San Diego Events Calendar – November 2016 to January 2017

SeaWorld

November

Mother Goose ParadeNov. 20
Mother Goose Parade
The largest parade in San Diego County takes place in the East County city of El Cajon and features celebrities, floats, clowns, bands, equestrians, and more.

SeaWorldNow-January 1
SeaWorld’s Christmas Celebration
The theme park features Santa’s Reindeer, sea lions, snow, a nightly lighting of Christmas tree lights, the Christmas Village, and much more.

December

Balboa Park December NightsDec. 2 and 3
Balboa Park December Nights
This annual event brings families and friends together to spread holiday joy, learn more about the cultural value of Balboa Park, and kick off the “most wonderful time of the year.”

La Jolla Christmas Parade and Holiday FestivalDec. 4
La Jolla Christmas Parade and Holiday Festival
Marching bands, floats, equestrians, vintage automobiles, and more parade down the streets of La Jolla. The parade ends with a holiday festival featuring craft booths, carnival rides, food, entertainment, and a tree lighting ceremony.

California Ballet Company: The NutcrackerDec. 10-11 and 16-24
Nutcracker
Audiences of all ages will enjoy the magical story of Clara, who dreams that her new toy nutcracker soldier has come to life, in this classic ballet at the San Diego Civic Theater.

Mission Bay - Parade of LightsDec. 11 and Dec. 18
45th annual San Diego Bay Parade of Lights
More than 80 boats are decorated for this holiday boat parade of lights on San Diego Bay. This year’s theme is “It Began with a Roar – San Diego Zoo Celebrates 100 Years.” The Parade proceeds from Shelter Island past Harbor Island, the Embarcadero, Seaport Village, the new Pier and then across the bay to Coronado and Ferry Landing in Coronado.

Port of San Diego Big Bay Balloon ParadeDec. 27
Port of San Diego Big Bay Balloon Parade
A harborside parade along Harbor Drive in downtown San Diego is followed by a major college football bowl game at Qualcomm Stadium in Mission Valley featuring teams from the Pac 12 and Big Ten conferences. The exciting gridiron action also has spectacular pregame and halftime pageantry.

Whale WatchingNovember-April
Whale Watching
The California gray whales make their annual migration from the Arctic waters to the warm lagoons in the Gulf of California for breeding. These peaceful giants of the sea come within miles of San Diego’s coastline and can be viewed during daily whale watching excursions and from the Cabrillo National Monument on Point Loma.

January

San Diego International Auto ShowDec. 29-Jan. 2
San Diego International Auto Show
This popular annual show at the San Diego Convention Center features the widest variety of new vehicles under one roof. Visitors can also participate in exciting family entertainment and interactive activities.

Borrego Springs Film FestivalJan. 12-16
Borrego Springs Film Festival
The festival features five days of independent films. Networking events and parties take place at various local resorts throughout the weekend.

Feature Story – Comic-Con International: San Diego

Comic-Con International: San Diego

Comic-Con International: San DiegoComic-Con International: San Diego, the most popular annual event in town, will take place July 21-24 at the San Diego Convention Center. This multi-genre entertainment and comic convention offers close to 700 special events featuring comics and all aspects of the popular arts.

Each year, the 130,000 visitors’ badges sell out in a matter of minutes online. Forbes magazine refers to Comic-Con as “the largest convention of its kind in the world,” and “the granddaddy of pop culture festivals in the U.S.”

Much of the excitement comes from the guests, who dress as their favorite fictional characters, called cosplaying. Visitors have been known to dress up as characters from Star Wars, Game of Thrones, Batman, Avatar, The Walking Dead, and numerous comic book personalities, among others.

Comic-Con is used by many film studios, comics publishers, and other entertainment companies to preview or announce new movies, series, or other types of comic-related products, such as toys. As examples at this year’s convention, Mattel is showing off its “Ghostbusters” Light & Sound pack and Wonder Woman Barbie, while Diamond Comic Distributors will offer more than 25 previews of its exclusive comic covers and new toys.

Annual events include an eclectic film program, screening rooms devoted to Japanese animation, and more than 300 hours of programming that cover all aspects of comic books and pop culture. At night, there are awards ceremonies, the annual masquerade costume contest, and an international film festival showcasing movies that creators are still hoping to have picked up by the entertainment industry. There is also a celebrity autograph area.

