Fostering Creativity in the Next Generation: Options, Obstacles, and Opportunities

MEETING FOR THE WEEK OF DECEMBER 5, 2022

This Meeting at a Glance:

Program: Fostering Creativity in the Next Generation: Options, Obstacles, and Opportunities

Speaker: Brad Glosserman

Is this your first time to visit us? If so, welcome to our weekly online meeting! To complete our meeting, please continue reading from here to the bottom of this page. Each Monday our week’s meeting is posted early in the morning, U.S. Pacific Time. These meetings are designed so that you can read and watch what we post anytime during the week. The entire meeting takes about 60 minutes to complete, with the video conference recording of the program being the bulk of the time. Note that you can easily read this meeting with your favorite device, so feel free to take our meeting on the go with you. Please also make sure to complete the attendance form at the bottom and leave a comment. Enjoy!

To properly attend this meeting, please:

  1. Read and watch the content below in its entirety.

  2. Complete the attendance survey.

Everyone is also encouraged to leave a comment in the Disqus section at the bottom of the page.


Message from our President

Dear fellow members,

'Tis the Season!

We're already halfway through the Rotary year, and although making a New Year's Resolution can be a little premature, I'd like to suggest an earlier resolution for this coming month - Take a break and have fun with us!

As Rotarians, we understand the importance of contributing time, talent, and resources to making an impact. But I sometimes wonder whether we've forgotten how to enjoy ourselves while giving.

Although our club is entirely online, it is still a great place to have fun and make friends. Personally, committee work and our Coffee with a Rotarian program are two of my favorite ways to get to know my fellow club members while being productive and making a difference.

If you, like me, are interested in increasing our level of participation, take every opportunity to reach out to our members to set up a chat. Additionally, mark your calendars for our Annual Sister Club Holiday Party on December 18th, an event in collaboration with the Rotary E-Club of Hawaii! Did you know this is our third consecutive gathering? This means that we can officially call this holiday party a club tradition. It all began with the goal of strengthening our club's connection with our twin club in Hawaii, and look where we are today!

As we count down the days till 2023 and turn the page to a new year, it's hard not to think about the challenges we've faced and be thankful for each of you and your support over the past year. A big thank you to everyone who stepped in and helped, donated, or just showed up. The fruits of our hard work, resilience, and membership will definitely enable us to carry out impactful initiatives and projects.

I hope you all have a very Happy Holiday Season and wish you all the best for the New Year! Take time to relax and enjoy the festivities!

I look forward to all the good things we'll continue to do in 2023.

Yours in Service,

Angelica Marotta, PhD 

President 2022-2023 Rotary eClub of Silicon Valley 

Rotary International District 5170


Holiday Party

Be sure to let us know if you want to attend, and we will send you an invitation with the link. Always a lot of fun, and interesting to learn how we celebrate around the world. Hint: Ugly Christmas sweaters are a global thing - be sure to wear yours!


WEEKLY FUNNY WITH SHAGS

We believe laughter is an important part of life, and we should all make time to laugh a little. This segment of our meeting is meant to tickle you just enough. These funnies are curated by member Steven "Shags" Shagrin!

A Good Day at Work

As I walked into work my boss greeted me with, "Have a nice day."
I did. I turned around and went home.


INSPIRATION

Every week we share a short video highlighting innovation, education, entrepreneurship, or whatever we think might inspire you to see the world in new ways.

I like this story not just because it's a hopeful look at addressing what causes climate change, nor that it's a clever blend of marketing and entrepreneurism, nor even because it's a cool shout-out to Canada. It's all of these things, and also a story that should sing to a Rotarian - the decision to act on a possibility in order to make a difference.


LEARN SOMETHING NEW

How to Learn Faster with the Feynman Technique

If you want to cut your study time, using the Feynman Technique is a great way to do it. Named after the physicist Richard Feynman, it revolves around explaining a concept in simple language as if you were teaching it to someone else. In this video, Thomas Frank shows you exactly how to use the Feynman Technique.


SERVICE REPORT

Tell us about service you’ve done recently in your community.

Click here to fill out The Rotary eClub of Silicon Valley Service Survey


HAPPY DOLLARS: Do Good by Sharing Something Good

Each week we ask our members to share stories with the club and toss in a few dollars to support our efforts. The primary goal of this section is to provide a fun way of getting to know each fellow members and guests, while giving back to a good cause.

