Author Archive for Matt Clemons – Page 63

Columbians Recount, Respond to Haiti Quake

haitiLast week I noted that some SIPA students were in Haiti as part of their professional development work when the earthquake occurred.  The Record, a Columbia University publication, recently ran an article about the SIPA students and others from around the University that were in Haiti at the time.  A portion of the article is below and to view the whole article please visit the web site of The Record.

Shortly before 5:00 p.m. on Jan. 12, Elisabeth Lindenmayer, director of the United Nations program at the Columbia School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA), was in Port-au-Prince with six of her students, exiting a van outside the United Nations Development Programme building. A longtime U.N. peacekeeper and former assistant secretary general and deputy chief of staff to Kofi Annan, she and her students were in Haiti for a week-long trip. They were conducting research on the role of the private sector in social and economic development and its link to state-building. After close to a week of interviews, they were scheduled to leave the next morning.

As they stepped onto the street, the earth shuddered. The building they were about to enter started to crack, and a deafening roar filled the air. “Get out,” Lindenmayer yelled. Some students threw themselves on the ground; others stayed in the van.

Although members of the Columbia community lost family and friends, the Columbians who were in Haiti were extraordinarily lucky. Remarkably, no one was injured, and a total of 10 students, faculty and staff members were able to be evacuated out of the country with support from a team working from Morningside Heights.

The SIPA Pan-African Network (SPAN)

Abibata Shanni Mahama, a second year student from Ghana, contributed the following post.

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The SIPA Pan-African Network (SPAN) is a student group at SIPA. It is geared toward the professional development of its members. It creates an informal community and provides a platform for students interested in the economic, political, and social development of Africa and its Diaspora.  It represents SIPA students from a variety of interests and disciplines (economic and political development; human rights; economic policy; environmental policy; security policy; and media to name a few), as well as from a variety of ethnicities and countries from around the globe.

SPAN hosts programs aimed at improving and building the African continent throughout the academic year.  Apart from these activities SPAN also holds social events such as parties outside campus twice a semester, mostly in downtown New York where students are able to partake in the nightlife of the city.  Some of these parties and events occasionally involve the African Business Club (ABC) from the Columbia Business School and the African Law Students Association (ALSA) from the Columbia Law School. This demonstrates how SIPA students are able to interact with other students from different fields who may even come from the same countries. Networking is a strong element in working with these clubs. Apart from entertainment, SPAN also does the following:

– Organizes the annual flagship event the African Economic Forum held in the spring, exploring various themes in the economic, political and social development of Africa.

–  Ensures and shapes the presence of African Studies at Columbia through the ‘Moving Africa Forward Initiative’, by incorporating student voices in an on-going dialogue.

–  Works with the Columbia University administration to increase enrollment of students from Africa and the Diaspora at Columbia, and to improve the curriculum offerings for classes on Africa and its Diaspora.

–   Sponsors social and cultural activities, diversity awareness, and empowerment efforts around issues pertaining to and in celebration of the rich historical and cultural heritage of Africa and its Diaspora.

You can find the SPAN Web site here.

Seriously, I Do Not have a Cat

You might not think it, but the process of assembling and reading admission files can take a physical toll on those that work in the office.  I have gotten burned by hot printer parts, gouged by staples, strained muscles when lifting boxes of paper with my back instead of my legs, and felt pain in my wrist after using a manual stapler for days on end.  But the most common injury by far is the paper cut.  Actually we took it to a whole new level a year or two ago when we moved from paper admission folders to plastic ones.

Okay, I know I probably just made all those interested in environmental studies and policy cringe with that last sentence . . . but wait, there is logic to it.  When we used to use paper admission folders they were one time use.  We would write all over the front of a file and once the year was done we shred them up and ordered thousands more for the following year. Now we simply reuse plastic file folders year after year and the cover sheet is on the inside of the file, viewable through the plastic.  Take  a look . . .

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Yes, your file will be placed in a folder just like this one.  All of your precious information is on the inside and when the year is over we can reuse the plastic folder the next year.  Plastic is wonderful for this purpose, but I found out that plastic folders possess the same ability to slice human skin as paper folders.

