Tuesday 22 November 2011

The CULTURE of CONSUMERISM: a MISSION FOCUS WEEK

Another Mission Focus Week! It's going well :)
I went to a workshop tonight led by my peer listener, Vincent from Kenya and a friend in AOC Jerry from South Africa called the Culture of Poverty.
They discussed for an audience of about 20 students the vicious cycle of the hand-to-mouth mentality, that in some cases communities blame the poor for their conditions and the myopic way we deal with the situations with our gap in communication as we do no understand the mechanisms of the culture and try to bring in our own. Also that when studying these issues we tend to look at them as projects and forget to think of them as people too.
Vincent gave an example of working in a slum in Kenya over the summer, by educating high school drop outs in how to finance their familes they would be bringing themselves out of poverty.

We spoke about so many things, I have so many notes and this is super rushed. I just have a free minute and was trying to get it on 'paper'.

Here's the whole schduele to give examples of other workshops being led:




Saturday 19th
Sunday 20th
Monday 21st
Tuesday 22nd
Wednesday 23rd
Thursday 24th
Friday 25th
16:30-18:00

Occupy AC


10:30-16:30

Inner Court Yard

General Assembly Meeting

(information session)

18:30
The Culture of Consumerism: Human and Unsustainable

(Luke)

Economics
Consumerism: a spiritual system?

(Iiris, Guillaume, Shanna)

Economics
Consumerism: the individual

(Iiris, Guillaume, Shanna)

Economics
The Culture of Consumerism: Human and Unsustainable

(Luke)

Economics

18:30-19:30


The Fishing Game


(Frederik)


Economics

The Culture of Poverty

(Vincent)

Economics


Economic Sustainability in Developing Countries

(Nichil and Christian)

Economics



Trade Game


(Global Justice)


History
DEBATE:
Christmas and Consumerism

(19:00-21:00)

 (Ricardo, Guillaume, Shanna)


Great Hall


19:30-20:30

Film Screening:

FIGHT CLUB


Coffee lounge

Good and Bad Capitalism

(Ricardo)


Economics




Capitalism without Resources

(Tariq)


Economics
20:30-21:30
Practical Anti-consumerism

(Harry)

Economics
iSweat

(Made in 48)

History


Monday 21 November 2011

Cinderfella!

Cinderfella
On Saturday we had Cinderfella. This is basically a fashion show of two guys from each house who dress up as girls. The charity that it is done for is Operation Smile, you pay 3 pounds in advance or 5 pounds at the door to watch it. The amount of effort these boys went through in shaving/waxing themselves and learning a dance routine was reason enough to go. The two parts was a little dance then they had to model swim wear. Chloe is a dancer so she choreographed our two boys- Dmitry from Russia and Einar from Norway a Burlesque dance with them; I went just for the fun of watching them learn it. They did really well. It will be a night to remember.
National Evening
It was the East-Asian National Evening last night: China, Japan, Korea and Mongolia. They had a lot of great dances and funny skits, slideshows which I had everyone laughing. Ruyi, my dorm mate, was in it which was great to see J

It’s crazy how fast things are going right now. I have to prepare for my end of term exams, only two weekends left at school and then I’m back home. Crazy to think I’ll have been away for four months, it has rushed by.
The leaves are off most of the trees now, but I rarely see my breath (that’s my indicator on how truly cold it is: can I see my breath??).  Even so, the idea of being back in the sun in two and half weeks is amazing. Home sweet home.

Morgannwg











Figured there weren't enough pictures of Morgannwg. We may be the oldest house, but we're the cosiest ^^^ obviously, look at all our Christmas decorations :)

Thursday 17 November 2011

Critical Engagement

We’re reading a book in English Lit right now called Truant by Horatio Clare. The man who wrote it actually went to the school from 1990-1992, and he speaks about it for ten pages in the book. One paragraph I really liked of what he wrote was:
We live in a paradise of diversity and novelty. No one’s ‘culture’ is quite the same as anyone else’s. Everyone has different music, different politics and different clothes: the college ‘look’ is a chaotic blend of whatever we have worn at home crossed with Palestinian scarves, Kenyan cotton, cheap Welsh wool jumpers and thick checked shirt. No one has to make an effort to be different or to fit in. We are all different, so we all fit.

