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Meet Our
Faculty: Mr. Roberts
Mr. Roberts is the Lowell Whiteman School’s longest employed faculty member with more than four decades of teaching at the school to his credit.
LWS
Experience Video:
How big are you when Visa does a commercial of you and Morgan Freeman is the narrator? Really big - You're Johnny Spillane, Triple Silver Medal Olympian in Nordic Combined. We couldn't resist this video!
Foreign Travel
Teaching Beyond Borders
The Lowell Whiteman School’s Foreign Travel Program challenges students to broaden their global perspective and deepen their understanding of diverse cultures while they learn more about themselves.
During the school year, students begin learning about their destination country and planning their own trip with their leaders. The connection to academics happens gradually – students become engaged because they want to learn about where they are going.
We do not travel like tourists – but instead actively engage communities with a variety of meaningful interactions. For this reason, the journey of Foreign Trip, our experience of four weeks in-country, is much more significant that merely “visiting” a country.
It is a balance of adventure, education, cultural immersion, and opportunities for self-discovery.
Each year small groups, twelve students and two faculty guides, depart for one of five destinations. Their destinations range from Mongolia to Senegal to Bolivia and all of the trips are guided by principles of responsible travel. Faculty and student groups travel humbly and do so in order to learn more, striving to minimize any negative impacts on local communities or their environments.
LWS travel groups support local economies whenever possible and seek out meaningful interactions with the people of the communities they visit. All trips include homestays where students are immersed in a community. Students live, eat, and commune with local families. In addition, LWS groups engage in community service, typically working with community members on a project of their choosing. We value these experiences from play to work to daily living as opportunities to enhance our understanding of a broader world.
Students return from Foreign Trip having learned different lessons. While they have all expanded their worldview in some way, their experiences are uniquely their own. For some, the most significant experience will be communicating in a language they had only known in the classroom and building relationships with friends a world away. For others it is taking on the challenge of an adventure, a physically challenging homestay or high altitude trek. For many, it is a simple as removing themselves from their comfort zone and, faced with the unknown, cultivating a greater sense of their own abilities.
Whatever their story, students return knowing more about themselves and the world around them. By exploring the world and processing those experiences, they return to speak of their discoveries with both authority and a sense of awe. The adventure of Foreign Trip opens the door to an entirely new way of seeing the world and one’s place in it.
Students in Geography or Honors Environmental Geography complete interviews during foreign trip. They use their primary research interviews to compose coherent assessments of their experiences. A selection of these reports are available below.
Willow Fitzgerald, Class of 2010, reports from Sikkim, India in 2008
Anissa Corser, Class of 2010, reports from Mongolia in 2008