Cette semaine était aussi magnifique que la précédente. Dimanche, j’ai visité le Château de Chantilly avec la famille de Pierre. C’était très intéressant et le château était vraiment beau. L’école est maintenant plus ou moins ordinaire. Les professeurs sont très gentils et si j’ai des problèmes, il y a toujours quelqu’un pour m’aider. Paris était formidable, encore. Nous sommes allés à la tour Eiffel et nous sommes montés jusqu’au deuxième étage. Vous pouvez voir toute la ville autour de vous. J’aime beaucoup les monuments et les statues qui sont à Paris. C’est vraiment une métropole culturelle et de patrimoniale. J’ai aussi vu la place de la Concorde, l’église de la Madeleine et j’ai marché sur les Champs-Élysées. Demain, j’irai à Bruges (Brugge), en Belgique. Il y a aussi les classes de conversation qui sont très sympas, les parents qui les animent sont excellents et je trouve que mon français s’améliore de jour en jour. Cela fait déjà 2 semaines, le temps passe rapidement quand tu t’amuses.—Samuel Ergina ‘12
Tag Archives: Global
France: La deuxième semaine
Cette semaine s’est encore bien passée. Mercredi, j’ai visité le Musée de la Vènerie, à Senlis. J’ai beaucoup appris sur la chasse à courre et je vais peut-être en faire une pendant mon séjour.
Hier, nous sommes allés à Paris où nous avons passé la journée. Le matin, nous avons fait un peu de shopping et on a déjeuné dans un petit café. L’après-midi, nous avons vu la place de la Concorde où il y a la grande roue et l’Obélisque. Ensuite nous avons marché un peu sur les Champs-Élysées, jusqu’à la tour Eiffel. Le haut de la tour était malheureusement fermé, mais la vue du deuxième étage était quand même magnifique! Il faisait très froid et ventait beaucoup, alors nous avons pris un chocolat chaud dans un café. Notre troisième visite à Paris était formidable!
Ce matin j’ai eu mon premier cours d’économie, qui était fort intéressant et aussi mon cours de théâtre. Nous avons dû faire de l’improvisation. Le thème: les bulletins… Je me suis bien amusée! Nous avons finalement eu du soleil aujourd’hui alors Capucine, son amie Camille et moi avons déjeuné dehors. Il faisait froid, mais quand même moins qu’à Montréal. –Hélène Osterman ’12
Semaine 1 à St. Vincent (France) : remarquable
Cette semaine était ma première fois en Europe, et ce n’était rien d’autre que remarquable. Le matin, quand je suis arrivé, il faisait tellement chaud! Les champs que nous avons vus en passant la campagne de la France étaient magnifiques. La famille ici est vraiment agréable et gentille. Pierre m’aide tout le temps quand j’ai des problèmes à comprendre ce que les professeurs disent. Ses sœurs sont vraiment polies avec moi et me traitent comme une partie de la famille. Je n’ai pas encore rencontré les parents de Pierre, mais ses grands-parents sont gentils aussi. J’apprécie leur patience avec moi et mes problèmes avec la langue. St-Vincent est aussi une école excellente. Les amis de Pierre me font me sentir comme si j’avais toujours fait partie du lycée. J’étais chanceux d’être mis avec Pierre. Lui et son groupe d’amis sont des personnes amusantes. Les classes sont toutes des matières que j’ai déjà étudiées sauf certaines exceptions, alors la transition entre les écoles n’est pas trop difficile. La visite à Paris était incroyable et une des meilleures expériences de ma vie. La professeure qui nous a surveillés était très amusante. Ma famille a beaucoup d’idées de visites à faire pendant les fins de semaine. Cette première semaine était incroyable et j’ai hâte pour la prochaine. —Samuel Ergina ’12
LCC and Our Global Classroom Initiative
I have been fortunate to have visited India three times in my life, including visits to the bustling cities of Mumbai and New Delhi as well as a journey to the top of the world—to the Himalayan mountain state of Kashmir.
I am pleased that through the Round Square LCC will send two students on exchange to India for the first time later this year. It will surely be an exceptional and eye-opening opportunity for them. When they return we all look forward to hearing about India through students’ eyes.
During each of my visits to that country I have been dazzled by the colour and diversity of Indian culture. It is an ancient society currently progressing at an incredible pace. The city of Bangalore—India’s Silicon Valley—is a leading centre of high tech creativity and a symbol of India’s commitment to innovation.
With a population of well over one billion people—about thirty times greater than Canada’s on a landmass about one-third size of Canada’s—India is a country challenged by its need for resources and the provision of education and health care to its huge population.
