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TCK/GLOBAL NOMADS CONFERENCE 2018 PROGRAM

TCK 2018 CONFERENCE

6th Annual Third Culture Kids & Global Nomads Conference

Finding Peace Within the Pieces 

February 24th 2018

 

Parking Information:

There is ample, free parking around Clark University. TCK conference attendees may park in the Admissions lot (entrance on Maywood Street) and on the upper level of the commuter section of the parking garage (entrance on Downing Street). Street parking is also available along Main, Woodland, Florence, and Maywood Streets, but please check street signs carefully for parking restrictions as some areas limit street parking to two hours. Winter parking bans may be in place on some streets.

map 

 

WiFi Information:

To access the WiFi, please join the ClarkGuestWiFi network and sign in using any social media account once it is connected.

 

 

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9:30 – 10:20am: Conference Registration

Tilton Hall, Higgins University Center, 2nd Floor

Breakfast and sign-in, and collection of conference materials.

 

10:30 – 11:20am: Session 1

The TCK Community: This is my home.

Presenters: Swathi Nachiappan, Babson College

Room:  JC 001

Throughout my research for my book on TCKs, I have discovered that although we have a multitude of different combinations of countries and cultures, we share values across our differences. We don’t seem to fit in with any specific group across the world, but we fit in with each other due to these similar thought processes. This is our community, and this is where we are understood. For me, this is home, and I’d like to share some tidbits from my book research on how I came to that conclusion through my own personal journey as well as those I interviewed along the way.

Faculty/Staff Panel

Panelists: Patricia Doherty, Constance Whitehead Hanks, Ross Glover

Room: Grace Conference Room

This panel discussion will explore new ways of helping internationally mobile students find a sense of belonging within their educational community.

 

11:30am – 12:20pm: Session 2

Teaching Empathy Will Lead to Progress

Presenter: Ana De la Torre

Room:   Sackler 121

I became involved in learning about responsible consumerism, focusing on using less plastic, as 90% of waste in the ocean is plastic. I researched products that do not use animals, eating less meat, not only because of the unethical practice in the meat industry, but because of health issues prominent in low-income communities, where issues that involve the deterioration of our environment are linked to areas where most low-income and minority groups reside, contributing to negative stereotypes. I learned to feel empathy and act on it, because as an immigrant child, issues seemed impossible to solve – finding issues to solve helped my find a space within a strange society.

 

Picking Up the Crumbs: An exploration of food politics in the lives of TCKs

Presenters: Kaiomi Inniss, Chikondi Thangata, Clark University

Room: Jonas Clark 001

In the lives of Third Culture Kids, one thing that can stay consistent is the food your parents make. Sometimes, your host country’s culture can influence your native-style cooking, giving rise to “fusion food”. Asian fusion, Tex-Mex, we’ve even seen “pho-rittos” – a fusion between Vietnamese pho and Mexican burritos. What are the implications of this? How does one draw the line between food appropriation and food appreciation? How does the international view TCKs possess impact this? In this session, we will discuss the politics of food. Don’t come hungry though! This is a discussion-based workshop and all are welcome.

 

“The Road Home”: A Short-film Viewing and Discussion of a Cross-Culturally Challenged School Boy

Presenter: Patricia Doherty and Constance Whitehead Hanks

Room: JEFF 218

In a few moments, life’s challenges can be thrust upon a child trying to navigate cultural differences. In this session we will view the short film “The Road Home” by Rahul Gandotra, (Palm Springs Shortfest Winner and Chicago International Children’s Film Festival Winner). Following the film Patty and Connie will facilitate a discussion about the main character, Pico, and his “problem”, his “resolution,” and the insights that Pico’s “struggles” may provide. This short but poignant film offers the opportunity for multiple reflections and perspectives, so discussion will be adapted to the participants in the session and their desired learning outcomes

12:30 – 2pm 

Lunch & Keynote Speaker

Tilton Hall, University Center

Anita Häusermann Fábos, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of International Development and Social Change

Clark University

Anita Fábos is an anthropologist who has conducted research and outreach among refugees and other forced migrants in urban settings in the Middle East, Europe, and the United States. Her scholarship and practice pursue a number of interconnected themes in the area of forced migration and refugee studies: how people make and transform ethnic and racial boundaries and boundary markers, people’s experiences of displacement and challenges to gender norms, historical shifts in citizenship and nationality laws, methods and ethics of research with hidden, vulnerable and mobile populations, transcultural social networks, and refugee narratives and representations. Starting with a lengthy period of action research, NGO activism and outreach in Cairo, Fábos’ research and writing has followed the movements of Muslim Arab Sudanese—her main research participants–from their place of first exile in Egypt, to asylum in Europe and North America, and towards the formation of a diaspora straddling Islamic ‘space’ (countries in which Islam is the religion of the state) and the ‘asylum space’ of countries of resettlement in Europe and North America.