Comic-Con started as the one-day San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Minicon, on March 21, 1970, drawing 100 people. The event was designed to raise funds and generate interest for a larger convention. Soon thereafter, an event called San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Con was held August 1-3, 1970, with more than 300 attendees.

After one more name change (San Diego’s West Coast Comic Convention in 1972), the show officially became the San Diego Comic-Con in 1973. The nonprofit event changed its name to Comic-Con International: San Diego in 1995.

Because Comic-Con attracts 100,000-plus visitors annually, it has grown to include satellite locations such as local hotels and outdoor parks. Programming events, games, anime, and the Comic-Con International Independent Film Festival all take place outside of the Convention Center, making downtown the happening place in San Diego during Comic-Con.

Since space is maxed out in San Diego, other cities have tried to take Comic-Con away from the city. However, Comic-Con recently signed a contract to stay in San Diego through 2018.

Feature Story – San Diego State University Campus Events

Cox Arena Basketball at SDSU

Cox Arena Basketball at SDSUThere are many outstanding events on the San Diego State University campus that are open to students from the American Language Institute (ALI).

The 12,000-seat Viejas Arena hosts events from concerts to comedies, along with the SDSU men’s basketball team, which is traditionally among the top teams in America.

Recording artist Toby Mac performed at the arena Feb. 28, and comedian Jeff Dunham brings his act March 12. English singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Ellie Goulding performs on stage April 23. Famous singer and songwriter Rihanna will perform at Viejas Arena on May 9.

SDSU’s basketball team plays 16 home games from mid-November until its final regular season game March 5 against its top rival from the University of Nevada Las Vegas. The Aztecs have been among the top 16 teams out of more than 350 in the nation twice in the last five years.

The SDSU Theater features student work in state-of-the-art facilities. Spring events are: Best of the Best Film Fest, Feb. 11-12; The Drowsy Chaperone, March 4-13; The Big Friendly Giant, April 22-May 1; and Emerging Filmmakers Showcase, May 11.

The Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theater is a great place to watch concerts under the stars primarily during the summer months. The schedule includes: Walk the Moon, May 26; Halsey, July 16; Shawn Mendes, July 23; and Ray Lamontagne, Sept. 13.

Arts Alive SDSU promotes ongoing events on campus. Among the activities are jewelry and metalwork displays, an energy forum, world music series, SDSU opera, and SDSU symphony.

The Tony Gwynn Baseball Classic took place Feb. 26-28 in honor of the former SDSU baseball coach, who died almost two years ago and is a member of the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame. Universities entered include SDSU, Bryant, Kentucky, Santa Barbara, San Diego, Nebraska, Tulane, and Arizona.

All in all, there are plenty of activities and events to keep ALI students busy on the SDSU campus.

 

Program Spotlight: Social Entrepreneurship Students Hold Fundraiser to Help People Worldwide

Social Entrepreneurship Fundraiser

Social Entrepreneurship FundraiserAccording to Paloma Gouveia, “the thing we need most now in the world is compassion.”

A Brazilian student in the groundbreaking Social Entrepreneurship (SE) certificate program at SDSU’s American Language Institute, she was among 20 classmates who spread compassion during the summer semester.

Through the selling of Compassion It bracelets, the SE students raised $1,000 to help the following individuals make their dreams become reality:

  • A farming woman in Armenia growing fruits and vegetables
  • A single mother in Colombia developing her own clothing shop
  • A fisherman in the Philippines buying additional nets and accessories for his boat
  • A woman in Kenya purchasing a dairy cow

“If I explain to someone what social entrepreneurship is, I will use the Compassion It fundraiser as a perfect example,” Gouveia said. “You care about others, think about good actions, and share all the love you have. In doing so, you help others live their lives in a better way.”

Sara Schairer, founder of San Diego-based Compassion It, provided the bracelets at a reduced cost for the SE students’ fundraiser. Her organization is a nonprofit global-social movement that inspires compassionate actions and attitudes.

The Compassion It bracelets are intended primarily for fundraisers. At an affordable cost, communities, schools, businesses, and even families can raise money using the bracelets,  influence positive behaviors through a pass-it-on ripple effect, and have an impact of peace and mindfulness that affects everyone.

All money for the initial purchase of wristbands is recycled back into Compassion It operations and programs, including compassion education, communication efforts, and, of course, producing more wristbands that will travel the globe.