In recent years, LCC has partnered with Health Inc., a small non-profit organization committed to bringing literacy, health care and community-building activities to India’s most remote villages—on the top of the world in the northern state of Ladakh in the Himalayan mountains.
Our newest venture is The Global Classroom Initiative; a special partnership between LCC and Health Inc. We are currently hosting Health Inc.’s founder Cynthia Hunt and three young Ladakhi leaders-in-training on a special educational exchange that will continue until mid-December.
In addition to following some of our daily routines in classes and on the hockey rink, this group is focusing on learning IT skills so they can be proficient at making videos. They will then be able to teach other Ladakhi students to tell video stories to us and to the world.
We intend to send LCC staff to Ladakh to help set up a satellite supported classroom so that we can use dependable technology to bring us closer together. We have already sent some young LCC alumni to Ladakh and some day we hope to send students. If you are interested in our Global Classroom project, check out this video and feel free to contact us directly if you want further information. —Chris Shannon, Headmaster
The Wonder of Mr. Machai Viravaidya
I recently attended the annual Round Square international conference in Thailand along with six LCC student-delegates. This international association of 80 schools from across the globe continues to focus on key values and IDEALS we promote regularly in our school (Internationalism, Democracy, Environmentalism, Adventure, Leadership, Service). Active learning experiences such as the annual international conference connect students, teachers and administrators and open eyes to major issues and challenges far from home. In addition to a host of excellent keynote speakers, discussion groups and cultural activities, I had the opportunity to participate in two separate service days, including a memorable day connecting with young children and babies at a Thai orphanage run by the Catholic church.
Although there is much to reflect on from this eye-opening experience, I will share my impressions of a single speaker. Mr. Machai Viravaidya is an impressive and humorous Thai man who has led an incredibly accomplished life of service and initiative, mostly dedicated to improving public health at the broadest level in Thailand. Known as Thailand’s “Condom King,” Mr. Viravaidya has spent decades distributing condoms across the country—years before it was being done widely in most countries. This was a big deal in Thailand as it is a very conservative and traditional country. He made the topic of family planning fun, distributing free board games which educated people, giving taxi drivers and police thousands of condoms to distribute to the general public and holding an annual condom blowing championship. He also started a chain of restaurants called “Cabbages and Condoms,” hoping that condoms would some day be as common as cabbages. He joked with student delegates at our conference to remember that condoms aren’t dangerous, they are what he calls useful “weapons of mass protection.”
As the founder of PDA, Thailand’s largest non-profit development association, Machai Viravaidya has played a key role in developing Thailand’s immensely successful family planning initiatives. This has led to one of the fastest reductions in birth rate anywhere in the world—falling from an annual increase of over 3% in the mid 1970’s to merely half of one percent today. During that time the average number of births per woman in Thailand fell from seven babies to less than two.
Mr. Viravaidya has also been instrumental in building Thailand’s comprehensive national HIV/AIDS prevention policies, radically reducing new HIV infections. In 2005 the World Bank estimates that these prevention measures helped save nearly 8 million lives and saved the Thai government over $18 billion in treatment costs alone. Amazing achievements resulting from one man’s vision and determination!
For his service toward improving Thailand’s public health, Mr Viravaidya has received many major awards, including the United Nations Gold Peace Medal and was acclaimed by Time Magazine as one of “Asia’s modern heroes.” Most recently he was recipient of the Bill & Melinda Gates Global Health Award and a prize called the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, with each prize having a value of $ 1 million—significant funds that he immediately put back to work fighting public health issues in Thailand.
Despite this success in family planning and fighting the spread of HIV, Mr. Viravaidya has not taken time to rest. Now he has turned to education, poverty reduction, and the promotion of creative solutions to complex problems in his country. He sees education as the key to success and has started a school called the “Mechai Pattana Bamboo School” which boasts the world’s largest geodesic bamboo dome (30 meters across), a climate change centre, a design and innovation centre, a democracy education centre, and what he calls a “Barefoot MBA and Philanthropy Academy” dedicated to teaching young Thai villagers how to make money and how to give it away. The students designed their own uniform, they sit on hiring committees for the selection of teachers, and there are no textbooks, just the Internet.
It was impressive to meet Mr. Machai Viravaidya personally and hear him speak. He is a global leader, an innovator and someone whose life motto could very well be “Non Nobis Solum.” His final message to his audience in Thailand was simple yet profound….. “If the educated and the wealthy don’t help with the world’s many problems, then who’s going to help? Go out and do something decent.” That’s a mantra we all should follow.
Check out his organization’s web site at: www.mechaifoundation.org –Chris Shannon, Headmaster




