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RESEARCH
General
World
Affairs
INTERNATIONAL
ISSUES
Program to foster high school students' knowledge
of other nations
Melissa Mitchell, News Editor
(217)
333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
12/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Educators
at the University of Illinois believe that now, more than ever before,
there is a critical need for Americans to have a deeper knowledge and
understanding of international issues. And one way to accomplish that
in Illinois is through the new International High School Program.
The program, announced last month by Illinois Gov. George H. Ryan, is
funded by a $500,000 appropriation from the state to the Illinois Consortium
for International Education and the University of Illinois, and will
be administered by the UIs International Programs and Studies.
"The goal of this program is to better prepare tomorrows
leaders and business people for a world that is more and more culturally
diverse," Ryan said in a recent news release.
UI Chancellor Nancy Cantor said the program will be "another way
in which our university engages with the people of Illinois and students
in Illinois high schools. With this new knowledge about the world, our
high school students will be more informed citizens and leaders for
the future for our state, nation and the world."
IPS program director Madeleine Jaehne, a member of Ryans task
force that developed the IHS initiative, said the programs goals
include improving teaching and learning by reaching students and teachers
at all Illinois high schools, regardless of enrollment figures or on-site
course availability.
"The initiative is unique in that it will affect schools across
the state instead of offering many programs that are wonderful, but
affect only one or two schools, and are in effect Band-Aid solutions,"
Jaehne said. "And it is not elitist the program and the
governors vision was to enable every future citizen and every
high school, no matter its resources, the opportunity to participate
in the program."
Through the IHS program, schools will be able to identify and strengthen
existing courses with content that focuses on other countries and cultures.
Students at small schools lacking foreign-language courses or other
international courses will be able to plug into such programs online
through the Illinois Virtual High Schoool and the Illinois Virtual Campus.
Another component of the program is the International Career Academy,
a global summer immersion experience. A subset of students enrolled
in the international track at an IHS will be selected to participate
in the academy.
"The program is very unusual or perhaps, unique among
the states in the U.S., therefore Illinois is a leader in all of this,"
said Earl Kellogg, UI associate provost for international affairs, IPS
director and interim director of the IHS initiative. Kellogg said the
UI was chosen to administer the grant "because we have large and
strong international programs and a large number of academic units that
have materials that can contribute to the development of the curriculum,
as well as much experience in assisting people studying abroad."
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