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Glendale: Leaving for an exchange of ideas

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  • Glendale: Leaving for an exchange of ideas

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    July 12 2004

    Leaving for an exchange of ideas

    Balboa Elementary teacher travels to Armenia to learn how country's
    education system works.

    By Darleene Barrientos, News-Press


    NORTHWEST GLENDALE - Balboa Elementary School teacher Maureen Miller
    has helped tutor some of the district's most gifted students. For the
    next two weeks, beginning Friday, she will help teach students from
    another culture, and, in the process, hopes to learn something
    herself.

    Miller will leave for Armenia, where she will stay with an Armenian
    teacher and learn about students and teaching methods in the country.
    The trip will be the beginning of a year-long working relationship
    with her Armenian counterpart, connecting their students through
    projects and the Internet. Miller was the lone Californian selected
    for the program, sponsored by the U.S. State Department and the State
    Department Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

    "This trip is to introduce American teachers to their Armenian
    partners and allow them time to get a sense of Armenian system of
    education," said Barbara Miller, chief operating officer for Project
    Harmony, the organization coordinating the exchange.

    "One of the criteria was a commitment to develop and execute the
    project over the course of a year to make sure the district and the
    community support the effort, and to show and express an interest in
    multicultural education."

    Miller, who works part time teaching gifted students at Balboa,
    applied for the program after seeing it on a bulletin Principal Linda
    Milano compiles for her staff. Miller will return to Glendale on July
    30.

    Milano said she was so excited for Miller, she did not realize only
    21 teachers were going through the program.

    "I said, 'You would be absolutely fabulous for this!' I was so
    excited when I got word that she was accepted," Milano said.

    The two teachers will work together to create either one long- or
    several short-term projects for both their classes that will enable
    their students to communicate via the Internet. Miller said she
    believed she was chosen for the program because of her attraction to
    technology, the Armenian culture and her willingness to commit to the
    program.

    "Because we have such a large Armenian population, I have an interest
    in Armenia and that part of the world." Miller said. "When we had the
    huge influx of Armenian children in the '90s, it was just something
    that interested me. I took Armenian for the Non-Armenian for a year
    at [Glendale Community College], and I got to know so many people in
    Glendale who are Armenian.

    "The culture is fascinating to me. Whatever I could do to make our
    culture and their culture work together, I'm happy to do."

    Miller's trip will not be the end of the exchange. She and her
    assigned partner, Karine Jaghacpanyan, who teaches technology and
    English in Vanadzor, the country's third-largest city, are already
    corresponding via e-mail. In October, Jaghacpanyan will travel from
    Armenia to Glendale to visit Miller's school and class.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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