缅北强奸 MD/MBA candidate juggles medical studies, Action Canada fellowship
For a 25-year-old student, Jordan Isenberg has built quite a resume.
He has earned a BSc in biology and an MSc in ocular pathology at 缅北强奸. Along the way, he studied eye parasites in Brazil, served as a UN technical advisor on climate change to the Republic of Guatemala, and developed economic models to reduce carbon emissions by discouraging tropical deforestation. Those models figured in the 2009 Copenhagen accord on climate change.
Now into the second year of 缅北强奸's joint MD/MBA program, Isenberg already has completed his MBA work at Desautels - including a thesis on reducing hospital greenhouse-gas emissions - and has moved on to the four-year program of medical studies, with an eye to eventually practicing emergency medicine.
So it's not all that surprising that he was one of 17 outstanding young Canadians selected last spring as Action Canada fellows for 2011-2012. The 11-month program, funded through private and public support, seeks to enhance participants' leadership skills and enrich their understanding of the country through a series of working conferences in communities across Canada.
For Isenberg, who grew up in Montreal, the fellowship has provided some eye-opening experiences. Over the past seven months, he and the other fellows have met with community leaders and stakeholders to learn about business and economic-development issues and concerns in places from British Columbia to Labrador.
In June, for example, the group met the day after the Stanley Cup riots with Vancouver city council members, condo developers and housing-group activists - all in the same room - to discuss questions facing the city. They also walked around the Downtown Eastside and saw projects underway in that area, known for high rates of poverty and drug use.
More recently, the fellows visited Labrador, staying in Goose Bay for a couple of nights before flying on to the northernmost town of Nain. They met with stakeholders ranging from a church choir group and Inuit leaders to representatives of mining giant Alcan.
Read full article: , November 3, 2011