For students currently in grades 9–12
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Columbia Climate School Collaboration
Harvard Chan C-CHANGE Youth Summit
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Australia, New Zealand, & Fiji
Croatia & Slovenia
Iceland
Italy & Greece
Japan
Kilimanjaro
Norway
Patagonia: Skiing
Switzerland, France, & Holland
Switzerland, Italy, France, & Holland
France
China
Ecuador & the Galápagos
Spain
Valencia & the Pyrenees
Costa Rica
Ecuador & the Galápagos
Hawai'i
Morocco
Nepal
Peru
Tanzania
Thailand
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For students currently in grades 6–8
France & Holland
Greece & Italy
Iceland
Ireland
France
Spain
Costa Rica
Ecuador & the Galápagos
Hawai'i
Columbia Climate School Collaboration
Harvard Chan C-CHANGE Youth Summit
*These programs are typically for students in grades 9–12, however motivated rising 9th graders will be considered
Special programs & collaborations
Custom Programs

Looking to create a custom program or collaboration?

Challenge yourself academically at the world's most prestigious universities

Non-profit organization offering student travel scholarships

High school youth summit focused on public health, climate change, and equity

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Campus-based climate change program for grades 9–12

Jack’s College Essay: Ethics of Eating

Jack is an alum of our Middle School Exploration France & Holland, Language Spain, and Service Morocco programs. This fall he’ll be attending the University of Pennsylvania and he drew on his experience in Morocco for his supplement.

* * *

On a service trip to Morocco, my peers and I grappled with the ethics of killing animals and our place in questioning it when we were asked if we wanted to see our food being prepared. A few minutes later, standing inches from a pool of goat’s blood, we watched as a living animal turned into our meal.

Some people ran away, horrified that the cooks could “slaughter” this animal; some claimed that they were very aware of their “place on the food chain,” and I wondered about that thinking’s validity. Modern civilization seems to reject nature, so can we really act according to the “food chain”?


However, it didn’t occur to me that as foreigners we were imposing our own cultural beliefs onto the people of Zawiya Ahansal. What seemed like a quick choice in the meat aisle of the supermarket in the States, was now a more personal dilemma. If killing an animal is absolutely necessary to eat, were they really in the wrong? The cooks challenged our preconceptions by acknowledging the dignity and respect of looking our food in the eye, an experience we hadn’t considered before.

After returning from Zawiya Ahansal, I stayed in the meat aisle a little longer, thinking about where my food was actually coming from. More importantly, I tried to address my complicity in everyday activities. How do I remove myself from the cultural, economic, and environmental impacts I create? What are the perspectives I don’t actively seek out and empathize with?

>> Click here to explore all Service programs

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College Essays

View alumni college essays about their transformative summers with Putney.

Stay up to date on the latest happenings!

Australia & Fiji
Australia, New Zealand, & Fiji
Croatia & Slovenia
Iceland
Italy & Greece
Japan
Kilimanjaro
Norway
Patagonia: Skiing
Switzerland, France, & Holland
Switzerland, Italy, France, & Holland
France
China
Ecuador & the Galápagos
Spain
Valencia & the Pyrenees
You may also like
Costa Rica
Ecuador & the Galápagos
Hawai'i
Morocco
Nepal
Peru
Tanzania
Thailand
Vietnam
Barcelona
Tokyo
Tuscany
You may also like
Ireland
Iceland
France & Holland
Greece & Italy
France
Spain
Costa Rica
Ecuador & the Galápagos
Hawai'i
Eligible for 8th grade*​
Columbia Climate School Collaboration
Harvard Chan C-CHANGE Youth Summit
*These programs are typically for students in grades 9–12, however motivated rising 9th graders will be considered

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