[Libs-Or] It's Complicated: Taking Up Space as Asian American Women in Higher Education

Max Macias max.macias at gmail.com
Mon Sep 13 10:03:39 PDT 2021


[FYI]
It's Complicated: Taking Up Space as Asian American Women in Higher
Education


Wednesday, September 29, 2021

3:00-4:30 PM Central Time (4:00-5:30 PM Eastern, 2:00-3:30 PM Mountain,
1:00-2:30 PM Pacific; convert other time zones here
<https://dateful.com/time-zone-converter>)

$25.00  |  REGISTER
<https://registration.occe.ou.edu/reg/reg_p1_form.aspx?oc=10&ct=ADVERTISING&eventid=9913>

Live captions and sign language interpretation provided. Registration for
this webinar closes at 4:30 PM Central Time on Tuesday, September 28th.
------------------------------
Important Details for Registrants:

   - The Zoom link will be emailed the morning of the webinar.
   - Download the latest version of Zoom on your device BEFORE the webinar
   begins. Launch and sign into Zoom, click on your profile picture (top right
   corner) and select Check for Updates.
   - All registrants will receive a recording approximately one week after
   the webinar.
   - Email ncorewebinars at ou.edu for assistance.

------------------------------
Webinar Description:

This session should particularly benefit Asian American womxn in higher
education who are interested in gathering, reflecting, and sharing
strategies for individual and institutional change. Asian American womxn
continue to be minoritized, facing microaggressions informed by stereotypes
that we are small and demure - silent. But we are here in higher education
and we look forward to gathering with you to reflect, brainstorm, and
build. In our respective institutions, we face whiteness and
invisibilization and in our personal lives we are mothers of multiracial
children.

How do we take up space as gendered and racialized people in higher
education? What landscapes do we navigate and how do we do this? How do we
work toward health equity and social justice while uplifting each other?
The collective identity and experiences of the facilitators span Filipino
and Korean/Chinese ethnicities, Nursing and Occupational Therapy health
professions programs, Generation X and Baby Boomer, and Second-Generation
and Third-Generation Asian Americans. We will have a particular focus on
the three R's: Race, Resistance, and Resilience.

Levels of experience: all levels welcome
------------------------------
Presenters:



[image: presenter Claire Vladerama-Wallace]

Claire Valderama-Wallace, PhD, MPH, RN; Assistant Professor, School of
Nursing; California State University, East Bay

Claire Valderama-Wallace’s journey has taken her from physiology (UCLA) to
public health (George Washington University) to nursing (UCSF and UC Davis)
in classrooms, clinical settings, public health organizations, harm
reduction organizations, and organizing spaces. She is an Assistant
Professor in the Department of Nursing at California State University, East
Bay, where she teaches Community Health Nursing, Community Engagement, and
Epidemiology and Social Inequities. She is the MSN Program Coordinator,
co-chairs the department's Dismantling Racism in Nursing Education task
force, and convenes the university's Indigenous Acknowledgement Collective.
She is also a member of GABRIELA Oakland, a grassroots Filipino women's
organization fighting for the liberation of Filipino women throughout the
diaspora, with the knowledge that no one is free until we're all free. A
vision for anti-imperialist and anti-racist nursing education, research,
policy, and practice guides her pedagogy, service, and scholarship.





[image: presenter Beth Ching]

Elizabeth "Beth" Ching, OTD, M.Ed., BSOT, OTR/L; Associate Professor,
Occupational Therapy; Samuel Merritt University

Elizabeth “Beth” Ching is a Third Generation Korean Chinese American born
in Vallejo, California and has been an occupational therapist since 1985.
Beth has been committed to working with underserved populations throughout
her career. She has presented at the National Conference on Race and
Ethnicity in Higher Education (NCORE) about reducing health disparities and
mentoring Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) youth to enter the
health professions. She also held the SMU Faculty Diversity Coordinator
position in the Office of Diversity and Inclusion. Dr. Ching has published
in the Journal of Cultural Diversity, Journal of Occupational Therapy
Education, Journal of Diversity and Equality in Health and Care; she has
co-authored “Psychosocial and Cognitive Issues Affecting Therapy” in
Neurorehabilitation for the Physical Therapist Assistant (2021). Dr. Ching
was honored to receive the 2021 Faculty of the Year Award at SMU.


-- 
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Max Macias [image: A button with "Hear my name" text for name playback in
email signature] <https://www.name-coach.com/max-macias>
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