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In this first episode of Season 2, we speak with seasoned academic leader, corporate senior executive, lawyer, innovator, battle-tested entrepreneur, and Bay Path University's new president, Sandra J. Doran J.D. about her experience in assuming a presidency in the midst of the pandemic. You will be inspired by her vision and enthusiasm for higher ed's future as well as her passion for women's education. Her bio can be found here. https://www.baypath.edu/about/leadership/president/biography/
Sign up at https://www.amauathome.com/ to stay up to date with all of our courses. The Forgotten Female Legacy is a short course brought to you by Al Madrasatu Al Umariyyah. Many of us are simply unaware of the rich tradition of female scholarship in the religion of Islam. Join Ustadh Abdulrahman Hassan on an awe-inspiring journey through history and discover some of the greatest women our Ummah has ever seen. Reignite your passion for seeking knowledge and be sure to inform the women in your life of this new course so they can do the same! You can also find us on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amauofficial/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/almadrasatualumariyyah Twitter: https://twitter.com/AMAU2525 BarakAllahu feekum. #AMAU #AbdulrahmanHassan #WomenInIslam
Learn English with Emily Blunt. She discussed how women are transforming the world during Variety’s Power of Women event in New York. Blunt implored lawmakers to take action to help young girls denied an education. Emily Olivia Leah Blunt is a British-American actress. She is the recipient of various accolades, including a Golden Globe Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award, in addition to nominations for two British Academy Film Awards. For more, visit: https://www.englishspeecheschannel.com
this is always going to be important for us to seek knowledge to remain educated as women we have a responsibility to ourselves and to our community always seek knowledge. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/boshiaraejean/support
This morning, John Voket and the award-winning For the People will be previewing an event we support every year - it's the 32nd Annual Bigelow Tea Community Challenge. We'll check in with Cindi Bigelow for details and meet two of the recipient nonprofits that will benefit with your participation. Then we'll welcome the director of the Connecticut Women's Education And Legal Fund to learn how this organization is advocating for and empowering women and girls in Connecticut - and meet two honorees of the October 1, One Woman Makes a Difference Annual Awards Dinner.
Jamila Afghani, Afghani Deputy Minister of Martyr and Disabled Affairs, member of the Afghani Delegation to the United Nations, and Founder of the Noor Educational and Capacity Development... Good hearts make the world a better place
Connecticut Women's Education and Legal Fund
Musonius Rufus says in no uncertain terms that men and women are capable, and indeed deserve, the same education, including in philosophy. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/stoicmeditations/support
In this fourth podcast from the April 9th seminar “Tangier 1947 — Two Speeches: Independence and Women’s Education”, Dr. M’hamed BENABOUD, from Tetouan Asmir Association, discussed Spanish archival materials outline the intrigue behind Franco-Spanish efforts to delay or obstruct Sultan Mohammed V's visit to northern Morocco, and he drew links between how Lalla Aicha in her speech was an archetype of the modern Moroccan who would form the state her father sought to create.
In this third podcast from the April seminar “Tangier 1947 — Two Speeches: Independence and Women’s Education,” Dr. Karim BEJJIT, Professor from Abdelmalek Essaadi University, discussed the nuances of US support for Moroccan sovereignty and King Mohammed V in light of Cold War relations with France and Spain. In subsequent podcast Dr. M’hamed Benaboud of Tetouan Asmir Association speaks on “Princess Lalla Aisha’s Historical Speech in Tangier of April 1947 in the Light of the Varela Archives.”
April 6, April Seminar: “Tangier 1947 -- Two Speeches: Independence and Women's Education.” This year’s April Seminar, held in partnership with L'Office Cherifien des Phosphates, marked the 70th anniversary of two Tangier speeches which changed history: those of King Mohammed V and of his daughter, Princess Lalla Aicha Alaoui, in partnership with the Office Cherifien des Phosphates. Presenters included: • TALIM President Dr. Dale F. EICKELMAN, Professor Emeritus, Dartmouth College (Part 1/4); • Dr. Bernabé LÓPEZ GARCIA, Professor from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, on the theme, “The Events of April 1947: A Spanish Perspective(Part 1/4);” • Dr. Assia BENSALAH ALAOUI, Ambassador-at-Large of HM King Mo- hamed VI, on the theme, “The Primacy of Education, Especially of Women, in the Progress of a Nation (Part 2/4);” • Dr. Karim BEJJIT, Professor from Abdelmalek Essaadi University, on the theme, "US-Moroccan relations in the 1940s: A New Beginning (Part 3/4);” and, • Dr. M’hamed BENABOUD, Tetouan Asmir Association, on the theme, “Princess Lalla Aisha’s Historical Speech in Tangier of April 1947 in the Light of the Varela Archives (Part 4/4).” Seventy years ago, on 9 April 1947, King Mohammed V delivered a speech in Tangier calling for Moroccan independence. Two days later his daughter, Princess Lalla Aicha Alaoui, gave her own speech calling for the education of women. On April TALIM’s annual seminar, held in partnership with the Office Cherifien des Phosphates (OCP), focused on “Tangier 1947 — Two Speeches: Independence and Women’s Education.” Presenters considered the historic nature of the speech and its reverberations in Moroccan society to the present day. This first part includes opening remarks by TALIM President Dr. Dale F. Eickelman, Professor Emeritus at Dartmouth College (14 min), and a presentation by Dr. Bernabé López Garcia on “The Events of April 1947: A Spanish Perspective” (33 min). (Elaborate on contents if possible). In subsequent podcasts Dr. Assia Bensalah Alaoui, Ambassador-at-Large of HM King Mohamed VI, addresses “The Primacy of Education, Especially of Women, in the Progress of a Nation”; Dr. Karim Bejjit, Professor at Abdelmalek Essaadi University, speaks on “US-Moroccan relations in the 1940s: A New Beginning”; and Dr. M’hamed Benaboud of Tetouan Asmir Association speaks on “Princess Lalla Aisha’s Historical Speech in Tangier of April 1947 in the Light of the Varela Archives.”
Christ Gunty of the Catholic Review joins us this week to discuss the upcoming changes at the Catholic Review. Later Betty Contino of the Women's Education Alliance (WEA) discusses WEA's commitment to philanthropy and the education of children.
Mount Holyoke College President Joanne Creighton delivered a talk titled "The Role of Women's Colleges in Women's Education Worldwide" for the First-Year Seminar Lecture Series.
Persa Batra, Visiting Assistant Professor of Earth and Environment, gave a talk during the Focus the Nation panel.
Christopher Benfey, Mellon Professor of English, delivered a talk about poet Emily Dickinson for the First-Year Seminar Lecture Series.
Corinne Demas, Professor of English, gave a talk during the Focus the Nation panel.
Todd Holland, Energy Manager, gave a talk during the Focus the Nation Stewardship panel.
Danielle Connor FP '06, gave a talk during the Focus the Nation lunch panel.
International human rights activist Naomi Tutu, daughter of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, delivered the first lecture in the Weissman Center's 2008-2009 series, Bearing Witness. Tutu shared her own life story with her observations on divisive society and the promise of communities working to protect and sustain the dignity of all people.
Jeremy King, Associate Professor of History, gave a talk during the Focus the Nation panel.
Sarah Smith (CMPO, University of Bristol) discusses her latest article 'Fertility and Women's Education in the Uk' in issue 4 of the CMPO bulletin Research in Public Policy.