Critical Engagement
Our second diploma period! This one is led by eight past students, graduating from 2004-2009.
Our days start at 9:00 where we have Thematic Workshops from 9:00-10:30, a half an hour break and then 11:00-12:30, lunch from 12:30-2:00. We then go to two workshops in the afternoon (2:00-3:15 and then 3:45-5:00) that we choose ourselves, led by the Alumni in their fields of expertise.
I’ve now completed two days! J
I’m in a group 5 with about 20 other students; we spend our mornings in SOSH. Our facilitator is Pedro, the youngest of the group who is leading the Diploma Period, graduating in 2009 – so my fifth year. He is now studying Civil and Environmental Engineering at Imperial College London. Really cool guy.
Anyways, on our first day we spoke about Identity. What it is, is it nature or nurture and how is group identity structured. We did an Identity Map, trying to list all of the different groups that we identify with at AC. From being in AOC, Morgannwg House to being in the Afro-Caribbean and Dorm 12. The discussions we had afterwards of how we identify with others and the feeling of belonging and wanting to diversify was very interesting- something you’d only experience in a UWC environment sitting between an Israeli and a German.
We then broke into smaller groups, my group discussing on how religion can cause conflicts around the world, of how others believe their religion is the ‘right’ one and the feeling of needing to eradicate the other. Other groups spoke about things such as Social Class and Language.
That afternoon I went to Critical Engagement and Gender and Critical Engagement and Energy and Sustainability. In the gender workshop we discussed the difference between sex and gender, how it’s viewed in different parts of the world, and what it means to be a man and woman in a changing world. The workshop was led by Mika from Finland, graduating in 2005, he studied Anthropology and Gender Studies in the University of Sussex.
Lastly I went to Pedro’s workshop where we went “CRAZYYYYY”, in thinking of ways to make our school more sustainable. From using the cow and goat waste and capturing methane and then changing it to less harmful Carbon Dioxide which we could then make soda from, to using the extremely heavy castle doors as a form of kinetic energy (I didn’t quite understand the Physics of it when it was being explained, but boy was it impressive).  Really fun. J
Today in the morning we spoke of Diversity, challenging the complacency that often accompanies notions of diversity. How in a multi-ethnic society can coexistence and integration between cultures be enabled? We then broke into smaller groups again and spoke of terrorist attacks. My group of six had two Norwegians so we began speaking about the attack in Norway over the summer, I didn’t realize how hard it would be to speak about it, but hearing in their voices the sadness and their connections to teenagers was something that really impacted me. It was monumentally devastating. Other examples used was the Turks in Germany attacks in 2006 (I think that was the year Leo said) and the school shootings in the USA.
The workshops I did this afternoon were brilliant!
The first one was led by Will, graduated in 2004 and then earned his BA in Politics, Philosophy and Economics from Oxford University. The workshops was called Critical Engagement Through Play. We did a series of short energizing games that pushed us to reconsider our moral and political beliefs, what was fair and was not. How competitive is it necessary to really be in a game of Pictionary? Is there any skill in Rock, Paper, Scissors? (yes, says the winners).  It was a lot of fun and a new take on standard games we all knew very well.
My last workshop was Critical Engagement and Community Projects. What grassroots community projects are and the steps involved in setting them up and sustaining them to achieve meaningful outcomes.  We also had a short debate, one side the Local Authority taking away funds from the other side, a children’s charity.  No doubt, we all got a bit heated. It was led by Ari who graduated in 2005 and went to study International Development and Spanish at Sussex University. Her father is actually one of the English teachers here and she grew up on campus.
Early night tonight, but for now – Open House!   [I think it’s pancakes J]
******

Monday 7 November 2011

Barbeque!

Last Saturday I went with a group of friends to 'Sunley Beach' for a barebque, it was Guy Fawks night. Lovely time!

 Lots of meat!
 Chloe, my new room mate :)
 Julyen, Quebec
 Heidi, Norway

 The 3 blondes in the house! Chloe and Konan, Brazil
 Oli <3 Wales


 Strange boys...
 Chris, Malta and Louis, Switzerland
 Really excited about my burger there
 Oli was very proud of his Welsh towel :)


I have some stunning friends.

Thursday 3 November 2011

History Lessons

Back to AC. Back to Codes. Back to late nights and alarm clocks. Ah the love.

Nothing significant has been going on to talk about. This morning I had a really great double History code. The class was split into six groups of three and we were defending countries Britain, France, Serbia, Russia, Austria-Hungary and Germany and we were in a debate defending how our country was not the cause of the First World War. It was brilliant. I was in a group with two other girls defending Austria-Hungary. Some of the students got really aggressive and passionate about their country and were adamantly arguing with one another- it was tough to keep up at some parts.

Also tonight there’s a presentation in Tythe Barn with a past AC-student named Jack Fairweather on ‘A War of Choice’, his book published last week on the War in Iraq. I think it will be really fascinating, and compared to the other places he’s visiting in Britain we are so lucky he’s given a day to come here.

I miss Anne-Sofie quite a lot. There’s a new girl in my dorm, Chloe from Nice, France. She’s incredibly happy and a sweet heart. And though I do miss Anne-Sofie it makes me realise that she really may not have been right for this school, Chloe’s enthusiasm and happiness in the room makes that apparent.  

This weekend I plan to take Chloe to the Italian restaurant to get to know her a bit better. Have lots of homework to do, Halloween SOSH... exciting times ahead :)  

Sorry for such a short-scattered blog. Hopefully I’ll have a more substantial event to talk about soon.

Love, Abi

PS- I haven’t eaten meat at the school for 3 weeks now!