 

2:10pm – 3:00pm: Session 3

Battling to Reclaim Heritage and Navigating Privilege

Presenter: Kaitlyn Wilson, Boston College

Room: JC 001

“What are you? But what are you really?” The central topic of this discussion is navigating a multi-ethnic background and the implications of living in the gray-space. I will discuss what it is like to never feel quite enough for either identity, and my own experience with living in this gray space. Discussions of how my appearance, upbringing, interaction with others, and my transition into college will take place to spark the discussion of thriving in the obscure areas of what multi-ethnicity means to me. I would like to enlighten and connect with others about how we respond to the unknown of others’ identities and the power this has on another person.

The TCK Spectrum

Presenters: Trung Tran Trong, Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI)

Room: Sackler 121

What makes a TCK and what makes an immigrant? Certainly, they aren’t mutually exclusive. I’d like to explore with you how we may all identify ourselves as TCKs but have different and unique backgrounds. Our TCK-ness is our story. Some of us may only have moved once, others – maybe dozens of times. But it’s not the size of your country count that matters, it’s how you use it. We’re not gatekeepers here; let’s talk about how different people identify as TCKs.

 

3:10 – 4:00pm: Session 4

Alumni Panel

Panelists: Farrah Weannara ’16, Melina Toscani ’17, Michino Hisabayashi ’15

Room: Lurie Conference Room

This is a chance for any participants to ask away questions to some Clark and WPI alumni who share the TCK experience! Topics of this informal discussion may include but are not limited to: how they reflect on their undergraduate experience now, what it was like to get an internship or a job after graduation as a TCK, their life views and future goals, words of wisdom, etc.

 

Conference volunteers: Brendan Burgess, Veronica Dizon, Chineme Ezema, Sangita Kurian, Lisa Musumba, Jay Sundar Rajan,

TCK/GLOBAL NOMADS CONFERENCE 2017 PROGRAMME

TCK 2017 CONFERENCE

Navigating the World with Evolving Identities

5th Annual Third Culture Kids & Global Nomads Conference

February 25th, 2017

 

Parking Information:

There is ample, free parking around Clark University. TCK conference attendees may park in the Admissions lot (entrance on Maywood Street) and on the upper level of the commuter section of the parking garage (entrance on Downing Street). Street parking is also available along Main, Woodland, Florence, and Maywood Streets, but please check street signs carefully for parking restrictions as some areas limit street parking to two hours. Winter parking bans may be in place on some streets.

map 

 

WiFi Information:

To access the WiFi, please join the ClarkGuestWiFi network and sign in using any social media account once it is connected.

 

10:00 – 10:30am : Conference Registration

Tilton Hall, Higgins University Center, 2nd Floor 

 

10:30 – 11:20am: Session 1

Constructing Transnational Identities: International Mobility and the Imagined Community of Nation-States

Presenter: Melina Toscani

Room: JEFF 133

In accordance with this year’s conference theme “Navigating the World with Evolving Identities”, this lecture describes how various transnational identities (including TCKs, migrant and diaspora communities) emerged from the strict structure of the nation-state system. Based on my final research paper for my Bachelor’s Degree, this presentation discusses how the social construct, or the “imagined community”, of the state are built upon a series of inclusionary and exclusionary forces that affect different types of internationally mobile people (e.g. tourists, immigrants, refugees) in drastically different ways and lead to the emergence of these new transnational identities.

 

The Beauty in the Madness: The Advantages of a Complex Identity

Presenters: Kaiomi Inniss and Ashleigh Nongogo

Room: JEFF 222

This workshop based presentation will focus on breaking down the various aspects of a TCK’s identity and how they intersect to create a uniquely qualified global citizen. The workshop will also aim to discover where TCK’s fall in the recent wave of racial tensions in US Society today.

This workshop based presentation will have an interactive component, a presentation, and end with an open discussion.

 

How to Start a TCK Group at Your Institution

Presenters: Santiago Deambrosi

Room: JC 001

This workshop will go over ways to start a TCK group on campus, how to maintain interest in it, and how to expand it. We will go over “case studies” of programs, networking, and methods implemented in the past here at Clark, as well as articles, infographics, and videos on the topic. We will also be having a discussion at the end for individuals to bring up their own ideas, programs, or other. This is intended for individuals who have interest in starting a group in their colleges, high school, or work, as well as for individuals who have already started one and would like to share their insights.

 

 

11:30am – 12:20pm: Session 2

Storytelling as a Tool for Creating Home and Identity

Presenter: Sylvie Scholvin

Room: JEFF 218

This presentation examines the complementary relationship between the construction of identity and multicultural travel experiences, and the resulting influence on one’s notion of home. Specific examples will be drawn from the life of a Sicilian man who left his high social standing for a nomadic lifestyle–a remarkable change considering the time frame (1960s-80s) and place (a small town with rigid social norms and fear of rootlessness). He maximized local and expat networks, promoted his experiences as valuable and desirable, and lived and traveled without earning or spending any money to ultimately become a town legend. His transformation of self, the creation of eccentricity, and his interpretation of “home” will be addressed.

 

Does Bilingualism Make Me a Different Person?

