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Students praise floating classroom, lessons learned in faraway lands

Nov 26, 2007 12:00 AM (372 days ago) by Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner
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Related Topics: BALTIMORE
A student meets children at one of the many ports Semester At Sea visits during its more than 100 days at sea.
(Courtesy photo)
A student meets children at one of the many ports Semester At Sea visits during its more than 100 days at sea.
BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Halle Schlather had heard about apartheid in South Africa and genocide in Cambodia, but only after she saw the “Whites Only” signs and walked by human bones left to rot did she understand the suffering in those countries.

“South Africa felt like what America would have felt like in the 1960s, when there was still a lot of prevalent racism,” said Schlather, a senior at University of Maryland, College Park. “In Cambodia, I saw bones left in the killing fields and [learned] the history of Pol Pot. It was pretty gruesome.”

Schlather learned these worldly lessons during her Semester at Sea this past spring, when she and five other U.Md. students circumnavigated the globe, visiting Puerto Rico, Brazil, South Africa, India, Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Hong Kong, China and Hawaii.

Dressed in traditional Indian clothes, Schlather and her friends explored Bombay, visited a Hare Krishna temple and joined strangers for a holiday feast.

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“The people there were so genuine,” said Schlather, 21. “We could learn lessons from them about hospitality.”

Before becoming a modern-day Magellan, the international business and government major had visited only Canada and the Caribbean.

Forty-two colleges throughout Maryland partner with the Institute for Shipboard Education for the Semester at Sea program, including Goucher College, Hood College, Anne Arundel Community College, Baltimore City Community College and Loyola College, according to the institute.

Students from across the nation earn transferable class credits from the University of Virginia, which partners with the institute, said Michael Zoll, the institute’s vice president of enrollment and student affairs.

Participating students often praise the ship, saying they avoid cabin fever by swimming in the pool, watching movies in the student union and exercising in the gym.

“It’s like a floating dorm,” Schlather said.

kvolkmann@baltimoreexaminer.com

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2:24 PM MST on Mon., Nov. 10, 2008 re: "BCCC targets black males for enrollment"

Examiner Reader said:
do u know if everything is true

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2:23 PM MST on Mon., Nov. 10, 2008 re: "Sign language at center of deaf culture"

Examiner Reader said:
cool

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2:16 PM MST on Tue., Jul. 29, 2008 re: "UM's business school ranks among best"

frogseayouye said:
look water glass german are deliver

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8:23 PM MST on Mon., Nov. 19, 2007 re: "Navigating a lucrative career"

Examiner Reader said:
Thier are two other companies in N.Y. harbor that offer school and a job.

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1:36 PM MST on Tue., Oct. 9, 2007 re: "Specializing in careers at technical schools"

Examiner Reader said:
These schools do not educate folks with degrees adequate for many BRAC jobs

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5:32 AM MST on Mon., Sep. 10, 2007 re: "UMES a model of diversity"

Examiner Reader said:
Please note that Judge Clifton Gordy is a Associte Judge in the Circuit Court for BALTIMORE CITY not Baltimore County.

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4:29 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 4, 2007 re: "Two centuries at the heart of Baltimore"

Q & A said:
Answer: Mudd, Mikulsi, and O'Malley. Question: Name three rteasons not to attend the U of Md.

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2:02 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 4, 2007 re: "Two centuries at the heart of Baltimore"

Julie Evans, University of Maryland, Baltimore said:
In your facts about UMB, you left out the majority of the students (4,837) on campus which are in graduate and professional degree programs: Physicians 621 Pharmacists 480 Dentists 456 Social Workers 840 Lawyers 830 Nurses 788 Physical therapists 194 Other graduate (PhDs) 628

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6:08 AM MST on Sat., Jun. 23, 2007 re: "BCCC targets black males for enrollment"

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i think it is great hoping for nothing but success

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