Kudos to U of AZ Professor Todd Fletcher has done great work in promoting U.S.-Mexico binationalism.
-Angela
Education students and their faculty mentors hope small change can make a big difference for a community in Mexico.
By Rebecca Ruiz-McGill, University Communications
April 13, 2009
Over the last 15 years University of Arizona students have been welcomed into the homes of residents of Guanajuato, Mexico, as part of the College of Education's Summer in Mexico, or Verano en México, study abroad program.
Todd Fletcher, UA associate professor of special education, rehabilitation and school psychology, used an array of networks to develop Verano en México. Since its inception, the program has benefitted hundreds of students preparing for careers in regular, bilingual and special education, English as a second language, social work, speech and language therapy and school psychology.
Students live with community members for the just-over five-week program and are taught intensive Spanish language classes. They also observe in Mexican public schools where they teach and work with Mexican educators, children, youth and their families for 20 hours each week. They also take regular university classes while there.
With the theme of "change," Fletcher, his faculty colleagues and students from his Cultural and Linguistic Diversity in Exceptional Learners class have begun an effort to give back to Guanajuato. They have started raising funds for a community development center that will help develop literacy, technology training and health education, build a library and provide mobile teaching classrooms to serve as a resource to remote rural communities.
"In class Dr. Fletcher always speaks how we as students and professionals can make a difference and how we should be the change we want to see. We began calling ourselves the fellowship of change and from there we have developed a relationship with an organization called Change for Change that is founded on the notion that a little can make a lot of difference," said Susan Baker, a graduate student in special education and president of the newly formed Arizona Students of The University of Arizona Change for Change Club.
Change for Change is a national organization that supports philanthropic efforts by collecting donations of small change. The UA club contributes its share to make big changes in Guanajuato.
"The UA's Change for Change Club is the first chapter in the West," Baker said.
Fletcher also has secured a 12-year lease for Resplandor International Cultural and Education Center, a non-profit facility being built in Guanajuato. Students began their fund-raising effort to support Resplandor and its programs with an April 13 bake sale on campus and a Change for Change campaign in UA residence halls. Another bake sale will be held in the UA College of Education on April 20.
In addition, Fletcher is exploring grants that will help sustain the project over time. He credits his work and the experiences of students in Verano en México for the Resplandor effort. "Students who have been to Guanajuato through the Verano en México program are transformed by the experience. They come back as educators who are more empathetic and who have greater cultural context to draw from for students and families who are here in the United States outside of their known cultural context," Fletcher said.
A scholarship fundraiser to honor former students and to help new students enroll in the program will be held on Saturday, April 25, at La Hacienda de Loma Linda in Oro Valley. Suggested donations are $30. Former and current students, faculty and interested UA and Tucson community members are invited to attend. The event will feature a night of music and entertainment provided by local artists.
All donations are tax deductible and all proceeds will go towards UA student study abroad, research and service scholarships associated with the Resplandor International Cultural and Education Center in Guanajuato.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Mexican Community Gives; UA College of Education Returns the Favor
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Dr. Angela Valenzuela
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Friendship between Nations and Races is better than Racism, Hate and confrontation.
Republicans supporting the most Racist and Macarthist Senator Jeff Sessions
A Super Racist for the Senate Judiciary Committee, a Racist from Selma, Alabama. Dedicated to persecute Blacks and Commies.
Steve Benen from the Washington Monthly talks with Rachel Maddow.
Republicans want him to replace Senator Arlen Specter in that Committee - As the Ranking Republican in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Jeff Sessions says that some Whites are a shame to their Race for not persecuting Blacks. The Replacement for the Former Moderate Republican Arlen Specter.
Specter defected to the Democratic Party
Jeff Sessions addresses professional Blacks as "Boy", very offensive.
Lots of Racial slurs of this Racist Guy - Accusses everybody of being a "Communist"
Is there any doubt that the Republican Party is a "White Party" and the Enemy of all Minorities ?
The Republican Party is becoming more Right Wing and more Racist.
