Education as Key to Transformation

Tora Hope, Karen O'Brien and Linda SygnaOn Monday we hosted the Student Climate Summit, with 60 participants from the colleges of Dale, Firda, Mo & Øyrane and Sogndal. The focus was on how to meet climate change on an individual and group level. The conference was a cooperation between UWC, Fylkesmannen and Sogn og Fjordane County. Karen O’Brien, Tora Hope and Linda Sygna from cchange/University of Oslo were the organizers of the workshops. The results of the Student Climate Summit were then taken to the National Climate Conference in Sogndal on Tuesday 3rd May.
“Education is the key to the transformation that we need.” said Karen O’Brien after the conference. “The human dimension to this is central. The young participants who came to this event already knew a lot and are eager to seek new solutions. I think they will become the new leaders of the future, be it on a local or a global level.”

Student participants Meriem (Morocco) and Linnea (Sweden) wrote about the follow-up in Sogndal:

Following the Student Climate Summit, four students – Linnea, Meriem, Bernard and Roche – accompanied by member of staff Judit Dudas and Prof Karen O’Brien went to participate in the National Climate Conference in Sogndal. The trip started with a visit to the Glacier Museum where students had the opportunity to see a glacier and to visit the interactive presentation on climate change at the museum and where the students also gave a presentation about the College, its Environmental Pillar, and reported on the results of the student climate summit.

At the conference in Songdal several scientists and other experts, together with the county governor, gave presentations about adaptation to global warming. The conference had a global and local perspective about the consequences of climate change and it also gave an insight of the role of Sogn og Fjordane Municipality as well as the plan to find solutions.

We recorded the visit on the UWC RCN Environmental Daily facebook page.

Click here for the cchange report of the event.
See here for a collection of photos from the day.

2018-10-16T09:32:40+01:00May 4th, 2016|

Til Topps – Jarstadheia

Lydia, Elodie and Azlin

Lydia, Elodie and Azlin

In 2015, we decided to replace the usual timetable on May Day with a walk to the top of our local mountain, Jarstadheia. It was a very special occasion with inclusion at the heart of the adventure with all our first years making it the top including all the students on the Survivors of Conflict Programme.

This year May Day / Labour fell on a Sunday and we developed the day into ‘Til Topps: Jarstadheia’ – RCN ‘s own interpretation of the Til Topps run every June by the Norwegian Red Cross on Norway’s highest mountain, Galdhøpiggen. For our event, we invited youth from local asylum centres to join us in our ascent of Jarstadheia. All our first years, some intrepid second years out for for some fresh air on the eve of exam season, and lots of members of staff and their families joined in on the adventure – and enjoyed the spectacular views up the Dalsfjord, up Flekke valley and out towards the sea. Thor, a new member of our Outdoor Department, set a series of challenges for participants on the ascent of the mountain. A good time was had by all!

Here is an album of pictures.

2018-10-16T09:32:40+01:00May 2nd, 2016|

Sara Löwgren (’13 – ’15)

I am already starting to see how the UWC has changed me although I only graduated from UWC Red Cross Nordic a year ago. Two years in that unique little world made from multiculturalism and idealistic inspiration, placed among high mountains and peaceful fjords has, I think, brought about an enormous enhancement of my personality.

I went back to Sweden after graduation to gain some experience of ‘real life’. During the fall of 2015 Sweden became a very interesting place to be due to the European refugee crisis. What I learned at UWC helped me a lot in everything I was doing. I know that the people who come to Sweden are not just refugees, they are people with different stories, knowledge, languages, experiences and cultures – just like my beloved co-years at RCN. I cherish every opportunity to learn from, and help, these people. At UWC I also realized the importance of communicating and believing in one’s ideas. Therefore, I decided to set up a school for the refugees who have not yet received their residence permits (and hence, are not permitted to start the compulsory Swedish courses).  So I was teaching Swedish to about a hundred adults. Many Swedish people asked me how it was that I, a 20 year-old without a degree in education, could initiate and carry out such a project on my own. My answer was the UWC experience, which taught me the real meaning of equality between humans, the beauty of cultural and ethnic diversity and the skill to believe in myself and my ideas.

My plans for the future include more than humanitarian work, however. In the spring of 2016 I will be going to Ecuador, where I will teach English in a village school for three months. I look forward to the voluntary work, but also to the opportunity of throwing myself into a culture (and language!) that is brand new to me. In the fall of 2016 I will enrol at the College of the Atlantic in Maine USA, where I will study human ecology with a focus on environmental science. I have been interested in environmental science for a long time and my time at RCN made me even more keen to go into this direction. Environmental issues and injustice exist in the background of most global conflicts and it is becoming more urgent every day. I believe the international understanding and leadership skills I gained at RCN will help me to better understand and work with environmental issues worldwide.

2018-10-16T09:32:41+01:00April 28th, 2016|

New Board and Council Members

We are delighted to announce the election of the following individuals to:

UWC Red Cross Nordic’s Board:

Jan BjörkmanJan Björkman is a social democratic politician from Sweden. He was Member of the Swedish Parliament from 1988 to 2010, representing the County of Blekinge. For most of these years, Jan was a central member of the Education Committee. From 2006 to 2010, he was First Vice Speaker of the Swedish Parliament. He has been a member of the UWC RCN’s Council from 2012 to 2016 and now takes up the position of Swedish representative on the College’s Board. With his deep knowledge of education politcs in Sweden and the Nordic region, Jan has much to offer our College.

 

Laila Bokhari Laila Bokhari has been State Secretary for the Prime Minister of Norway since October 2013.  Her portfolio includes foreign and security policy, justice and emergency preparedness. Laila is a political scientist and a researcher on political violence, terrorism and radicalization; she was a member of the 22 July Commission of Norway.  She has held a diplomatic posting at the Royal Norwegian Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, Born in the UK of a Norwegian mother and Pakistani father, her childhood was spent between Norway, Pakistan and the UK. Laila and her brother also oversee the running of a school for girls in Pakistan – this school is something she cares deeply about and provides a strong link with one of her most valued causes, the global right to education.

 

UWC Red Cross Nordic’s Council:

Teresita Alvares BjellandTeresita Alvares Bjelland: having been the President of the Harvard Alumni Association, Teresita has a unique experience when it comes to networking and alumni fundraising, a new strategic area for UWC RCN. Teresita has taken interest in our alumni at occasions such as Partnership for Change and knows the College well through interviewing our students who have applied to Harvard. She is currently a member of the Harvard Global Advisory Council. She has an international background (Cuba born and a naturalized US citizen) and has been based in Norway for 25 years – she has lived and worked in Spain, Denmark and England in addition to Norway and the US. She will bring much relevant competence and experience for our Council.

 

Zhe Wang Gresvig Zhe Wang Gresvig is an alumna  of UWC RCN and was raised in a SOS Children’s Village in China. She currently lives in London, working for Save the Children. Her husband Haakon is the son of Tom Gresvig, one of the founders of UWC RCN. With her skills, affinity to the College and the Gresvig heritage, Zhe will be a definite asset to our Council.

 

 

Arne Osland / Larry Lamont
18th April 2016

2018-10-16T09:32:41+01:00April 18th, 2016|
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