On Friday
March 2 I attended a couple of the sessions offered at the Iowa State
Conference on Race & Ethnicity located in the Memorial Union. I thought it was a great experience and
forced me out of my comfort zone a little.
I had the opportunity to hear about teaching rationalization, listen to
a inspiring keynote speaker, and even participate in a workshop facilitated by a
fellow Hixson.
“Teaching
Rationalization Critically: A Course on Constructing Race and Ethnicity” was
presented by Michael Benitez. This was
the first session I was able to attend and it was not exactly what I was
expecting. I wasn’t sure if it was
suppose to be directed to persons interested in HOW to teach about this topic
or it is was more of a informational/promotional presentation about the UST
321x course. Michael dove into what type
of things he does in his course to have the most benefit to his students. I thought the strategies he was using made of
a lot of sense but seemed like they would be difficult to implement on a small
scale as a peer mentor.
Next was
the lunch and the keynote speaker; Grace Aiko Obata Amemiya. Lunch was interesting and involved things
like vegan wraps with peanut sauce and vegetarian stir fry looking
vegetables. They also had Thai tea, rice
pudding, and fried bananas! It was
pretty good and I couldn’t argue with the price. Grace was born in California in the 1920’s
and was a college student studying nursing when Pearl Harbor was attacked on
December 7th, 1941. Being of
Japanese decent, Grace and her family we moved into internment camps. Although her family and Grace herself endured
many hardships for several years she stills feels no bitterness toward the
United States government. Her message
was meaningful and Grace herself is one to admire.
The last
session I attended was, “When Race Becomes More Complex: Giving Light to Racially
Mixed People “Bill of Rights” and one of the presenters just happened to be a
fellow Hixson; Thao Nguyen. I was only
able to attend the first part of the presentation but it was definitely getting
more intense and I was sad to leave. It
was becoming more discussion based and relied less on people actually
presenting. It address some issues that
we are all faced with and not always as aware of.
Overall,
great day and an excellent learning experience! Looking forward to spending more
time at ISCORE next year.
~Easten
Wow the lunch sounds like it was good and I bet the speaker was really interesting to listen to too, I wish I could have made it to that part.
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