Category Archives: Area of Study

A Weekend at Google

My experience at Dublin’s Startup Weekend, sponsored by Google for Entrepreneurs and Up Global. Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2015, Dublin Institute of Technology, Technology | Leave a comment

No Ordinary House in the Mountains

Winding through the Wicklow Mountains with the sun glistening off the peaks of green shaded hilltops, I could not stop staring. Known as the “Garden of Ireland”, the landscape was glowing and nearly alive with the abundance of trees and … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2015, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Natural Resources | Leave a comment

Gone Fishing In Belfast

There’s just enough wind out of the east this morning that it’s making it difficult to cast. I’ve been out on the River Lagan for three hours already, and burned through half a can of worms. So far, I haven’t even … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2015, Natural Resources, Queen's University Belfast | Leave a comment

Disability and Development in Dublin

Ireland is known for many things. In the short few months that I’ve been here, I’ve found that its reputation for arts and culture, friendly people, beautiful scenery, and lively atmosphere is well deserved. Fewer people know that Ireland is … Continue reading

Posted in Development, Trinity College Dublin | Leave a comment

One Last Cast

I was exhausted. My arm burned from hundreds of futile casts. My feet ached from three days of stumbling on jagged rocks that on more than one occasion sliced up my hands. The violent, frigid waves continued to smash me, … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, Natural Resources, Uncategorized, University College Dublin | Leave a comment

The pivot back to the US

This year I had time to think and identify priorities. I demolished books on American politics, leadership, and history, and dabbled (mostly unsuccessfully) in a few ‘classics’. I spent a lot of time reading about the US military’s constant appetite … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, mathematics, University Limerick | Leave a comment

MATHletes

Fostering an emphasis on quality maths education is important for a variety of reasons. Math literacy promotes analytical thinking. Math is the language of science. Math, taught properly, encourages creativity and synthetic “outside-the-box” thinking. An emphasis on math, as part … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, mathematics, Trinity College Dublin | Leave a comment

Rough Transitions

The form that sat lifeless on my computer screen still managed to mock me in some subtle way. It symbolized the inevitable passing of time and the arrival of new things. My year in Ireland is coming to a close … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, University College Cork, US Military | Leave a comment

Social Enterprise, Community Development and Take-Home Lessons

Somehow, between my research interests and my project with DARD, I’ve become completely immersed in the world of social enterprise. A social enterprise is a business with primarily social objectives whose surpluses are principally reinvested for that purpose in the … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, Development, Queen's University Belfast | Leave a comment

Mitchells for Maths! A story of cross-class service

Last week, thanks to Midwest, Southeast, LMFM, and KFM, I got my 5 minutes of local Irish radio interview fame talking about the MATHletes Challenge 2014, my current project as Public Policy Advisor with SOSventures and the O’Sullivan Foundation. MATHletes … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2012, mathematics, Uncategorized, University College Cork | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Looking for Answers

Studying foreign policy and diplomacy as an American in a foreign country is complicated enough. Add in the minor detail that I am in the Navy and it becomes a whole new ballgame. For a lot of my classmates, I … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, University College Cork, US Military | Tagged | Leave a comment

Some Things I’ve Been Thinking About

When you think about it, math is pretty simple. I don’t mean to say that math is easy. “Simple,” rather, in a sort of ontological sense. Most of the basic formulas of mathematics are constructed from a remarkably small set … Continue reading

Posted in Class of 2014, mathematics, Trinity College Dublin | Leave a comment