  • $4,000 Course Enhancement Grant from Project Pericles, NY Office
  • $3,000 from the Strickland Foundation

General fundraising

  • $56,000 for the construction of Health Community Services Center Complex in Kpoeta, Ghana.
  • $21,800 from Ghanaian partners, including: the Government of Ghana for nurses’ salaries, and community fundraisers in Kpoeta and Sokode
  • $14,500 raised for Heifer International’s Livestock and Beekeeping Project #21-1037-01
  • $8,050 in medical supplies from Duke University
  • $5,500 for a kindergarten in Sokode, Ghana, mostly from First Presbyterian
  • $3,000 for campus speakers: John Prendergast, of the Enough Project, on the Darfur crisis and Keri Willever and Dr. Augustus Vogel, former Peace Corps volunteers in Ghana
  • $3,500 for books for Abor Elementary School in Ghana, school supplies for children in Sokode, Ghana, and a solar cooker initiative in Kpoeta and Sokode
  • 1,250 for miscellaneous items including thank you notes and printing Ghana discount cards

 

ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENTS

Awards

  • Half of all Elon University Truman Award Finalists, ever (3 members)
  • Lumen Prize winners (8 members), Phi Beta Kappa inductees (6 members), Honors Fellows (7 members), Elon College Fellows (4 members),  Leadership Fellows (3 members), Communications Fellows (2 members), Black Excellence Award winners (3 members), Monroe Award winners (3 members)

Publications

  • Published internationally/internationally in: Africa Media Review (3 members), Progress in Development Studies, Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought, and African Studies Quarterly (2 members each)
  • Published at the campus or local level for work on Ghana, Africa, or the Diaspora in Visions Magazine (4 members), The Pendulum (3 members), Colonnades (2 members), BA/BS (1 member), Elon Journal of Undergrad Research in Communications (1 member), Greensboro News and Record (1 member), The Mercury, a PA newspaper, (1 member), Voyages Magazine (1 member), Richmond Free Press Magazine (1 member), Black Oaks Newsletter (1 member)

Presentations

  • On campus research presentations on Ghana/Africa via SURF (8 members)
  • Local presentations on Ghana/Africa (9 members)
  • National conference presentations on Ghana/Africa (5 members)
  • International HIV/AIDS presentation (1 member)

Other

  • Award-winning Tobacco King documentary about race relations in Zambia (1 member)
  • Faculty mentor installed as honorary “Queen Mother” of development for the village of Kpoeta by its people in recognition of her and the Ghana Pericleans’ effective work
  • Study abroad in Ghana for winter term (14 members) or a semester (4 members) or study/travel elsewhere in Africa (12 members)
  • A book group online with rotating members that has kept mentor, alums, and on-campus members connected academically. 15 members have discussed: The Strength in What Remains, about a Burundian medical student who builds a clinic in his hometown, Africa: A Practical Guide for Global Health Workers, and/or Whistling Vivaldi: How Stereotypes Affect Us and What We Can Do

 


PAN-PERICLEAN FIRSTS & LEGACIES


  • Wrote the original Handbook for Periclean Faculty and Students
  • Received Elon administration approval to get Pericleans names on the graduation program
  • Created the Pan-Periclean Pledge and revised it in collaboration with other classes
  • Wrote a successful appeal to administration to have the country of study selected in advance
  • First class to admit students (11) from different graduating years for sustainability purposes
  • Created the first Periclean discount cards (Ghana Cards) for use at local businesses
  • First class to have formal individual and group 3-year plans, and first to include an academic essay and an interview as part of the selection process
  • First class to host all-Periclean SURF panels (two) that focused on our country of study


 

Posted in Director -Tom Arcaro, Partners-All Classes | Comments Off on Class resume.