[ECOLOG-L] Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

2013-02-15 Thread Suzanne Kolb
Dear ECOLOG Community,

Please invite your students to participate in Antioch Education Abroad's
Brazilian Ecosystems Program. It is an outstanding opportunity for direct
field experience with the ecology and biodiversity of Brazil's preserved
environments, and with real world conservation problem solving where those
preserved areas are under threat.

The program is a 16-credit fall semester for undergraduate students that
takes place from 30 August to 29 November.

The program travels to the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado Savanna, Amazon
Rainforest, and Pantanal Wetland, across four different states: Paraná,
Goiás, Amazonas, and Mato Grosso.

Students return to campus inspired and energized about continuing their
education towards more realistically defined career goals.

Please encourage your students to learn more about this program by
directing them to aea.antioch.edu/brazil

Thank you for your time,

Suzanne Kolb, Ph.D. Ecology
Associate Professor of Environmental Science
Director, Brazilian Ecosystems Program

sk...@antioch.edu

Antioch Education Abroad
Antioch University
900 Dayton Street
Yellow Springs, OH 45387


Re: [ECOLOG-L] Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

2012-02-29 Thread Jason Hernandez
Well, after reading Jones' reply, I am not quite sure what she means by some of 
her points. 

 <>

First, who, exactly, are "the ecological community," as distinct from 
"corporate conservation organizations" and "defenders of complex and flagship 
taxa"?  When a student focuses on ecology, where does that student end up after 
graduation?  Academia?  Government?  Environmental consultancy?  If these are 
not the most effective career paths for "mitigation of anthropogenic 
stressors," then what would be a better approach?  I suspect Jones was speaking 
slightly tongue-in-cheek when she suggested Special Forces Survival Training, 
as she is certainly aware that forest security assistants are but one component 
of an overall conservation strategy.

As one who, in my younger days, participated in just this sort of "experiential 
learning" -- and made financial sacrifices to be able to afford it -- I cannot 
be as dismissive as Jones appeared to be.  For a student who is seriously 
concerned about biodiversity preservation, actually seeing the situation "on 
the ground" is an essential adjunct to classroom instruction.  In the 
classroom, we learn in the abstract; but this can create an unrealistic or 
idealized view of what is really possible.  Until I actually went to Costa 
Rica, and saw that literally the only tropical rainforests left were in the 
Reserves and National Parks, tropical deforestation was largely a distant 
problem I read about in textbooks and magazines.  I would say that this sort of 
program can be valuable, IF the content is well-planned to address the concerns 
Jones brought up.  Her call for an "independent and quantitative evaluation" is 
well taken, as it would serve the same
 purpose as, say, the accreditation process for universities.

Jason Hernandez




Date:    Tue, 28 Feb 2012 13:35:30 -0500
From:    "Clara B. Jones" 
Subject: Re: Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

Respectfully, this sort of program is simply an example of "experiential
learning" for kids who can afford it and for their faculty-caretakers...the
ecological community is losing the competition for
biodiversity-preservation and, for numerous reasons, have little leverage
against the corporate conservation organizations; economic, political, and
social interests of habitat countries; repressive influence of defenders of
"complex" & flagship taxa; the personality-driven and fashion-driven nature
of conservation enterprises, etc., etc. Programs such as this one have
proliferated remarkably over the past 15-20 y...*Cui bono*?...I call for an
independent and quantitative evaluation of these "education abroad" and
related programs, in particular, to determine their payoffs for the
environment, for the mitigation of anthropogenic stressors, for science,
for indigenous groups, for creative problem-solving, and the like. There is
much more of concern...and very little time to act...Suggestion to Kolb:
put these kids through Special Forces Survival Training, teach them to keep
their mouths shut and their eyes open, and put them to work as forest
security assistants under the direction of Brazilian nationals concerned
with biodiversity-protection...

On Tue, Feb 28, 2012 at 10:48 AM, Suzanne Kolb  wrote:

> Antioch Education Abroad's Brazilian Ecosystems Program is a 16-credit fa=
ll
> semester for undergraduate students. Now accepting applications!
>
> Please encourage your students to participate in this vital field
> experience. It is an outstanding opportunity for direct field experience
> with the ecology of Brazil's biodiversity, and with real world conservati=
on
> problem solving.
>
> The program travels to the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado Savanna, Amazon
> Rainforest, and Pantanal Wetland, across four different states: Paran=E1,
> Goi=E1s, Amazonas, and Mato Grosso.
>
> Students return to campus inspired and energized about continuing their
> education towards more realistically defined career goals.
>
> Program dates: 30 August - 29 November.
>
> Please invite your students to learn more about this program by directing
> them to aea.antioch.edu/brazil
>
> Suzanne Kolb, Ph.D. Ecology
> Associate Professor of Environmental Science
> Director, Brazilian Ecosystems Program
> sk...@antioch.edu
>



--=20
clara b. jones
Blog: http://vertebratesocialbehavior.blogspot.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/cbjones1943