The four gifts provided by the SE fundraiser were made possible through Kiva, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to connect people through lending to help alleviate poverty. Kiva enables individuals to lend as little as $25 to create opportunity around the world.

Students participating in the SE fundraiser were from Brazil, Columbia, Italy, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Taiwan, and Turkey.

The Compassion It bracelets were black on one side and white on the other. Students began the day with the bracelet showing its black side. Once they performed a compassionate act, they would flip their bracelet from black to white. Compassionate acts included volunteering, providing food/money to a homeless person, helping an elderly person across the street, placing coins in a parking meter that was almost expired, sending someone flowers, and taking a fellow classmate to the airport, among other things.

“In the history of mankind, too many people just answer the world’s problems by saying, ‘who cares?’” noted Italian student Matteo Marchisio. “Now, social entrepreneurship gives a possible way to stop this thinking.”

Kelly Shah, ALI social entrepreneurship program director, said the summer fundraiser took place for several reasons: providing students with social involvement, practicing English with a purpose, the business aspect of learning to pitch an idea, and having a real-life occurrence.

“We were looking for something outside of the classroom to provide a great experience for our students,” she said.

The SE program focuses on creating businesses that solve social problems. A prime example is TOMS Shoes, which matches every pair of shoes purchased with a pair of new shoes for a person in need.

Students are each creating a project along social entrepreneurship lines. For instance, Gouveia enjoys photography and is putting together a website to sell her photos, with part of the profit being donated to animal institutions and zoos. Marchisio has developed a plan to sell a sci-fi book he has written with a portion of the income being donated to a foundation focused on fighting illiteracy.

“I studied TOMS Shoes and really appreciated the organization’s attempt to help people,” he said. “I am trying to fight a social disadvantage and help people who need it.”

Program Spotlight – Fulbright Preacademic Training Program

Fulbright Program

Fulbright ProgramTo “increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries” the U.S. government created the Fulbright Program – an international educational exchange. Since its inception in 1946, over 310,000 students­ (chosen because of their leadership and academic standing) study, teach, research, and exchange ideas at universities around the world.

One of those universities, San Diego State University, also hosts the Fulbright Preacademic Training Program at the American Language Institute. The three-week program provides Fulbright grantees with a combination of U.S. academic culture orientation, English language training and field-of-study preparation, and accordingly the skills needed for academic study at U.S. institutions of higher education. The program is also designed to provide a basic understanding of current issues in U.S. society and assist Fulbright grantees in developing an understanding of U.S. social values, which is necessary for successful intercultural communication in their host communities. Fulbright programs are intended to promote not only students’ professional development but also a mutual understanding among all peoples.

Program Specifics

  • Three weeks
  • All students stay in the same residential hotel. That helps them bond almost immediately.  They take public transportation to and from campus, thus learning to navigate that system.
  • The English refinement portion of the program consists of speaking, listening and writing lessons in the mornings.  We also schedule a library tour and computer application instruction.
  • Afternoon sessions consist of SDSU faculty lectures on topics such as the U.S. economy, cultural diversity in the U.S., the role of the media and an overview of social media and mobile applications, everyday geographies in a multicultural neighborhood, etc.; a grad/SDSU Fulbright student panel to alleviate some of the students’ fears about what they’re about to encounter; a volunteer opportunity at a local public library and science summer camp.
  • Various fieldtrips (to Coronado via ferry, SeaWorld, Disneyland) and a city tour expose the students to Southern California and help them connect with each other outside the academic environment.
  • A two-day, two-night homestay allows them to experience American family life first-hand.
  • All expenses (room, board, small allowance for incidentals and post-program travel) are paid for through the Fulbright Preacademic Program. During the week students buy breakfast and lunch on campus with a meal plan just like other SDSU students, and for evening and weekend meals they are given a cash allowance.

Fulbright Facts

  • Program was named after its sponsor, U.S. Senator James William Fulbright
  • It’s one of the most prestigious award programs in the world
  • There are 144 countries involved in program
  • More Fulbright alumni have won Nobel Prizes than those of any other academic program

 

Famous Fulbright Scholars

  • Samuel L. Kountz
  • Thomas R. Pickering
  • John Lithgow
  • Hedwig Gorski
  • Sylvia Plath
  • Boutros Boutros-Ghali
  • Charles Kennedy
  • Renée Fleming
  • Joseph Heller

For more information, see ali.sdsu.edu/fulbright