Filters

Clear

Sunday, January 15, 2023

  • Prajna Meditation Club

    Sponsored by:
    Prajna Meditation Club
    Close your week off with a warm, calm feeling and a cup of chai in your hand, as we meditate and share gratitude at Scott Center at 46 South Street. No experience required, the more the merrier! Instantly best friends if you bring your own cup.

    (Private)

  • Green circle with a smaller circle of the world inside in green and white.  Outside the green circle are photos of enviornmental events

    Weekly Sunday Night Environmental Group Meeting

    Sunday Night Environmental Group (SNEG) is a non-hierarchical student org committed to climate and social justice activism. In the past we have pushed the college to divest from fossil fuels, passed anti-fossil fuel infrastructure resolutions in town, trained students on methods of non-violent direct action, occupied the statehouse, organized climate strikes, and so much more. We strive to ground our work in anti-racism, indigenous sovereignty, and community power.  All are welcome regardless of prior knowledge or experience.

    Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Monday, January 16, 2023

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

  • Wakeful Wednesdays

    Join Spiritual and Religious Life Dean Mark R. Orten for 20 minutes of quiet contemplation with reading and music for our times. Intentional silence and guided meditation will be interspersed with music and readings from secular worldviews and sacred traditions to open our awareness and to find strength and perspective for living during personal, political, racial, ecological and other upheavals.

    Middlebury Chapel

    Open to the Public
  • Taking a Leap with Novel Approaches to Teaching and Learning

    Join us for this lunch, panel discussion, and workshop with Julia Berazneva (Economics), Ellery Foutch (American Studies), Alex Lyford (Math), Alexis Mychajliw (Biology), and Greg Pask (Biology). Following a brief panel discussion about faculty’s experiences with teaching through play, project-based learning, research-based learning, and community-connected public humanities labs, participants will be able to meet with the panelists to discuss ideas for experimenting with their own instructional approaches.

    To see the full schedule and register see - go.middlebury.edu/cts.

    Davis Family Library Center for Teaching, Learning and Research

    Closed to the Public
  • Harm and Forgiveness in Restorative Justice

    As a highlight of a new course in “conflict transformation (CT) skills,” the CT Collaborative features sujatha baliga as a contributor to the Winter term, offering her expertise in the area of harm and forgiveness in restorative justice. sujatha baliga’s work is characterized by an equal dedication to crime survivors and people who’ve caused harm. A former victim advocate and public defender, baliga was awarded a Soros Justice Fellowship in 2008 which she used to launch a pre-charge restorative juvenile diversion program. sujatha earned her A.B. from Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges, her J.D.

    Dana Auditorium (Sunderland Language Center)

    Open to the Public