Happy dollars is an opportunity to share something positive that has happened in your life whether it is personal or business. Think of it as your opportunity to brag a little, but also put a little bit into a karma jar. The money donated through happy dollars is put to charitable use, and the message that you leave for happy dollars will be posted in our online meeting the following week for the entire week for folks to see! (Pending that it’s appropriate!)

Here are the happy dollars contributions from last week!

This section is usually updated in the early hours of Saturday, so contributions made over the weekend may not be listed here.

Rory Olsen made a $20 donation.
We have had everything happen this week. Despite it all, everything is okay.

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PROGRAM: Fostering Creativity in the Next Generation: Options, Obstacles, and Opportunities

SPEAKER: Brad Glosserman

Every week we bring to you a new program on innovation, entrepreneurship, and education, and how those contribute to service to others.

The Rotary eClub of Silicon Valley seeks to explore perspectives on service from across the world. The views of the speakers in our programs are their own, and unless stated otherwise, are not necessarily reflective of the views of our eClub nor Rotary International.

If you have an idea for a cool speaker, please feel free to reach out to them directly or submit THIS FORM so our Program Committee can contact them!

Brad Glosserman is Deputy Director of and Visiting Professor at the Center for Rule-making Strategies, Tama University. He is also a Senior Adviser (nonresident) at Pacific Forum, in Honolulu, where he served for 13 years (2004-2017) as executive director.

Today, Brad will discuss one of the original and premier mentoring programs of young leaders in the Asia Pacific. The Pacific Forum Young Leaders Program, originally focused on the next generation of Asia Pacific leaders has since become global, and aims to nurture creativity and innovation in the field of foreign relations. We'll look at lessons he has learned in the fifteen years he ran that program.

Brad is the author of Peak Japan: The End of Grand Ambitions (Georgetown University Press, 2019; a Korean edition was released in 2020 by Korean Copyright Center) and co-author (with Scott Snyder) of The Japan-South Korea Identity Clash (Columbia University Press 2015). He is the editor, with Tae-hyo Kim, of The Future of U.S.-Korea-Japan Relations: Balancing Values and Interests (CSIS, 2004). He is also the English-language managing editor of the journal of the New Asia Research Institute (NARI) in Seoul. A frequent participant in State Department visiting lecture programs and the US Navy’s Regional Security Education Program, he speaks at conferences, research institutes and universities around the world. His commentary regularly appears in media around the globe. He has written dozens of monographs and articles on US foreign policy and Asian security relations and has contributed numerous chapters to books on regional security. He is completing a manuscript on the geopolitical intersection of national security and high technology. For 10 years, Brad was a member of the editorial board of The Japan Times and continues to serve as a contributing editor. He now writes a weekly column on geopolitics and technology for the paper. An adjunct lecturer at the Management Center of Innsbruck (MCI), Brad has a JD from the George Washington University National Law Center, an MA from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and a BA from Reed College.

Brad is just finishing a new book on the "new national security economy," which covers geopolitical competition and how it intersects with emerging technologies.

Members and guests, please welcome Brad Glosserman!


UPCOMING PROGRAM RECORDING SCHEDULE

All of our guest speakers and programs are recorded live online over Zoom video conference. We welcome members and guests to join us in one of these upcoming recordings. Recordings are approximately 30 minutes long and are subject to change without notice.

Our online video conference room link for these recordings is always http://zoom.siliconvalleyrotary.com/. You are welcome to join us! Please note the timezone listed for all recordings is US Pacific Time (San Francisco, California, USA).

If you can’t join the live recording, please send your questions for an upcoming speaker to programs@siliconvalleyrotary.com.


THE ATTENDANCE SURVEY

Thanks for reading and watching this week’s meeting. You have two last things to do before you’re done.

We have a very short attendance survey below for you to fill out to record your attendance.

Visiting Rotarians, this is how you can get an email receipt to pass along to your club’s secretary as proof that you’ve attended our meeting if you need it for makeups.

Non-Rotarian Guests, we would love to see who is dropping by our meetings! This part is optional for you. If you think you may want to join our eClub at some point in the future, we would strongly recommend you fill out the attendance form as it will improve your chances of success for your membership application.

For all members and guests — we strongly recommend and ask that you leave a comment in our comments area below. Tell us how you enjoyed the program. Ask this week’s speaker any questions you might have. Or just stop by and say hello and tell us where you’re from!

Important: Once you submit the Attendance Survey below, please make sure you see the confirmation message. If you get an error message instead, please try the 'submit' button again, and if that doesn't work, please refresh the page and fill out the form again. Thanks!

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