Little paper cuts are annoying but generally do not cause me a lot of grief.  A single sheet of paper will sometimes slice me and I will wince but move right along because upon initial glance there is an indication of the damage, but little to no blood.  However, there are those paper cuts where I wince, grasp at the cut, and immediately shut my eyes.  From the second the slice occurs I can just tell that what I am going to see when I take my uninjured hand away is not going to be good.

Maybe you know the kind of cut I am talking about.  Like one in the webbing between your thumb and index finger that is really deep and each time you move you can feel the cut separating in the webbing.  Paper cuts from paper folders, which are pretty heavy gauge, can be brutal and it did not take me long to discover that plastic files can be just as potent.

With paper cuts and staple gouging occuring quite frequntly this time of year, I could easily be mistaken a cat owner.  My hands almost appear as if I have tried to give a cat a bath –  something I tried in my childhood when my parents went out one night and learned quickly never to do again.  Although I could be mistaken for a cat owner, I am instead the owner of several thousand admission files . . . some of which like to exact their pound of flesh.

Fall 2010 Applicant Facts Post #4

Last week I shared the most common female applicant first names and I just know the males have been dying with anticipation, so here you have it.

My brother and I both cracked the top 10. I just missed number one and my brother shares the #7 ranked name. Oh, and the couple that inspired the name posts welcomed a baby boy into the world recently and named him Max.

1. Michael (19)

2. Tied at 18: Benjamin, Matthew

3. Christopher (16)

4. Tied at15: Andrew, David

5. Justin (14)

6. Alexander (12)

7. Brian (11)

8. Tied at 9: Daniel, Jeffrey, Peter

9. Adam (8)

10. Tied at 7: Anthony, Joseph, Peter

SIPASA: MPA President

Alec Oveis will be graduating from SIPA this year and served as co-president of the SIPA Student Association (SIPASA).  One student each from the MPA and MIA programs serve in a co-president role and Alec represented the MPA students.  I asked Alec to share some of this thoughts with prospective students and he composed the entry below.  Next week I will have post from the MIA co-president.

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Dear Prospective Student,

As you consider your choice in graduate school, I would like to share with you some of my thoughts on why I believe SIPA and Columbia are so special. For the past year, I have served as president of the MPA class and co-president of the SIPA Student Association, and in these positions I’ve had the opportunity to meet and work with student representatives from other schools. What I’ve seen is that SIPA is unique among public affairs schools in terms of the resources available to its students and in the quality of its student body.

What makes SIPA special? To begin with, I would point to the diversity of the student body. Nearly half of the students at SIPA come from countries outside of the United States, and as you would expect their presence has a strong influence on the culture of the school. The variety of interests is truly impressive as well. The students at SIPA have the opportunity to study a wide range of subjects, including economic and political development, security, energy, finance and economics, management, social and urban issues, and human rights. Whatever your particular passion is, you will be able to find classmates and colleagues who share that same interest with you.

As I mentioned before, the students at SIPA have a remarkable set of resources available to them. Almost all of the world’s major financial, diplomatic and development organizations are either based in New York City or have offices here, and SIPA has ties to many of them, either through its alumni or faculty. Whether you’re looking to continue working in your particular field or plan on switching careers, the Office of Career Services is very active in helping students find internship and job opportunities at these institutions, here in New York City and elsewhere.

More than once I’ve seen recruiters bypass other schools and come to SIPA, mainly because of the convenience of its location. Within the university itself, you will have the opportunity to take classes at the other schools at Columbia, including Teacher’s College, the Law School, the Business School, Public Health, Social Work, the Journalism School, and others. This will allow you to make friends, and form contacts, with students in these other fields.

I assure you that the education you receive at SIPA will be as good as, if not better than, the education you would receive anywhere else. What distinguishes SIPA from many of the other schools and programs are the opportunities and resources that the school provides to its students. I encourage you to think carefully about what you hope to gain from your graduate school education, and please do not hesitate to contact the Admissions Office with any questions you may have.

Best wishes,

Alec Oveis

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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