Welcome Rotarian!
E-Clubs offer the option to fulfill the Rotary Club requirements for meeting attendance by attending online meetings or otherwise spending time on our site and participating in the discussions. We have articles pertinent to Rotary works below to facilitate discussion. Our meetings and make-up meetings are open to all Rotarians and visitors are welcome!
Make-Up meetings take about 30 minutes to complete and involves 3 steps.
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Please enjoy make-up meeting articles below, and let us know you completed Rotary meeting requirements by leaving a few words in the COMMENT AREA below the articles. Rotary International's Manual of Procedures requires Rotarians to enjoy at least 30 minutes surfing an E-Club's website to qualify for meeting attendance.
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Once you are logged in, website will display a [GET YOUR MAKE UP MEETING COMPLETION CERTIFICATE] button below each article. Once you have fulfilled your make-up meeting requirements, please press the button to generate your Make-Up Meeting Certificate. These can be printed or e-mailed to your club secretary as proof of your attendance.
Make Up Meeting Articles
Running Towards Chaos
We recently attended a conference for our work and heard an amazing keynote speech by Dr. Natalie Stavas. Dr. Stavas is a Harvard trained pediatrician who happened to be running the Boston marathon at the time of the terrorist attack. She was fortunately away from the bomb explosions in the finish line, and she made […]
Teaching for Mastery
In this week’s article, Khan Academy founder Sal Khan discusses teaching for mastery, not test scores. Historically in the West, education was imparted through a liberal arts education process. A tutor, or a set of tutors, were tasked with teaching a single student, which started with a review of the classics – Plato, Homer, etc […]
Schooling for all types of intelligence
Nobody can say what the world will look like in 5 years, much less in 65 years. However, children born this year will be retiring in 2071, and soon they will enter schools expected to prepare them for this future. In a past article, we discussed the jobs that will be lost in the future. […]
Future of commerce over the internet
This week, we have two make-up articles. I realize not everybody visiting an online service club might be interested in long articles about managing Todo lists, and we’ve had two in a row, so we’ll have another article about transactions online – which, as a Rotary E-Club, has much more relevance to our service. The […]
Applying the Getting Things Done (GTD) Method on the computer with a TXT file
This week’s article is a second in a series of articles about personal productivity. In a GTD workflow, all the “stuff” in the InBox gets processed into one of 7 destinations – Trash – for things that require no action and hold no value as reference (ex. junk mail) Someday/Maybe – for things you might […]
Introduction to Getting Things Done (GTD) Productivity System
We briefly introduced the GTD system in a previous make up article with a video of a presentation given to Google employees by GTD system creator David Allen. As Rotarians, keeping up with our obligations is a core principle and a requirement. Hopefully, we exercise some control over what is allowed to demand our attention, […]
The jobs that will be lost to machines
This week’s make up article is about the future of work and the changes that will be brought on by machine automation and computerization. Here’s a video about it by Anthony Goldbloom for TED. If you’re not up for watching the video, there is a digest/summary below the video. Famed economist John Maynard Keynes […]
How to make an effective video promoting your cause!
Being an E-Club, our Rotary Club exists mostly on the web. While this represents many challenges, it is also a great opportunity – to reach a broader audience anytime and anywhere. One of the ways a particular Rotary cause can be promoted is through the multitude of video sharing services like Youtube and Vimeo, which […]
Increasing agricultural output in an environmentally responsible way
This week’s discussion article focuses on increasing agricultural output without significantly increasing the carbon footprint of agriculture. Currently, modern agriculture needs to increase its output by 70% to meet the nutritional demands of the growing earth population, which will become 10 billion by 2050, from 7 billion people we have currently in 2016. This week’s […]
Effect of Urban Planning on Conflict
This week’s article focuses on the TED talk given by Syrian architect Marwa Al-Sabouni, about the architecture and urban planning in Syria laid the foundation for the current, brutal civil war.