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Below are events and opportunities for educators to learn about the world and earn clock hours at the same time.
Thursday December 3, 2009
7:00-8:30 PM
Thomson Hall 317, UW Campus, Seattle
Overtaken By Events: A Pakistan Road Trip is Jackson School MA candidate Ethan Casey's account of a six-week overland journey from Mumbai, India to Karachi, Pakistan between February and April 2009. It will be published in March 2010, with 16 pages of photographs by Seattle-based photographer Pete Sabo.
Overtaken By Events is a sequel to Alive and Well in Pakistan: A Human Journey in a Dangerous Time (2004), which has been praised as “Magnificent … a travel book that travels through the mind” by Ahmed Rashid, author of Taliban and Descent Into Chaos, as “Intelligent and compelling” by Pakistani novelist Mohsin Hamid, author of The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Moth Smoke, as “A search for common humanity” by The Daily Telegraph, and as “Wonderful … a model of travel writing” by American novelist Edwidge Danticat.
Both books document the human dimension of events in and involving Pakistan, report on recent events as they affect ordinary Pakistanis, and humanize Pakistan and Pakistanis for a global and particularly American readership. Casey visited Pakistan first in 1995 and most recently in early 2009, and he lived for five months in 2003-04 in Lahore, where he taught journalism at Beaconhouse National University. Venues he'll be speaking at during the 2009-10 academic year including Brown University, Texas Christian University, and the Air Force Academy.
Tuesday December 8, 2009
5:00-8:00 PM
Thomson Hall, UW Campus
Three Cups of Tea: Islam and Schooling in Asia
Islam, Asia, Modernity Professional Development for Educators Workshop
Muslim societies in Asia are fast changing, and often at the crossroads of global social, economic and geopolitical conflicts. Long standing educational systems and traditions are evolving in multiple ways as these societies became more integrated into the global economy. Local institutions, national bureaucracies, international non-governmental organizations, and other actors are influencing how schools educate both male and female students.
This workshop will focus on Pakistan, Indonesia and Xinjiang, China, and how different influences are coming to bear on educational systems in these areas.
Join us for this engaging 3 hour workshop intended for educators of grades 6-12.
Each attendee will receive at least 20 copies of Greg Mortenson's award winning book
Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace...One School at a Time
Space is limited, so register early.
Date: Tuesday, December 8
Time: 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Location: Thomson Hall, UW Campus, Seattle
Cost: $25.00
Dinner will be provided.
Clock hours available at no extra charge
To register: visit
https://catalysttools.washington.edu/webq/survey/snodgras/85759
where you will enter information about yourself. Then mail your payment of $25.00 to:
South Asia Center, University of Washington, Box 353650, Seattle, WA 98195. Questions or inquiries, please call 206-543-4800 or contact snodgras@u.washington.edu.
| JSIS Outreach Centers | |
| University of Washington | |
| Box 353650 | |
| Seattle, WA 98195 | |
| ► | jsisoc@u.washington.edu |