Though I wrote these words eight years ago, I don't think the concerns of sports moms have changed all that much and that what I said
then largely still hold true today, although I think, if I were to update the list of concerns, I would probably add two more: fifth, that mothers want a more inclusive youth sports experience that is affordable to all families, regardless of socio - economic status or whether they live in a wealthy suburb or an economically disadvantaged inner city
neighborhood, and sixth, that mothers want a better balance between sports and family life (a problem I
explored in the book and on these pages, but that, if anything, has gotten worse, not better, in the last eight years).
Students
explore the impact of a plan to locate a new industry in a low - income
neighborhood,
then take on the roles of community members, business executives, and city officials as they advocate for and against building a power plant in a low - income minority
neighborhood.
Imagine studying in Peru during the week,
then spending the weekend
exploring the Andes mountains in full living color — while your friends back home are looking out their apartment window at the tallest peak in the
neighborhood — a hill.
Watch a flamenco show in a Sacromonte cave in Granada, and
then explore the UNESCO World Heritage - listed
neighborhood of Albaicin on an evening walking tour.