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Student-Led Activities
Levitt Scholar Presentations
Think Tank
Conferences and Field Trips
Insights
Contact Information
Administrator
315-859-4451 315-859-4477 (fax) |
Field Trips and ConferencesThe Levitt Center supports the concept that significant learning experiences can take place off campus. Therefore a number of innovative field trips have been sponsored, including a trip by government students to Kenya, a combined English/History trip to London, and a historical tour of significant sites from the Civil Rights Movement in the southeastern United States. More...Student regularly take part in national and regional conferences, often with Levitt Center support. Examples include: a Hamilton College team at the Model United Nations, a group who attended an Amnesty International conference, and a team sent to Model European Union. Students Participate in Model European Union Conference in GermanyMore ... Hamilton Students Participate in European Union Simulation 12 Hamilton Students Participate in Spring 2006 Model UN Conference in Philadelphia Twelve Hamilton College students traveled to Philadelphia the weekend of November 2-5, 2006 to participate in the University of Pennsylvania Model United Nations Conference (UPMUNC). These students are members of Model United Nations, an organization which enables students to attend various Model UN conferences throughout the year. The purpose of the organization is to improve public speaking and writing skills while learning about the official UN procedures. More ... Spring 2006 Students Travel to Prague for Model European Union EuroSim conference Summer 2004 Seminar and Field School in Kenya: What Difference Does Democracy Make? Professor Orvis and his Govt. 317/318 class sought to answer this question: after a decade of legal opposition and a year of a new government in power, what difference does democracy make? This seminar and field school offered 11 students the opportunity to investigate this subject. In the seminar they studied the background to the political opening, the evolution of politics since 1990, and some of its effects. Each student conducted a research project and prepared a paper and presentation on the effects of the political changes on some aspect of Kenyan life. The Field School, in which all 11 students and Professor Orvis traveled to Kenya from May 29 to June 13, 2004, allowed the participants to continue their research in the field. They divided their time between Nairobi, a rural area occupied by Maasai pastoralists, and another rural area occupied by Kikuyu farmers. Along the way, they met with political activists, university faculty and students, independent scholars, and ordinary folks to discuss the effects of political change on the city life, agriculture, pastoralism, tourism, environmental issues, gender issues, the economy, education, and corruption, among other issues. More ... |
News HighlightsJennifer Earl, Director of the Center for Information Technology and Society and an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara will present "Protest on the Information Highway: Trends in Online Activism," Tuesday, April 15 at 7:30 pm in the Science Auditorium (G027). February 28th, 2008. |
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