Re: [ECOLOG-L] Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

2012-02-28 Thread Clara B. Jones
Respectfully, this sort of program is simply an example of "experiential
learning" for kids who can afford it and for their faculty-caretakers...the
ecological community is losing the competition for
biodiversity-preservation and, for numerous reasons, have little leverage
against the corporate conservation organizations; economic, political, and
social interests of habitat countries; repressive influence of defenders of
"complex" & flagship taxa; the personality-driven and fashion-driven nature
of conservation enterprises, etc., etc. Programs such as this one have
proliferated remarkably over the past 15-20 y...*Cui bono*?...I call for an
independent and quantitative evaluation of these "education abroad" and
related programs, in particular, to determine their payoffs for the
environment, for the mitigation of anthropogenic stressors, for science,
for indigenous groups, for creative problem-solving, and the like. There is
much more of concern...and very little time to act...Suggestion to Kolb:
put these kids through Special Forces Survival Training, teach them to keep
their mouths shut and their eyes open, and put them to work as forest
security assistants under the direction of Brazilian nationals concerned
with biodiversity-protection...

On Tue, Feb 28, 2012 at 10:48 AM, Suzanne Kolb  wrote:

> Antioch Education Abroad's Brazilian Ecosystems Program is a 16-credit fall
> semester for undergraduate students. Now accepting applications!
>
> Please encourage your students to participate in this vital field
> experience. It is an outstanding opportunity for direct field experience
> with the ecology of Brazil's biodiversity, and with real world conservation
> problem solving.
>
> The program travels to the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado Savanna, Amazon
> Rainforest, and Pantanal Wetland, across four different states: Paraná,
> Goiás, Amazonas, and Mato Grosso.
>
> Students return to campus inspired and energized about continuing their
> education towards more realistically defined career goals.
>
> Program dates: 30 August - 29 November.
>
> Please invite your students to learn more about this program by directing
> them to aea.antioch.edu/brazil
>
> Suzanne Kolb, Ph.D. Ecology
> Associate Professor of Environmental Science
> Director, Brazilian Ecosystems Program
> sk...@antioch.edu
>



-- 
clara b. jones
Blog: http://vertebratesocialbehavior.blogspot.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/cbjones1943


[ECOLOG-L] Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

2012-02-28 Thread Suzanne Kolb
Antioch Education Abroad's Brazilian Ecosystems Program is a 16-credit fall
semester for undergraduate students. Now accepting applications!

Please encourage your students to participate in this vital field
experience. It is an outstanding opportunity for direct field experience
with the ecology of Brazil's biodiversity, and with real world conservation
problem solving.

The program travels to the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado Savanna, Amazon
Rainforest, and Pantanal Wetland, across four different states: Paraná,
Goiás, Amazonas, and Mato Grosso.

Students return to campus inspired and energized about continuing their
education towards more realistically defined career goals.

Program dates: 30 August - 29 November.

Please invite your students to learn more about this program by directing
them to aea.antioch.edu/brazil

Suzanne Kolb, Ph.D. Ecology
Associate Professor of Environmental Science
Director, Brazilian Ecosystems Program
sk...@antioch.edu


[ECOLOG-L] Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

2011-04-04 Thread Suzanne Kolb
Please invite your students to participate in Antioch Education Abroad's
Brazilian Ecosystems Program, a 16-credit fall semester undergraduate
program with SPACE STILL AVAILABLE.

This is an outstanding opportunity for direct field experience with
biodiversity concepts and real world conservation problem solving in Brazil.


Students return to campus inspired and energized about continuing their
education towards more realistically defined career goals.

The program travels to the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado Savanna, Amazon
Rainforest and Pantanal Wetland, across 4 different states: Paraná, Goiás,
Amazonas, and Mato Grosso.

Program dates: 31 August - 5 December

Still accepting applications! Please encourage your students to learn more
about this ultimate field experience in biodiversity conservation by
directing them to aea.antioch.edu/brazil

--
Suzanne Kolb, Ph.D. Ecology
Associate Professor of Environmental Science
Director, Brazilian Ecosystems Program
sk...@antioch.edu

Antioch Education Abroad
Antioch University


[ECOLOG-L] Brazilian Ecosystems Call for Students

2010-03-12 Thread Suzanne Kolb
Please invite your students to participate in Antioch Education Abroad's
Brazilian Ecosystems Program, a 16-credit fall semester undergraduate
program NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS.

This is an outstanding opportunity for direct field experience with
biodiversity concepts and real world conservation problem solving in Brazil.

Students return to campus inspired and energized about continuing their
education towards more realistically defined career goals.

The program travels to the Atlantic Forest, Cerrado Savanna, Amazon
Rainforest and Pantanal Wetland, across 6 different states: Paraná, Bahia,
Goiás, Pará, Amazonas, and Mato Grosso.

Program dates: 31 August - 5 December

Now accepting applications! Please encourage your students to learn more
about this ultimate field experience in biodiversity conservation by
directing them to aea.antioch.edu/brazil
 
-- 
Suzanne Kolb, Ph.D. Ecology
Associate Professor of Environmental Science
Director, Brazilian Ecosystems Program
sk...@antioch.edu

Antioch Education Abroad
Antioch University