Read what Wikipedia Encyclopedia says of Senator Jeff Sesssions and his extremy right wing Activities :
Sessions had unsuccessfully prosecuted three civil rights workers (including Albert Turner, a former aide to Martin Luther King, Jr), on a case of election fraud for the 1984 election. Sessions spent hours interrogating black voters in predominantly black counties, finding 14 allegedly tampered ballots out of approximately 1.7 million ballots cast. The three civil rights workers were acquitted after four hours of jury deliberation.
On September 9, 2005, after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, Sessions called his former law professor, Harold Apolinsky, co-author of Sessions' legislation repealing the federal estate tax, which had lost momentum in Congress, and left a voicemail: "[Arizona Sen.] Jon Kyl and I were talking about the estate tax. If we knew anybody that owned a business that lost life in the storm, that would be something we could push back with."
Sessions was one of only nine opponents of Senator John McCain's anti-torture amendment. Sessions supports former Vice President Dick Cheney's proposal to exempt the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from any ban on the use of torture.
Sessions has been opposed to parts of the Voting Rights Act, which he described as a "piece of intrusive legislation." In 2006 he was in favor of letting it expire, and also said that Congress should consider if it was needed in some northern cities and states.[14] He later voted in favor of extending it.
Sessions has advocated the extension of FISA legislation to legalize the Bush Administration's wiretapping techniques"
Rachel Maddow Takes On Senator Jeff Sessions & His 'Racial Issues'
See Videos on Jeff Sessions Super Racist :
Milenials.com
Vicente Duque
Primary Election in California to replace Hilda Solis in the House of Representatives.
Hilda Solis served in the United States House of Representatives from 2001 to 2009, representing the 31st and 32nd congressional districts of California that include East Los Angeles and the San Gabriel Valley. Now that she is the Secretary of Labor of Obama, there is a special election to fill the void in the House of Representatives.
May 19th - Election Day !
Emanuel Pleitez - A new Millennial Latino for the U. S. Congress - Special Election replacing Hilda Solis of California, the New Secretary of Labor
Huffington Post
Eric Greenberg
Eric Greenberg sponsored a major research survey into the values and attitudes of the Millennial generation - www.gen-we.com. He and Karl Weber are authors of the book Generation We: How Millennial Youth Are Taking Over America and Changing Our World Forever.
March 17, 2009
The Pleitez Promise--A Millennial Breeze Begins To Blow in Washington
Some excerpts :
One of the first young Americans to bring the Millennial sensibility to Washington may come from California's 32nd Congressional District, where there will be a special election for the seat recently vacated by Labor Secretary-designate Hilda Solis. Democratic candidate Emanuel Pleitez is a 26-year-old who hopes to become the second member of his generation to serve in Congress. In many ways, Pleitez (pronounced PLAY-tez) represents a vivid template of the kind of leadership this new generation is poised in bring from America's neighborhoods to Washington.
Like many in his district, Pleitez is a Latino who has climbed the ladder of the American dream from its lowest rungs. His single mom, a cafeteria worker, immigrated from Mexico and struggled to raise her family on the east side of L.A. Before he reached the age of ten, Emanuel and his family had moved ten times, often finding shelter in back rooms or garages. And like millions before him, Pleitez seized the opportunities offered by education to improve his lot. He graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in El Sereno and went on to graduate from Stanford University.
Pleitez served on the staff of Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and briefly worked on the Senate Democratic Steering and Coordination Committee. Then he moved to the private sector, working as a financial analyst at Goldman Sachs. This experience helped qualify him to serve on the Treasury Department Transition Team for the new Obama administration.
It's a varied and interesting background, once that equips Pleitez to be an energetic and informed advocate of progressive policies, especially regarding the economy. But what interests us most about Pleitez is his role as a harbinger of a coming generational shift, one of the first young Americans to bring the Millennial sensibility to Washington.
Many Videos of Emanuel Pleitez in Electoral Campaign :
Milenials.com
Vicente Duque
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