The Mission in the World

The mission in the world

The primary outcome of the UWC-USA student experience is to help them become the kinds of changemakers and global activists who leave Montezuma behind bringing with them the skills, values, and experiences that make them powerful forces for justice and peace in the world.

"A UWC education is not an end in itself, but is designed to inspire and equip students with the skills they need to seek personal and communal fulfillment, to be mindful of the needs of others, and to become activists for a more peaceful and sustainable world."

WAYS TO GIVE

One of UWC’s unique features is its network of over 150 national committees around the world. The national committees select the students for our schools and colleges reaching out to their local communities and engaging with young people in their country and territory. Through the outreach and selection work done by the UWC national committees, an UWC education can be granted to students of diverse backgrounds and independent of their ability to pay.

Supporting scholarships and programs at UWC-USA provides opportunities for over 200 students from over 90 countries to learn how to build collaborative teams with students from deeply different backgrounds. UWC-USA alumni take what they’ve learned in Montezuma and apply it with new collaborators in their home communities to address the most challenging issues we face.

“The virtue and the strength of UWC is that it provides small, but powerful cells of innovation, catalysts for change, breaking barriers of habit and opening broader vistas of experience for both pupils and educationalists.”

88%

of students rely on scholarship assistance

$77K

cost of a two-year education at UWC-USA

$0

how much government funding we receive

81%

of operating budget funded through philanthropy

The Mission in the World

UWC-USA students spend two intensive years together in Montezuma preparing to live the UWC mission in their communities around the world. Our donors support our students and programs because they believe that UWC alumni are the changemakers the world most needs right now.

Highlights

UWC-USA’s 7000 alumni are members of the 75000 member UWC community – a community dedicated to building bridges between people and cultures. Our alumni are the changemakers in schools, communities, neighborhoods, NGOs, and industries consistently deploying their skills and values in the interest of a more sustainable and peaceful world.

Thomas Schwingeler

’86

Thomas Schwingeler ’86 is a pragmatic man who likes to plan ahead. For example, he already has a will prepared—perhaps not typical for a guy in his late 40s who spends his free time fly-fishing, but a practical step for someone who likes to have his affairs in place.

In crafting his will, Thomas made sure his family would be taken care of, but he felt there was room for more beneficiaries. And so he decided to include UWC-USA.

“Being away from home, on your own, in such a beautiful physical setting with people from different backgrounds and similar enthusiasm and interests was perfect,” he says about his UWC-USA days. “I feel those two years were the best years of my life.”

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An outdoor enthusiast, Thomas found his place in the Wilderness Program. “It appealed to me because it gave me the opportunity to gain confidence and learn my limits, all in stunning natural settings. It was character-forming and enriching.”

Thomas credits UWC-USA with giving him the opportunities and experiences that have shaped his adult life. Indeed, the combination of fond memories and the life-long impact of his UWC-USA experience were key factors in his decision to make a planned gift. “UWC-USA changed my life,” Thomas says simply.

Morgante Pell

’12

While still a student at UWC-USA, Morgante Pell ’12 did something bold: He issued an Annual Fund challenge to his peers. By encouraging his classmates to pay it forward early in their lives, Morgante helped plant the seeds of lifelong giving.

The genesis of his class challenge was an inspiring encounter in Montezuma. “I was on Student Council and met Sebastien de Halleux ’96, who encouraged me to get involved with giving back by thinking of my scholarship as more of a zero-interest loan,” Morgante says.

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Morgante’s challenge was successful: Fifty-five members of the class of 2012 gave to the Annual Fund, a very high level of giving for a class in their second year. Their achievement proved that giving early in life fosters enduring giving habits; in 2013, the class of 2012’s class participation rate for the Annual Fund was higher than more than half of all UWC-USA’s graduating classes. Morgante’s passion for giving back doesn’t end at traditional philanthropy. His life goal, he says, is to integrate UWC-USA values with technology to make positive change. “Attending UWC is a transformational experience—allowing one to develop a vision for life and build the skills to fulfill it,” he explains.

Helenty Homans

Helenty Homans’ involvement with UWC-USA was inspired in part by a trip to the Holy Land where she and her granddaughter witnessed the stark and inhumane conditions created by the Arab-Israeli conflict. In response, Helenty established an endowed scholarship in 2007 for the perpetual support of young people from both Israel and Palestine to attend UWC-USA. Every two years, one new student from Israel and one new student from Palestine arrive in Montezuma as Helenty Homans Scholars.

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Helenty sees tremendous value in bringing together young people who have grown up on opposite sides of the conflict. On a recent personal visit to her home near Santa Fe, one of the scholars, a young Palestinian woman, described how she handled an interaction with an Israeli student who had talked about the conflict with Palestinians in highly aggressive terms. After some friction, the Palestinian student and the Israeli student were able to discuss the conflict constructively and find some common ground. “That gives me hope,” Helenty says. “The idea of the United World College is important: training young people from all over the world to be new leaders, allowing them to listen and get to know each other, helping them to talk to each other. I see the world falling apart right now, but these young people are our potential and the world’s next generation.”

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