Presenter: Simon Escapa

Room: JEFF 222

Have you ever wondered why the other person, when he/she speaks another language, seems to behave differently? In this session, we will explore what it means to speak different languages. Why does swapping languages changes speech patterns and behavior? Are they specific to the language? We will explore in this session why speaking different languages can make other people believe that you are a different person when you speak another language.

 

Visualizing Your Social Self: Culturegrams

Presenters: Farah Weannara and Francisco Borges-Rivera

Room: JC 001

We will explore the different aspects of identity using the auto-ethnographic technique, culturegrams! In this session, attendees will fill out their own culturegrams and take part in an interactive, intimate sharing experience. The facilitators will share their own culturegrams and give various prompts to spark discussions about identity and culture. Participants will be encouraged to share their personal experiences in a judgment-free, safe space in hopes of finding the things that link and differentiate us.

 

 

12:30 – 2pm 

Lunch & Keynote Speaker

Tilton Hall, University Center

 

Anh Vu Sawyer

Southeast Asian Coalition, Worcester MA

Anh Vu Sawyer declares herself as a “daughter of the world”, because of her connection between the east and west.

As Executive Director for the Southeast Asian Coalition of Central Massachusetts, Ms. Sawyer oversees the agency’s mission to provide critical assistance to SE Asian refugees, immigrants and low-income families so that they can successfully integrate, thrive and become contributors, while helping to preserve the Southeast Asian cultural heritage in Central Massachusetts. Since 2015, her agency has also provided assistance to refugees from Iran, Iraq and Syria. During her directorship, SEAC received 2016 Katherine Forbes Erskine Award, 2016 MCPHS Community Partner Award, 2016 John Auerbach Community Leader Award, 2015 Massachusetts Non-Profit Network Excellence Award, 2015 Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Outstanding Member and 2014 Eleanor T. Hawley Human Rights Commission Award. Ms. Sawyer is a member of Governor Baker’s Advisory Council For Refugees And Immigrants and Attorney General Maura Heally’s Advisory Council On New Americans.

As a college student, Ms. Sawyer and her family left Saigon, Vietnam, via the American Embassy rooftop in 1975, a few hours after the fall of Saigon. In addition to helping the start-up of several innovative companies (People Express Airlines, Scanning America), while raising her three children, Ms. Sawyer partnered with her husband in their humanitarian work bringing educational and medical projects to Vietnam. Every year, Ms. Sawyer travels to the highlands of Vietnam for economic development and art and cultural preservation projects among Vietnamese ethnic minorities.

Ms. Sawyer is a published author (Song of Saigon, Warner Books, 2003), essayist and award-winning instructor.

 

 2:10pm – 3:00pm: Session 3

Finding the Line Between Discrimination, Humor and Lifestyle

Presenter: Jonathan Tai

Room: JC 001

Sometimes people make jokes. Some about themselves, some about others, some that cover great generalizations, sometimes intended to be offensive but most of the time not. We all know why we find it offensive or why someone else might find it offensive. But what happens afterwards? How do we host productive conversation with the other person, to find the humor and correct misconceptions? Let’s talk about that!

 

Repatriation While in a Long-Term Relationship

Presenter: Leyla Gentil

Room: JEFF 133

Coming back to your native country after many years overseas can be a very daunting task for most TCKs. This interactive session will go over repatriation and potential difficulties in coming back home, as well experiences in being in a relationship with a non-TCK from your home country. Participants will be invited to share their experiences, frustrations and discoveries in similar situations.

 

 

3:10 – 4:00pm: Session 4

Alumni Panel

Panelists: Teja Arboleda ’85, Simon Escapa Otani ’16, Maisha McCormick ‘13, Sakshi Khurana ’16, Michino Hisabayashi ’15

Room: JEFF 218

This is a chance for any participants to ask away questions to some Clark and WPI alumni who share the TCK experience! Topics of this informal discussion may include but are not limited to: how they reflect on their undergraduate experience now, what it was like to get an internship or a job after graduation as a TCK, their life views and future goals, words of wisdom, etc.

 

Faculty/Staff Panel

Panelists: Colleen Callahan-Panday (OISS, WPI) and Amanda Connolly (ISSO, Clark)

Room: JC 001

International Student Advisors can play a pivotal role in helping Third Culture Kids not just adjust to the college community but also to feel a sense of belonging. The session will address key factors in TCK identity development as well as specific ways that campus professionals can meet the needs of this population.

TCK/GLOBAL NOMADS CONFERENCE SPONSORED BY:

SIT GRADUATE INSTITUTE:

SIT Graduate Institute offers interculturally-focused master’s degrees and certificate programs in international education, peacebuilding and conflict transformation, sustainable development, and TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). Programs are based on an experiential learning model and a commitment to social justice and intercultural communication. Full-time and low-residency (online) options are available. 

SIT Graduate Institute logo_horizontal_2-color

 

CLICK HERE TO SEE SIT’S POSTER AND CONTACT: engaged-inclusive-experiential