ASPEN The people of Denmark, according to a recent study by the University of Leicester in England, are the happiest people in the world, and one of them is happy to be living in Aspen for the next few months.
I know! We are! agreed Pia Isabella Holm Rasmussen about the study declaring the Danes glee.
Rasmussen, 23, is an intern with the Aspen Youth Center, hoping to work with local teenagers and learn all she can before returning home to finish a degree in social education.
She is the first-ever intern at the center and has been on the job for about three weeks, getting to know the organizations ins and outs and making instant friends with its client base the kids from Aspens schools.
During a recent visit to the youth center by a reporter, Rasmussen was playing The Game of Life with 9-year-old Lizette Arballo, and apparently losing.
I just lost my job, and now I have to find a new career, she said with a laugh, noting that the game is not known in Denmark, although she has played Monopoly before.
Rasmussen, who has been in college for about a year and a half, said she came to Aspen first of all because its totally different from Denmark. I wanted to see the difference, to see how they work with children.
Her degree, she explained, will enable her to do a wide variety of work in the area of social services.
I will be able to work with people from zero to 100 [ years old], along with drug addicts, the homeless and other groups in need of assistance, she said.
Another reason she chose Aspen as the scene of her second internship (the first was at a shelter for the homeless and others in Denmark) is that she was unsure about the concept of nonprofit organizations.
The government takes care of societys needs at home, such as providing free education, free medical care and paying young adults a wage of sorts to attend college, she said. But she had to pay her own way over to the United States for the internship and is staying with her sister, Gitte, and brother-in-law, Brian Anzine.
There are youth centers in Denmark, she said, but they are run by the government and families pay a very small charge for their childrens use of the facilities.
Its nothing compared to here, she said, noting that here kids and their families pay up to a few dollars a day to use the youth center (other than those families granted scholarships).
Although shes only been on the job three weeks, she said she has noticed differences on several levels between this area and her home.
The children are more polite, she observed, when they address her or other adults.
She said that the government supplies all equipment in Danish youth centers. The televisions, for example, are much smaller than the televisions at the Aspen Youth Center, she said, and there are more game tables and other equipment for kids to play on here.
Among the lessons Rasmussen expects to learn here is how to handle conflicts among children, something with which she already has had some experience.
Rasmussen said that while donations to government facilities in Denmark are possible, it is rare, because the tax rate of 50 to 60 percent is deemed sufficient for the governments needs.
There is a culture of giving in Denmark, she continued, but its more for other countries. Danes donate to the International Red Cross and other relief and aid agencies, rather than to organizations within their own country.
Rasmussen believes Danish contentment comes mainly from her home countrys socialized education, health care and other social security systems.
Denmarks first-place finish in the study narrowly beat out Switzerland, Austria and Iceland. Britain came 41st, 18 places behind the United States.
Still, she said, she might like to try living in the States for longer than her internship, which ends July 1.
I really think the American people are nice, she explained. Theyre curious, they come up to you and ask you things, whereas in Denmark people seem to keep more to themselves.
Sarah Visnic, executive director of the Aspen Youth Center, said she hopes the internship program will become a permanent part of the centers mission, though she is concerned about how the organization will house future interns.
We hope this is a start to a continuous internship program, Visnic said, noting that the addition of an adult with supervisory experience is a great help to the centers staff.
jcolson@aspentimes.com
I know! We are! agreed Pia Isabella Holm Rasmussen about the study declaring the Danes glee.
Rasmussen, 23, is an intern with the Aspen Youth Center, hoping to work with local teenagers and learn all she can before returning home to finish a degree in social education.
She is the first-ever intern at the center and has been on the job for about three weeks, getting to know the organizations ins and outs and making instant friends with its client base the kids from Aspens schools.
During a recent visit to the youth center by a reporter, Rasmussen was playing The Game of Life with 9-year-old Lizette Arballo, and apparently losing.
I just lost my job, and now I have to find a new career, she said with a laugh, noting that the game is not known in Denmark, although she has played Monopoly before.
Rasmussen, who has been in college for about a year and a half, said she came to Aspen first of all because its totally different from Denmark. I wanted to see the difference, to see how they work with children.
Her degree, she explained, will enable her to do a wide variety of work in the area of social services.
I will be able to work with people from zero to 100 [ years old], along with drug addicts, the homeless and other groups in need of assistance, she said.
Another reason she chose Aspen as the scene of her second internship (the first was at a shelter for the homeless and others in Denmark) is that she was unsure about the concept of nonprofit organizations.
The government takes care of societys needs at home, such as providing free education, free medical care and paying young adults a wage of sorts to attend college, she said. But she had to pay her own way over to the United States for the internship and is staying with her sister, Gitte, and brother-in-law, Brian Anzine.
There are youth centers in Denmark, she said, but they are run by the government and families pay a very small charge for their childrens use of the facilities.
Its nothing compared to here, she said, noting that here kids and their families pay up to a few dollars a day to use the youth center (other than those families granted scholarships).
Although shes only been on the job three weeks, she said she has noticed differences on several levels between this area and her home.
The children are more polite, she observed, when they address her or other adults.
She said that the government supplies all equipment in Danish youth centers. The televisions, for example, are much smaller than the televisions at the Aspen Youth Center, she said, and there are more game tables and other equipment for kids to play on here.
Among the lessons Rasmussen expects to learn here is how to handle conflicts among children, something with which she already has had some experience.
Rasmussen said that while donations to government facilities in Denmark are possible, it is rare, because the tax rate of 50 to 60 percent is deemed sufficient for the governments needs.
There is a culture of giving in Denmark, she continued, but its more for other countries. Danes donate to the International Red Cross and other relief and aid agencies, rather than to organizations within their own country.
Rasmussen believes Danish contentment comes mainly from her home countrys socialized education, health care and other social security systems.
Denmarks first-place finish in the study narrowly beat out Switzerland, Austria and Iceland. Britain came 41st, 18 places behind the United States.
Still, she said, she might like to try living in the States for longer than her internship, which ends July 1.
I really think the American people are nice, she explained. Theyre curious, they come up to you and ask you things, whereas in Denmark people seem to keep more to themselves.
Sarah Visnic, executive director of the Aspen Youth Center, said she hopes the internship program will become a permanent part of the centers mission, though she is concerned about how the organization will house future interns.
We hope this is a start to a continuous internship program, Visnic said, noting that the addition of an adult with supervisory experience is a great help to the centers staff.
jcolson@aspentimes.com


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