Loading...

4th Annual John & Mary Pappajohn Business Plan Awards

On Tuesday, June 6, 2017, the ACT- American College of Thessaloniki hosted the Awards Ceremony for the winners of the 4th Annual «John and Mary Pappajohn Business Plan Competition».  Organized by Anatolia School of Business of ACT, this year's competition saw 100 applicants from which the five winning teams were chosen. Each team received an award of 4,000 euros to help it further develop its business concepts.

The winning teams are:

Oviview:  The digital pre-interviewing platform offers the chance for easy and quick initial screening of candidates using cameras to record each interview. It also offers easy access to applicant’s profile making the whole interviewing process simpler, cheaper and more objective.  

Gagoo:  A peer-to-peer betting platform where users can challenge their friends. The award from John and Mary Pappajohn Business Plan Competition will be used to engage partners for front-end development and graphic design. The team’s plan is to complete a minimum viable product by the end of summer.

Loceye:  The team has a vision to bring in the market the first eye tracking software with no extra dependencies than a regular web camera. Its goal is to help every UX researcher, designer, web-developer, cognitive psychologist and marketer to conduct their own studies, without the need of external equipment and confusing user interfaces. 

Avaris:  It is a retail solutions company that specializes in optimizing RFID technology for versatile usage in retail stores. Avaris’ mission is to deliver a product that elevates consumer’s in-store experience while also allowing retailers to reach new heights of efficiency and security."

Luminoid Lighting:  It is an effect lighting company headquartered in Boston, MA.  It aims to make lighting effects easy to use and accessible to consumers. With Luminoid’s mobile app and wireless lighting fixtures, any partygoer or music lover can enjoy a professional light show within seconds with no setup required.

More

Scott Townsend visits Thessaloniki for the "Social Capital" exhibition

The Dukakis Center at ACT has invited Scott Townsend to visit Thessaloniki to share the fruit of recent research in Greece, in the form of an exhibition entitled "Social Capital," to be hosted at the French Institute of Thessaloniki from June 21 till July 17, 2017.

Mr. Townsend is Associate Professor of Graphic Design at North Carolina State University. His work in the last thirteen years has taken the form of specific projects concentrating on issues of globalization.

"Social Capital" is actually one of a series of ongoing projects, begun in 2013, using various forms of audience and community research. The individual projects in this series have taken place in Florence, Belgrade, Kefalonia, and Corfu, as well as in Cairo, and will be exhibited in the United States at the end of 2017.

The current exhibition will consist of material drawn from community dialogue in Kefalonia in 2015-17, at a moment when global attention was focused on the prospect of "Grexit." The research tells the story of how communities have persevered through their own social capital -- community resources and relationships -- while undergoing increasing hardship.

The exhibition will consist of projected animations be exhibited alongside interviews and visualizations, to explore such themes as "borders and exchanges," "community," "negotiation," family at a distance," allegiances," etc. The exhibition will also serve as a venue to begin new research and engagement in Thessaloniki regarding the Malakopi Arcades as a contemporary urban space.

"Social Capital" marks the second occasion in eighteen months that the Dukakis Center and the French Institut of Thessaloniki have collaborated in a public service initiative. In November 2015 French journalist Jean Quatremer delivered a Dukakis Lecture at the Thessaloniki City Hall under the auspices of both institutions.

For further information please contact the Dukakis Center by email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

More

AMICAL Conference at ACT

The Bissell Library proudly hosted the annual AMICAL (American International Consortium of Academic Libraries) conference 2017 at the Bissell Library, this year from 17-20 May with the theme: Centering on learning: Partnerships and professional development among librarians, faculty and technologists. 141 delegates from American University Libraries outside the US came from 20 counties.

The two outstanding invited speakers were:

Prof Christine Bruce, Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Brisbane Australia talked on: Building information land learning experiences through partnerships.  

Kristen Eshleman, Director of Digital Innovation from Davidson College US talked on: Stronger together: More than incremental change.

The keynotes as well as more talks and panel presentations were recorded and can be now watched from the AMICAL Consortium website www.amicalnet.org/ and to our facebook page: www.facebook.com/bisselllibrary

Prof Christine Bruce who is a top theorist on Information Literacy in the world also offered a morning seminar to all our Library staff across the school and advised our Information Literacy strategy across the institution. She has now been interviewed by major Greek media outlets with the hope to influence national policy in promoting reading, learning and libraries.

We had amazing feedback and it has been a fantastic learning, sharing and networking opportunity. 

More

ACT welcomes professor Carlene Hempel and Journalism students from Northeastern University

ACT welcomes Northeastern University professor Carlene Hempel and 18 Journalism students from the Northeastern College of Arts, Media and Design (CAMD). As part of their program “Dialogue in Civilizations”, the group will spend 3 weeks in Thessaloniki and 2 weeks in Athens reporting on crisis, culture and community in Greece.

Drawing from a mixture of ACT classes, guest lectures and site visits organized by ACT, as well as their own on the ground reporting, the students will be creating an online multi-media magazine featuring both print and broadcast work to document this international experience.

More

Dukakis Center co-hosts book presentation on Syrian refugees in Greece

On April 3 the Dukakis Center and Exostis Free Press co-hosted at WE a presentation of The Itinerary: Tracing the Refugee Routes, a new book by renowned photojournalist Dimitris Bouras and friends documenting the plight of Syrian refugees in Greece.

