Summit on Human Dignity

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Jim Keady’s “Behind the Swoosh” Presentation

The PowerPoint presentation the Mr. Keady used during his presentation is now available online here, including all the contact information and recommended steps to getting involved.

Behind the Swoosh


Cord Motor Company. Jack’s Fifth Avenue, & Westward Bank all expected to announce massive layoffs today

The above three companies are currently experiencing major financial issues and are currently in full cost-protective measures. In fact, Cord Motor Company is expected to declare bankruptcy as soon as tomorrow.

-AMDG 13 Daily Stock Market Summary


Summit Field Trip This Friday!!!!

Summit Fieldtrip this Friday!
Join Ms. Gallagher, Mr. Cullen and Mrs. Baldwin for a visit to the Macehualli Day Labor Center http://centromacehualli.org/Home_Page.html for our 1st Summit Fieldtrip this Friday!  We will leave right after school and be back no later than 4:30pm.  Lunch included!  All students wanting to go must have a permission to travel form.  Pick one up in the OFJ.  Space is limited so stop by the OFJ today!

What do you think about the Summit?  let us know on the Summit website blog!
All students are encouraged to visit the Summit website (www.brophyprep.org/summit/globalization) and participate in the Summit blog.  Reflect on your experience of the Summit so far, or leave your thoughts on what economics and globalization are all about.  Or just check it out to see what other students and faculty have to say.  www.brophyprep.org/summit/globalization


Workshop Day: What Worked and What Didn’t

Any discussion about Workshop Day is inherently difficult — 36 different speakers were on campus and each of us only had the chance to see 3 of them.

At least 900 of you will experience another Summit, so without getting into speaker specifics, thoughts on what types of workshop speakers were appealing and which speakers weren’t? Don’t think about what they actually said… instead, respond to their speaking styles and the methods they used in presenting. Did you prefer workshop speakers who relied on Powerpoint? Did you think a workshop in which a video was showed was a waste of time — is watching a video something you can do whenever you want, or did you appreciate watching it in the workshop context?

Let us know what you think!


The AMDG 13 Stock Market (Based off of Job Fair Companies)

is now up! It is under the activities tab. Make sure you check it daily to see how your employer is faring in the AMDG 13 Stock Market.


An Important Question

To everyone to debate…

A major question that affects both economics and globalization and is one of the hotter issues in world trade today…

Is free trade or fair trade the answer to ending corporate exploitation?  Or, is there an even more viable option out there?


Workshop Day

Hello everyone,

I attended some great workshops today, and was quite grateful of the caliber of speakers willing to present.  Clint Hickman from Hickman Eggs was my favorite.

Here are two thoughts of mine so far that I would love to see some replies containing your thoughts on:

During today’s opening talk, the contentious topic of global warming was brought up during Mr. Perkin’s discussion.  Whether or not you agree with various points in it, would we all benefit from less pollution?  For example…do any of you have family members with asthma or other breathing conditions where this is an issue?  How might air pollution lead to poor drinking water quality and an increased cost to purify it?

Fr. Doug Marcoullierbrought up an interesting argument regarding Texas being pro-immigration during the Governor Bush days because of a shift toward local services and sales tax vs. California’s then anti-immigration sentiments maybe due to government service and income tax.   Any thoughts, either in support or dissent?

-Mr. Kolb


Mission Statement

Room at the Table:

Globalization, Economic Justice and Human Dignity

A Forum to Examine Economics and Globalization in Light of Our Gospel Call to Respect and Promote the Human Dignity of Each Person.

Summits like this are frequent occurrences at universities and colleges around the world; oftentimes the goal of these summits is to bring influential voices together to effect change in policy, procedure and the world in which we live. These summits serve as an immersion experience through which students are asked to reflect on how their faith calls them to respond to a complicated world.  While we realize the majority of our students are not yet of voting age, we nonetheless recognize their capacity for change as young people who are in formation.  And so, it is Brophy’s hope that our annual summit might contribute to the formation of our students such that they become young men of conscience and conviction, willing to stand up against a culture that too often values expediency and efficiency at the expense of human dignity. Ultimately, Brophy hopes to graduate young men who will one day participate in summits at colleges and universities, young men who will have voices that can positively influence real change in policy, procedure, and the world in which we live.

Summit 2010: Mission Statement

Economic growth and globalization touch individuals on local, national, and global scales. In light of this reach, the Brophy community seeks to examine the deeper reality and impact such globalization has on peoples and communities. Students will be challenged to consider how globalization affects the dignity and rights of the human person in the present and into the future, with particular attention paid to the effects of globalization on the poor. Issues such as un-contained economic growth, socio-economic injustice, trade issues and agreements, government policies, cultural globalization, and the ethics of economics will be primary areas of concern addressed by Summit speakers and explored further in Summit workshops and classroom discussions.

In addition, we will explore and celebrate efforts being made by individuals, organizations, and corporations around the world who have successfully implemented economic practices that promote the dignity of the human person and the environment in a just and sustainable way.  We will look to them to give witness to what Pope John Paul II calls “the possibility of authentic development of the human person” through a globalization that is grounded in justice and sustainability.

In light of the complexities of globalization and the questions they elicit, students will be invited to consider four primary questions: What is globalization anyway? What’s globalization got to do with me and with others? What is the goal of globalization and, how is that vision brought to life? And finally, what is my personal responsibility as a member of the global community?  It is Brophy’s hope that through this educational experience we might come to view globalization not merely as a political issue, but more importantly as one of human dignity that affects people’s lives in concrete ways.

Meaningful learning should cause discomfort. This year’s summit offers a forum to raise the consciousness of our community about the effects of globalization on individuals and families as well as local, national and international communities so that we may emerge from the 2010 Summit on Human Dignity with an unwavering commitment to just and sustainable economic growth. It is hoped that we can begin to acknowledge our inner voices, come to understand our discomfort, and begin to engage and transform our world—a world still waiting to hear our much needed voices.