By Shenandoah Sowash
STEVENS POINT -- As America continues to struggle with overseas
outsourcing and increasing global competition, professors at the
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point are working to arm graduates with
the skills needed to become global citizens.
Robert McGough, a senior education specialist, researcher and program
manager with the World Bank, encourages professors to take seriously
the need to give students a global education.
"Some see globalization as a destructive influence, as a bad thing ...
at this time in history, globalization is here to stay, and we must
learn to live with it," McGough told instructors Thursday during the
12th annual UWSP Teaching Conference, "Teaching with a Global
Perspective: Preparing Students to be Global Citizens."
Globalization affects everyone, even the World Bank, which now
outsources a majority of its accounting work to New Delhi, McGough
said.
"Countries such as India and China are destined to be superpowers, or
at least major players," McGough said.
Drawing on the need for sustainability, economic development and
self-sufficiency, McGough offered a strong case for educating college
students in the ways of the world.
"Over time, you'll find more college graduates going overseas for work.
... These other countries are going to be ... more »
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Wednesday, January 23
by
Publisher
on Wed 23 Jan 2008 08:28 AM AKST
by
Publisher
on Wed 23 Jan 2008 08:27 AM AKST
One of the most strategic locations in the Roman world was the isthmus
of Corinth. This narrow neck of land between the Corinthian Gulf and
the Saronic Gulf guaranteed its continued commercial prosperity. The
transit across this isthmus avoided the long, risky voyage around the
rocky, storm-tossed capes at the south of the Peloponnesus. It was
literally the crossroad of the world where the north-south trade routes
intersected the east-west traffic. It thus became one of the most
dominant cultural centers of its day: materially prosperous,
intellectually alert, and morally corrupt. Even in the pagan world the
city was known for its moral corruption. "Corinth" came to imply
licentiousness; korinthiazesthai, "Corinthianize," meant to live in
debauchery. It was Hollywood, Las Vegas, and New York all rolled into
one.
It is no wonder then that the letters to the church at Corinth embody so many of the concerns that plague us today. It is also impressive to discover how many basic Christian issues are addressed in these two (remaining) letters Paul wrote to the church at Corinth: the "foolishness" of God contrasted with the "wisdom" of man, the distinction between salvation and rewards, problems of church discipline, resorting to lawsuits, marriage ... more »
by
Publisher
on Wed 23 Jan 2008 08:25 AM AKST
Earlier this month, for the first time in history, the price of oil hit
$100 a barrel. Oil prices have increased 5-fold in the last six years,
starting from a low of less than $20 a barrel in early 2002. In 2007
alone, crude oil prices jumped nearly 60 percent. Analysts blame a weak
dollar and rising demand for the spike in prices. Rising oil prices
have brought into sharp focus the economic challenges facing our
nation. In recent years the value of the US dollar has dropped,
consumer debt has reached an all-time high, and we've entered into a
nationwide housing crisis in which about one out of every 100 mortgages
could end in foreclosure.
While some experts speculate that we may be headed for a recession, others say its already here. Top economists from two major Wall Street firms - Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs - recently predicted that the US economy would go into a recession this year. They cited a rise in unemployment and lower than expected retail sales as indicators. On Tuesday recession fears prompted the Federal Reserve to take emergency measures - reducing the federal funds rate from 4.25 percent down to 3.5 percent. ... more »
by
Publisher
on Wed 23 Jan 2008 08:15 AM AKST
Disappearing dirt rivals global warming as an environmental threat
By TOM PAULSON The planet is getting skinned. While many worry about the potential consequences of atmospheric warming, a few experts are trying to call attention to another global crisis quietly taking place under our feet. - Sustainable farming not an easy sell Call it the thin brown line. Dirt. On average, the planet is covered with little more than 3 feet of topsoil -- the shallow skin of nutrient-rich matter that sustains most of our food and appears to play a critical role in supporting life on Earth. "We're losing more and more of it every day," said David Montgomery, a geologist at the University of Washington. "The estimate is that we are now losing about 1 percent of our topsoil every year to erosion, most of this caused by agriculture." "It's just crazy," fumed John Aeschliman, a fifth-generation farmer who grows wheat and other grains on the Palouse near the tiny town of Almota, just west of Pullman. "We're tearing up the soil and watching tons of it wash away every year," Aeschliman said. He's one of a growing number of farmers trying to persuade others to adopt "no-till" ... more » |
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