Joining Mr Bouras were fellow photojournalist Nick Paleologos and journalist Patrick Strickland (Al Jazeera); Dimitrios Goulis, Director of the 67th Thessaloniki Elementary School (the local school that embraced refugee children); and Maria Fardela of Exostis and Lambrini Nassis of ACT and the Dukakis Center.  Journalist Kiki Tsiligeridou of TV100 and Amagi Radio moderated the event, which was also attended by a small group of refugees.

Dimitris Bouras is a SBALA alumnus (Class of 1994) who has spoken at ACT on a number of occasions. A celebrated photojournalist who has traveled widely in the Middle East and the former USSR, he will begin lecturing on photojournalism at Cambridge University in the fall.

The Dukakis Center has a standing interest in the plight of migrants and refugees in Northern Greece. In November 2015 a group of interns took a master class in photojournalism with Dimitrios Bouras. One of their assignments was to participate in a study trip to the makeshift refugee camp in Eidomeni, near the border with the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, where they served lunch on a soup line and took photographs of conditions in the camp.

Other recent Dukakis Center fieldwork includes study abroad service learning research projects; alumni volunteer efforts, and senior practitioner research activities.

More

John Koenig discusses the Cyprus question

"Masterclass", "Testimonial". These are the words the came to mind to those listening to John Koenig speak about the most current round of diplomatic talks on the so-called Cyprus question. The setting: Daios Hotel in downtown Thessaloniki (located on the site of the old US Consulate General of Thessaloniki). Some sixty denizens of the city had assembled to hear a former adopted son, John Koenig, recount his experience as US Ambassador to Cyprus. The experience was illuminating.

Recently-retired after a 31-year career in the Foreign Service, Koenig had just recently returned to Thessaloniki with his Greek-American wife Natalie after a fourteen-year absence. The purpose of his visit, ostensibly, was to deliver a Dukakis Lecture and to meet with other members of the Center's Honorary Advisory Board.

Koenig's career had carried him from Southeast Asia to the shores of the Eastern Mediterranean and beyond. By chance as much as anything a Europeanist, his two tours in Cyprus and two in Greece (including three years from 2000-2003 as Consul General of Thessaloniki) make him unique in the history of American diplomacy for his accumulation of local and regional expertise.

Earlier in the day Ambassador Koenig had sat with students at ACT to talk about his experience as the #2 US diplomat at NATO. Now the topic was one that was most dear to his heart of diplomat's hearts: a resolution to the division of the island of Cyprus into two major, protagonist sides, one Greek, the other Turkish.

The graveyard of diplomats, as the island is known to insiders, Cyprus was the place of Koenig's greatest personal successes and most disheartening professional setbacks. The endgame in the current talks is in site, Koenig explained, all that is needed is the final effort. Will it happen?

Ambassador Koenig staged his return to Thessaloniki at a banner moment in the history of the Dukakis Center. Commemorating five years since the old Dukakis Chair had been transformed into an academic center, and celebrating a burgeoning local partnership with the evening's co-hosts, the Navarino Network, the Center was organizing the 150th public lecture in the renowned series of Dukakis Lectures. (Incidentally, Ambassador Koenig first made an appearance in the Dukakis series in October 2000 at a round table dedicated to the then-upcoming US Presidential election.)

On the evidence of this early spring evening on the Thessaloniki waterfront, the Koenigs will return. Sooner, rather than later.

More

ACT Career Week 2017

In the first week of March, 2017, the Career Office of the American College of Thessaloniki organized the 2nd Career Week, hosting 36 events in 4 days and attracting 570 attendees.

During the career week students and alumni had the opportunity to attend workshops, discuss with field experts and join company presentations and interviews. The first results for the students were imminent, as within the next week we had the first job offers!

The career week was supported by all ACT Academic Divisions, the Bissell Library, the Student Government and Radio ACTive, our on-campus radio station, all significantly contributing to its success.

More

Culture and Tourism for economic growth and tackling the crisis

Friday, March 31,10:00-14:30

Bissell Library, Anatolia College of Thessaloniki

How can we combine tradition and cultural heritage with new technologies and innovation, and in the meantime keep authenticity intact?

What is the role of culture and tourism in respect to social needs? How we can leverage innovation and alternative courses of action?
 
How important is collaboration, networking, and local support groups, in terms of extroversion and openness at a national and international level?
 
We will be answering all these questions and many more during the 1st interdisciplinary culture(c)rises conference, organized by Heritage Training, with the support of ACT.
 

Admission is free. Please note that the conference will be held in Greek.

In order to secure your seat RSVP at http://culturecrises.weebly.com

More

Israeli-Greek Cooperation in the New East Mediterranean

a lecture by Professor Aristotle Tziampiris

On Wednesday March 15th, 2017, from 10:30 to 12 noon, Dr. Aristotle Tziampiris, Professor and Chair at the Department of International and European Studies, University of Piraeus and an Anatolia College alumnus (Class of 1988) presented at the ACT Audio-Visual Room a lecture titled: “Israeli-Greek Cooperation in the New East Mediterranean”.  

It was an event organized by the ACT, Division of Humanities and Social Sciences with the support of the Michael and Kitty Dukakis Center for Public and Humanitarian Service and it was well attended by Anatolia College and ACT colleagues and a good number of ACT and Study Abroad students.

The lecture offered a unique and stimulating perspective into the topic and it was followed up by a thought-provoking discussion.

More
 

17 Sevenidi St.
55535, Pylaia
Thessaloniki, Greece
Tel. +30 2310 398398
P.O.Box 21021
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.