scholarships / en Five students awarded prestigious Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarships for the 2023-2024 school year /five-wwu-students-awarded-prestigious-benjamin-a-gilman-international-scholarships-for-the-2023 <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Tue, 16 May 2023 16:38:35 +0000 thomps94 122287 at Donations spur creation of three funds that impact Black students /donations-spur-creation-of-three-funds-that-impact-black-wwu-students <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Mon, 13 Jun 2022 21:44:52 +0000 fraleyz 121605 at Ten Students Awarded Prestigious Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarships to Study Overseas   /ten-wwu-students-awarded-prestigious-benjamin-a-gilman-international-scholarships-to-study-overseas <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Wed, 12 Aug 2020 17:26:58 +0000 thomps94 118111 at Students Win Scholarships in Local Furniture-Design Competition /wwu-students-win-scholarships-in-local-furniture-design-competition <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Mon, 10 Jul 2017 16:41:19 +0000 thomps94 113520 at Cloud Security Alliance Scholarship Founded at /cloud-security-alliance-scholarship-founded-at-wwu <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Tue, 20 Jun 2017 19:52:33 +0000 thomps94 113479 at Audubon society gives conservation scholarships /inthemedia/audubon-society-gives-conservation-scholarships <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Thu, 15 Jun 2017 16:37:08 +0000 thomps94 113469 at Sulkin Gift Benefits Middle School Students in Summer Science Program at /sulkin-gift-benefits-middle-school-students-in-summer-science-program-at-wwu <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Tue, 18 Apr 2017 16:51:02 +0000 thomps94 112970 at Kitsap Bank Establishes Pair of Scholarships for Students at Center at Olympic College in Poulsbo /kitsap-bank-establishes-pair-of-scholarships-for-students-at-wwu-center-at-olympic-college-in <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Mon, 21 Nov 2016 20:31:42 +0000 thomps94 112143 at Why student scholarships are about much more than just the money /inthemedia/why-student-scholarships-are-about-much-more-than-just-the-money <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Tue, 05 Jul 2016 19:32:52 +0000 Western Today 111602 at #WesternGiveDay has arrived /westerngiveday-has-arrived <span>Opportunities increasing for study, work in Mongolia</span> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field-item"><p><iframe allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen data-delta="1" data-fid="25029" data-media-element="1" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/90t1XTKskQ4?feature=oembed" title="YouTube, Western in Mongolia"></iframe></p> <p>Western Washington University has developed several ties with Mongolian universities, organizations&nbsp;and not-for-profit organizations, and those ties are leading to increased opportunities for student study and faculty collaboration in Mongolia.</p> <p>This past summer, a group of “global ambassadors” traveled for two weeks to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to learn more about opportunities for collaboration between and Mongolian institutions. The ambassadors included Karen Stout, director of the Karen W Morse Institute for Leadership; Lauren McClanahan, associate professor of Secondary Education; Danica Kilander, associate director of the IDEA Institute; and students Caleb Albright, Olivia Hill&nbsp;and Michael Secrist. Through their meetings and travels, the group learned there are many opportunities for educational and research opportunities related to politics and government, sustainability, agriculture and the environment, business and entrepreneurship, education, the libraries, history, culture, language, art and music&nbsp;and leadership.</p> <p>While in Mongolia, for example, Stout learned about the significant leadership roles women have historically held and continue to hold in Mongolian society. Mongolia is the only country in which women earn more income than men, in which they are the majority of all college and graduate students, and in which they occupy more than 80 percent of office and administrative jobs in the capital city. This summer, Stout will go back to Mongolia with instructor Holly Diaz and a group of approximately 10 students for a three-week study-abroad trip. They will explore the roles and identities of women leaders in education, politics and government, environmental social change, business and entrepreneurship&nbsp;and the arts, to name a few topics.</p> <p>The study abroad program led by Stout and Diaz will be a 10-credit program in which eight to 10 students will enroll in LDST 337: Issues in Global Leadership and COMM 416: Women and Social Change. They will interview women leaders, visit organizations aimed at supporting leadership development&nbsp;and travel south to the Gobi desert to celebrate the cultural festival of Nadaam. The deadline for this program has been extended to April 29.</p> <p>Faculty members with research interests that might overlap with current or historical events in Mongolia or who would be willing to teach classes or workshops in Mongolia to help Mongolian instructors develop new pedagogies and gain access to cutting edge research should consider building on the ties Western already has there. <a href="mailto:karen.stout@wwu.edu">Karen Stout</a> and other members of last year’s global ambassador team would be happy to provide them&nbsp;with more information.</p></div> <span><span>Western Today</span></span> <span><time datetime="2016-04-26T10:09:52-07:00" title="Tuesday, April 26, 2016">Tue, 04/26/2016 - 10:09am</time> </span> Wed, 01 Jun 2016 20:28:54 +0000 Western Today 111461 at