Student globetrotting
One of the opportunities open to undergraduates and recent graduates is that of travelling abroad. When I was 20 years old I spent the summer travelling with the European Seminar sponsored by Gordon College, Massachusetts, and in the process visited some ten countries (including tiny Liechtenstein) in eight weeks. It was an exhausting but unforgettable experience. In many respects this journey helped to crystallize the sense of calling which I've pursued since then.
Now, as a professor, I see my own students embarking on their own travels, and some of them are kind enough to drop me a postcard or bring back a small gift. The other day one of my students, who had been to Russia over the summer, gave me a pin bearing the Russian imperial doubleheaded eagle with the arms of St. Petersburg on the shield. Very nice indeed. And only yesterday I received a postcard sent from another student in Poznan, Poland, where he has spent some weeks visiting relatives. Students may not be aware how much such gestures are appreciated, but they certainly are.
Probably the most interesting gift of all was a couple of pieces of the Berlin Wall, shrinkwrapped in plastic, which was brought back from Germany by a recently graduated student just over a decade ago. I still have it in my campus office. Perhaps I should make a display case for these gifts.
17 September 2004
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2004
(700)
-
▼
September
(47)
- Play ball What? The Washington Expos? It just do...
- New Skillen book just out I am pleased to report ...
- Cyprus president on Annan Plan Cyprus President T...
- Dooyeweerd consultation - III Although the consul...
- Dooyeweerd consultation - II Most of our discussi...
- Galactic confection This latest news would appear...
- Dooyeweerd consultation - I I have just returned ...
- Pop music icon a terrorist? Baby boomers will rem...
- CBS recants Whatever one thinks of President Bush...
- Mainline churches, ideologies and renewal The Uni...
- A retirement Congratulations are due to the Rev. ...
- Battle of the search engines Will a9.com oust Goo...
- The Gothic Revival CottageAlthough my childhood am...
- Whom are we fighting? To those Americans (in part...
- Student globetrotting One of the opportunities op...
- Ending slavery What? Wasn't slavery outlawed more...
- The American electoral map, birthrates and culture...
- Electing a president: too much democracy? Here is...
- Baby steps in Cyprus Last year the Green Line bet...
- Oh, come now: this is news? Our hometown newspape...
- PJR on-line The 3rd quarter issue of The Public J...
- Lost HamiltonI wonder how many Hamiltonians are aw...
- Authority, office and uniformIn my recent readings...
- News from Orthodox world The Patriarch of Alexand...
- Québec's revised 'health' policy Beginning in 196...
- A centenary tributeToday marks the one-hundredth b...
- Latest Comment Although I've not seen an offici...
- WRF event Last evening I was privileged to be pre...
- Egoyan and the Genocide: another perspective At t...
- Electoral reform in Canada My own "Minority Gover...
- Introducing the family: Niilo and Anna JuntunenMy ...
- The 'betrayal of liberalism' thesis againSusan P. ...
- Restating the obvious From the Vatican's Zenit ne...
- Moldovan or Romanian? The Republic of Moldova is ...
- Westfield Heritage Village If you live anywhere n...
- ET phoning earth? So has the Search for Extraterr...
- Old One-Hundredth? This morning in church we sang...
- Russia's '9-11' The Russian people have suffered ...
- Bernard HerrmannMany years ago I was driving home ...
- Bush's Deeds, Kerry's Words In today's Capital Co...
- Elizabethan pronoun and verb forms Well into my y...
- Prayer requests Terrorists are by definition cowa...
- The Electoral College Meanwhile, south of the bor...
- The majority parties: changing the constitution? ...
- The Genevan PsalterThose who know me well are awar...
- September We have had a cooler than normal summer...
- Wake me when it's over Oh yes, I almost forgot: t...
-
▼
September
(47)
No comments:
Post a Comment