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The Global Education Program actively works with Maumee Valley faculty and administrators to guide internal programs and operations of the school. Adding international studies to both curricular and co-curricular aspects of Maumee Valley benefits students, faculty, parents, friends, and alumni in both direct and indirect ways. In addition to community programs, several initiatives are designed to enhance the experience of Maumee Valley's various constituents. Please click on the links below for descriptions:

Global Issues Club

The Global Issues Club was launched in 2006 and reorganized in 2007 in partnership with NetAid, a nonprofit organization that "educates, inspires and empowers new generations of young people to fight global poverty." Run by Upper School students and sponsored by GEP Co-Director, Josh Lavetter-Keidan, the Club meets regularly to explore international issues. The club also raises money for NetAid causes. Recent and future Club activities include:

a bakesale in October, 2007 raised $160 for UNICEF to aid their mission to fight child hunger and poverty
presentations by MVCDS international students about their home countries and cultures
field trips to religious sites in the Toledo area
meetings to discuss articles and global current events
viewings of documentaries and movies regarding international issues 
cooking demonstrations of international cuisine
simulations and interactive projects

Global Leadership Training

Why Leadership Training?
The Global Education Program recognizes that to educate global leaders we must not only inform them about the world, we must also provide them with avenues to take action, and offer them the skills to pursue that action. To this end the GEP staff is working with faculty and administrators in all academic divisions to strengthen Maumee Valley's leadership training and service learning programs. While this initiative does not fall directly under under the Global Education Program, it is an important piece of the puzzle.

Winterim                                                                                                                                                                  

 

                                                                                                                                                                                 A distinctive feature of the Upper School is our Winterim program. Winterim enhances students' learning with an intensive, focused experience. Students select from offerings that include classes at Maumee Valley, educational trips, study at other schools through The Network of Complimentary Schools, and independent study projects both within and outside of the Toledo area. Recent offerings ranged from teaching English in Ethiopia to examining crime scenes in a forensic science course to creating 'zines and comic books. At the end of their fourth year, Maumee Valley graduates have enjoyed a broad range of experiences and are well prepared to pursue their education at the next level. Click here for fall 2007 offerings.

Going Green - A Story About A Winterim 2006 Experience

In a November Toledo Blade story, Upper School Head Bruce Carr said of Winterim: “This is an opportunity for all of our students to benefit from an in-depth, hands-on learning experience.” This year’s offerings saw students construct medieval catapults in The Science of War class, travel 6,269 miles on an Amtrak train, and intern with Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (D-OH), to name just a few. 

Perhaps no one captured the imaginative spirit of Winterim, however, better than senior Stephen Parry. Parry combined two interests, cars and the environment, and turned a 1982 diesel-powered Rabbit into an environmentally friendly automobile that runs on used peanut oil from Kotobuki, a Japanese restaurant on Monroe Street in Sylvania.

“Using a waste product as a source of alternate energy sounded like an interesting project,” Parry said. “I had read about greasecar conversion kits in Car and Driver and Popular Mechanics, and that really sparked the idea.”

Parry read three books about alternative energy sources and one text on repairing diesel engines. He then purchased the Rabbit on eBay, drove it from Farmington Hills, Mich., to his home in Monclova, built an elaborate filtration system to clean the used oil, and installed a greasecar conversion kit inside the vehicle.

While he undoubtedly had no idea how dirty his task would be, or how many trips he’d have to make to The Andersons for hoses, tanks and supplies, by the end of Winterim he turned the key, the engine revved, and his old diesel was running on used peanut oil.  

Historically, the Upper School’s Winterim program sends three trips abroad annually.  Each experience either pursues an in-depth cultural and historical study of a country or a community-service project (in collaboration with a non-governmental organization). In the past five years students have visited and worked in a variety of countries:

  • Ethiopia - students served as teachers at schools run by Project Mercy and Share Our Strength
  • Mexico - students helped provide vocational training for women with El Puente de Esperanza (Bridge of Hope)
  • Thailand - students lived with Thai families while teaching Thai students in collaboration with the US Peace Corps
  • Bahamas - students studied marine biology
  • Cultural education trips have also gone to Mexico, France, Russia, Turkey, Canada, and Spain
  • Students annually do independent studies abroad including Honduras and China 

Maumee Valley is committed to providing opportunities to travel abroad to our Upper School students and faculty. To this end we are working on developing sustainable partnerships with organizations in Latin America.

Summer Global Enrichment Placement

Global Education Program staff serves as a resource for students in the search and application process to a variety of summer programs that enrich students in the area of global studies. Below is a continuously updated list of opportunities in two categories: Domestic and Abroad.

Description Website Grade(s) Cost 
Domestic  
Global Issues Seminar @ Univ. of Notre Dame www.nd.edu/~gis/ 11th-12th free
Foreign Lang. Academy @ Kent State or BGSU N/A call 330-672-2150 11th-12th free 
Global Scholar Seminar @ Washington & Lee http://www.globalscholar.org/ 9th-12th $1600
Global Youth Village int'l summer camp in Virginia http://www.globalyouthvillage.org/ 7th-12th  $1900
Global Young Leaders Conference in NY or DC www.cylc.org/gylc/ 10th-12th $2600
Interlochen (MI) Junior Global Arts Exploration www.interlochen.org/camp/ 3rd-6th $2480
Ethics & Global Citizenship Program @ Tufts (MA) http://ase.tufts.edu/summer/ 11th-12th $1575
Concordia Language Villages in MN http://clvweb.cord.edu/ 2nd-12th $4000
Abroad      
Global Routes cross-cultural volunteer program http://www.globalroutes.org/ 9th-12th $3600+
Habitat for Humanity's Global Village Program www.habitat.org/gv/  11th-12th $1200+
Non-Summer      
Reischauer Scholars @ Stanford (Japanese studies) http://www.reischauerscholars.org/ 9th-12th free
For Teachers Deadline  
Dar al Islam 2-week Teachers' Institute in NM http://www.daralislam.org/ April 2 free

Koltay Lecture Series  

The Koltay Lecture Series was established in 1989 to honor the memory of Laszlo Koltay, teacher, coach, Middle School Head, and passionate supporter of international programs at Maumee Valley.

Laz brought the perspective of one familiar with Europe, Asia and North America to his classes, his coaching and his interactions with all members of the community. It is the goal of the Lecture Series to expose students and faculty to his fervor and international perspective.

Each year, one expert on an international topic is invited to speak to students and parents in grades 7-12 and spend the remainder of the day visiting classes and conversing with small groups of students.

In 2007, The Koltay Lecture Series, traditionally sponsored by Maumee Valley's Middle School division, teamed with the Global Education Program.  It continues to be directed by Koltay Lecture Series Chair Pamela Summons.
The endowed Laszlo Koltay Fund provides funding for this program. Contact Mary Sabin if you would like to make a donation.

Click here for a list of previous Koltay Lectures.

 
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