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MCC Daily Tribune

International Education Week Events This Week (note date and time clarifications)

We look forward to celebrating International Education Week and Geography Awareness Week virtually starting today. Please register for these events to connect with each other and enjoy some global programming with students, staff, and faculty.

Monday, Nov. 16, 2020

MCC Virtual Mapping Party! 12 - 2 pm (instructions will be given at noon and at 1 pm)

Registration Link:

https://monroecommunity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIqcOCgpjMrGNc5ayrjS6b1Zfludd-MD_ML

Registration will remain open today. Zoom link will be sent to you as soon as you register.

Make a difference. Map! This afternoon, participants will create maps in another county as a part of MCC's Youth Mappers chapter and MCC's Mapping Corps Club. "Capitalizing on web-based open geospatial technologies, Youth Mappers' mission is to cultivate a generation of young leaders to create resilient communities and to define their world by mapping it." For more on Youth Mappers, go to: http://www.youthmappers.org/

This event is co-hosted with the Global Education and International Services Office and co-sponsored by
Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Project.

 

Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2020 (date clarification)

A MCC Global Faces Event: Mother Language Celebration from 10 - 11 am

Students in English for Speakers of Other Languages will share a short poem in their native languages at this event.

Register here: https://monroecommunity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0oceyqpjgqE9BQpSVUrxYbDAcT2GMmfMYv

Co-hosted by ESOL and GEIS

 

Virtual Mapping Events in English and Spanish (Hosted by MCC students from 12 - 2 pm)

Register here: https://geotech-virtual-gis-day-kctcs.hub.arcgis.com/

 

Friday, Nov. 20, 2020 from 1 - 2 pm (Time change)

The Political Economy of Leaving Home: How Debt, International Borders, and Deportation Inform Outmigration

This talk examines how the financial realities of outmigration from Central America to the United States reinforce return attempts after deportation. Because of the nature of mortgage payments, liens, and debt terms, deported out-migrants often find themselves with little recourse except to try to emigrate North again to find employment. This talk, therefore, examines how prevailing narratives of migration ignore or work around a fundamental economic reality--not one principally of poverty and underemployment but one rather of indebtedness stemming from the significant costs of transnational migration itself.

Speaker: John Kennedy, PhD student, Romance Studies, LASP Graduate Fellow, Public Humanities Fellow, Cornell University

Register here:

https://monroecommunity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUlceuqrzgqGNXE7i9Qe18bhWETMbhT1bFU

Co-hosted by AHPS, Cornell University Latin American Studies Program and GEIS

 

COIL Faculty Meet Up 3 pm

Are you interested in COIL (Collaborative Online International Learning)? Join SUNY COIL staff and MCC COILers to learn more and discuss new initiatives.

https://monroecommunity.zoom.us/my/clee40

Christina Lee
Global Education & International Services
11/16/2020