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So far Edmund Cluett has created 595 blog entries.

Graduation Ceremony 2016

2018-10-16T09:32:38+01:00May 22nd, 2016|

Graduation took place on Saturday 21st May at UWC Red Cross Nordic. It was a pleasure to welcome so many families, host families from our local community and other guests on Friday evening for dinner in the Høegh and then a cultural show – all coordinated by the first year students. The ceremony took place in a beautifully decorated auditorium at 14:00 on Saturday and consisted of speeches, a slideshow, a special video for the occasion (see here and below), musical performances and the formal graduation procession. The Rektor, Richard Lamont, opened the ceremony with a welcome address. Liv Ronglan, the RCN Board Rep for the Norwegian Red Cross, gave a powerful address about the College’s partnership with the Red Cross and the role our students can play in the future. Her address was followed by speeches from Gunhild Berge Stang (Mayor of Fjaler), from second year students (Anna Kwok from Hong Kong and Bassie Bondeva from Sierra Leone) and the farewell message was given by Tove Veierød (Chair of the RCN Board). Our guest of honour for the occasion was Marianne Andresen – a lionhearted champion of the College for over twenty years.

Many of the parents of our second year students were unable to attend the ceremony – and therefore we have posted lots of images on faceboook and a copy of the graduation ceremony programme so that our whole community can connect with the occasion. Congratulations to all our graduating students!

For Larry’s welcome address, click here.

For facebook albums from the day, click here and here; and from the Graduation dinner on Friday evening, click here.

Liusiadh Brown (Intern)

2016-05-30T09:15:23+01:00May 14th, 2016|

Liusaidh, a young, blue-haired teaching intern from Scotland, arrived at RCN in late July, 2015. She didn’t know much about the College and had no experience of teaching. She didn’t have much confidence, and the Summer Course students asked her strange questions that were sometimes difficult to answer.

Now Liusaidh is a real teacher. She finds interesting ways to explain things to students, understands how they feel in her lessons. Before coming here, she was rather quiet, but says she has become more sociable and open as a consequence of her time at RCN. She says, “The guidance that Angie (Toppan) and Pete (Wilson) has given me has been invaluable, both by delivering model lessons but also by giving me concrete feedback that I can reflect on and learn from.”

Liusaidh spends a lot of time working with Samira (Niger), Mean (Cambodia) and Sumaya (Western Sahara), who are students in the Foundation Year programme at RCN. Teaching beginners is a difficult task because it requires patience. She chooses material that is accessible to her students and helps them talk about their situation and topics they are interested in. They say they have learned a lot with Liusaidh, improving their English skills and becoming assertive and enthusiastic communicators in their new language.

Liusaidh has enjoyed her UWC experience immensely, which has made her stronger and more professional in the art of teaching. She has participated in humanitarian activities such as visiting Førde Mottak and cultural celebrations such as Holi. She has also made the most of opportunities to ski, hike, kayak, camp and look up at the stars and the Northern Lights. In her own words, “I really love living in Norway with fresh air, beautiful landscape and kind people.”

She is ready for new challenges in the teaching profession hoping to work for schools that see potential in the diversity of its student body.

(The above is a collaborative effort, written by her students.)

Sarina Tahitu (Intern)

2018-10-16T09:32:39+01:00May 12th, 2016|

We were happy to welcome Sarina Tahitu to the College as a teaching intern in April. She came to us as a student teacher from the World Teachers Training Programme at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. Before doing her educational master, she graduated in cultural anthropology and development sociology. With a particular interest in Development Studies and Theory of Knowledge, while she was with us she observed, and then led lessons at the College, as well as participating in a wide range of extra-academic activities. These are some of her reflections:

In Dutch there is a saying, which captures my overall experience here: ‘Kort, maar krachtig!’ It literally means “short, but powerful” or more freely translated “short, but sweet.” My month at RCN UWC has been a blast and I’ve learned a great deal through the conversations I’ve had, the connections I’ve gained and the classes I taught and observed. I have come to love the openness and freedom of the place and its people. I’ve always had an interest in finding out and understanding what makes others tick, and my anthropological heart revelled in working with students and colleagues with so many different cultural backgrounds. I was truly inspired and touched by many during my stay at the College, and I learned a lot about myself as well – as a teacher and as a person in general. I believe RCN is unique and has a huge power and potential for helping future generations learn and understand that diversity is a good thing, rather than something to be feared. Thank you to all who made my stay so very special, to those who invited me along, who made me laugh and who were generous with their time and stories. It was an honour!

Constitution Lecture 2016

2016-05-04T14:46:39+01:00May 4th, 2016|

It was a pleasure to welcome Steinar Bryn (senior adviser at the Nansen Center for Peace and Dialogue) to UWC RCN today. Steinar delivered the fourth UWC RCN Annual Constitution Lecture (based on the College’s Nordic Pillar) – following previous lectures by Kåre Willoch (former Prime Minister of Norway), Sven Mollekleiv (President of the Norwegian Red Cross) and Geir Lundestad (former Director of the Nobel Peace Institute and Secretary to the Nobel Committee).

Steinar has extensive experience working as a dialogue facilitator. He is highly recognized in communities like Vukovar, Prijedor, Srebrenica, Bratunac, Stolac, Kosovo Polje, Obilic, Mitrovica, Bujanovac and Jegunovce. He has also facilitated dialogue in the Middle East and between Somalian clans. He has facilitated hundreds of seminars, published numerous articles and has an extensive record of lecturing worldwide.

Steinar’s programme included: lunch with students from the Balkans and participants on the College’s Survivors of Conflict programme; a lecture to first years and staff on ‘Celebrating the National Day in a Multi-Ethnic Europe’; and a symposium on dialogue. Steinar’s lecture covered many issues – dialogue arenas, integration and assimilation; and stimulating insights into today’s Norway and the Nordic region. He finished the lecture by recognising that RCN is a special dialogue arena and inviting us to continue to develop the partnership with the Nansen School and Centre for Peace and Dialogue.

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