
蹤獲扦-Dearborn has been steadily expanding its global education opportunities over the past several years, including a growing program to study abroad. Needless to say, a global pandemic has thrown a wrench in some of those plans, and 蹤獲扦-Dearborns Director of Global Engagement Scott Riggs has had to get a little creative to find opportunities that dont involve travel. Last year, though, he ran across one with a lot of potential: The an international leadership development program for university students who are working on projects that advance one of the . The so-called SDGs are widely seen as a gold-standard blueprint for building a more equitable, environmentally focused global society.
Riggs says he can only take credit for putting the idea of the fellowship in front of students and organizing an initial info session. Responsibility for landing one of the spots in the competitive international fellowship program, he puts squarely on the eight students who applied as part of a three-campus U-M cohort. The group will be co-led by 蹤獲扦-Dearborn psychology and philosophy senior Amanda Saleh and 蹤獲扦-Ann Arbor art and design senior Anna Lebedeva. And as a cohort, theyll all have access to online UN trainings and the other global fellows as they bring their work to life. But theyll actually each be working individually on a project for their respective campuses. Salehs, for example, focuses on growing a campus chapter of the international organization , which engages students in global anti-poverty and literacy service projects. (She hopes to plan at least one project with a local community group and one that could send students abroad for a service project. Her team will be collecting for school construction abroad throughout the year.) Environmental studies senior Daniel Arini, 蹤獲扦-Dearborns other student in the cohort, plans on creating a digital 3D museum space focused on environmental activism, one of his lifelong passions. (You can .) And Lebedeva is using her semester fellowship to create an interdisciplinary, web-based hub for researchers and nonprofit organizers within the U-M system to share their work with one another. (Hers also has an interesting art challenge: Anyone who submits artist or not has to include some original artwork with it, even if its just a stick figure drawing.)
The students have various hopes for their fellowship experiences. Saleh, whos been a campus organizer in several different spaces throughout her student career, says shes hoping to take her organizing skills to a deeper level. In particular, she sees the program as a way to focus her energy on education justice, an issue thats grown increasingly more important to her and one thats a great fit for the UNs Sustainable Development Goals. For Arini, the fellowship represents the chance to make real an idea hes been thinking about for a few years now and all the better that it can now include global perspectives that make the museum more complete. And Lebedeva is especially looking forward to the human connections theyll make over the course of a fast-paced couple of months.
This is only one semester, so its not like you can take on something huge, like solving world hunger, Lebedeva says. So for me, its more about the community of getting to know each other, seeing the different approaches people take, connecting with people across the world, and then collecting all of those experiences so we can take our work far beyond the fellowship.
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Want to learn more about the UN Millennium Fellowship? Check out the programs for inspiring stories from past fellows. And well keep you updated on Saleh, Lebedeva and Arinis work in future issues of Reporter.