
When I lived in Mumbai, India, I’d wake up elated one early morning each March. The key was to wake up before my cousins smeared pink or red or green powder all over my face—so I could get to them first.
Posted by tdasmuns
When I lived in Mumbai, India, I’d wake up elated one early morning each March. The key was to wake up before my cousins smeared pink or red or green powder all over my face—so I could get to them first.
Posted by msalomon
Since my first course with associate professor Dr. Laura Scheiber during the spring of my junior year, I have been involved in lab work, including analyzing materials that come in from the field. After a couple of classes—and many hours spent in the William R. Adams Zooarchaeology Laboratory, which is directed by Dr. Scheiber—I decided to… Read more »
Posted by sldawson
IU’s “International Comparative Exchange: Services for Children with Disabilities” course was born out of a combination of Bryan P. McCormick‘s work in the Balkans as a Fulbright Scholar and my passion for creating programs to support youth impacted by various health conditions. This three-credit summer intensive class, now entering its second year, is offered through the… Read more »
Posted by Annie Delehanty
I’m all about my comfort zone. If that comfort zone was an item, it would be my Nike sneakers—nice, comfortable, and reliable. I know they fit and will carry me to my destination. In May, I packed up my Nikes and boarded a plan from New York’s LaGuardia Airport to Managua, Nicaragura, where I was… Read more »
Posted by Jordan Morgan
After months of discussion and preparation, we had finally arrived in the community of El Toro in Nicaragua. Along with 10 other Panhellenic Association women from Indiana University, I had committed to building a school in a Nicaraguan community. The IU Panhellenic community had spent months of hard work fundraising for Circle of Sisterhood, a… Read more »
Posted by Madeline Lasson
Nicaragua is a small country in Latin America just North of Costa Rica. It is the second-poorest country in the region, just behind Haiti. Those living in rural parts of Nicaragua average about 2.1 years of school, and 68 percent of Nicaraguans in rural areas live on less than $1 per day. This is all… Read more »
Posted by stwiggs
Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world. – Nelson Mandela About three years ago, a mentor and role model of mine, Katie Nobbe, introduced me to the Circle of Sisterhood Foundation. The mission of the foundation is to leverage the collective influence and resources of sorority women to help… Read more »
Posted by provblog
Thanks in large part to the efforts of a group of sorority women from Indiana University, children in the village of El Toro, Nicaragua, are now attending school in a bright, modern new building with plenty of school supplies and teachers. After raising a collective $40,000 and taking an eight-week preparation class, a group of nine members… Read more »
Posted by Jacqueline DuMont
Before starting this journey, I had little prior knowledge of Serbia and didn’t know what the culture would be like. Our group from Indiana University had meetings and assignments to prep us before we exited the country, and I learned we would be touring disability specific schools and facilities for individuals with disabilities. In my… Read more »
Posted by provblog
Through an immersive summer course offered by the Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington, students from IU and the University of Belgrade in Serbia are learning more about how children with disabilities are supported in different cultures. “International Comparative Exchange: Services for Children with Disabilities” was first offered in the summer of 2016, when six… Read more »