We are thrilled to release our 6 minute "Opdoc" video of the refugee education situation and
our refugee teacher program in Malaysia -- It's one of the first videos
that describes how Malaysian government policies excluding refugee
children from getting a government education impacts refugee children.
We also focus on hope - how refugees and NGO's are taking amazing
initiative to educate these marginalized refugee children in Malaysia,
along with what our US Department of State Fulbright alumni refugee
teacher training program and you can do to help.
Click HERE to see the opdoc video on youtube. It's called an opdoc since the "op" part is "opinion" and the "doc" part is "documentary."
Here it is too:
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Monday, September 30, 2013
Refugees in Malaysia: A short video made by Burmese refugees about their marginalized, unsafe lives and lack of education in Malaysia, with support from our Fulbright team
September, 2013
With support from our Fulbright team and funding from the U.S. State Department, Burmese refugees in Malaysia made this powerful, short film about their marginalized lives and lack of education in Malaysia, a country with a current government that is hostile to refugees. The film bravely addresses:
Click HERE to see the video on youtube.
Or watch it below --
With support from our Fulbright team and funding from the U.S. State Department, Burmese refugees in Malaysia made this powerful, short film about their marginalized lives and lack of education in Malaysia, a country with a current government that is hostile to refugees. The film bravely addresses:
- How and why they fled from Burma to Malaysia
- How they face detention, are forced to pay bribes, and barely survive in Malaysia
- How the Malaysian government does not allow refugee children to go to Malaysian government schools.
- How refugees are trying to educate their children, themselves.
Click HERE to see the video on youtube.
Or watch it below --
The refugee teacher training handbook distribution!
July, 2013
The refugee teacher training handbook was developed by our team so that anyone who wants to train refugee teachers in self-care (management of their own stress and emotions) and classroom management of behavior, emotions, and attention could do it. Our team published this handbook and distributed the hard copy among the refugee schools and UNHCR.
The goal is for sustainability of this project via a handbook and training video - then the refugee teaching community can use both to continue the training of their teachers after this project has ended.
We loved the process of passing on knowledge via this handbook - you can see everyone's happy faces below upon receiving and distributing the books.
See post below for links where you can download these handbooks in English, Burmese, and Arabic for FREE!
Pictures of the handbook distribution below:
The refugee teacher training handbook was developed by our team so that anyone who wants to train refugee teachers in self-care (management of their own stress and emotions) and classroom management of behavior, emotions, and attention could do it. Our team published this handbook and distributed the hard copy among the refugee schools and UNHCR.
The goal is for sustainability of this project via a handbook and training video - then the refugee teaching community can use both to continue the training of their teachers after this project has ended.
We loved the process of passing on knowledge via this handbook - you can see everyone's happy faces below upon receiving and distributing the books.
See post below for links where you can download these handbooks in English, Burmese, and Arabic for FREE!
Pictures of the handbook distribution below:
This is a picture of Dr. Ng distributing the handbook to UNHCR Education staff who will continue distributing the handbook to refugee teachers we have not reached yet. |
Refugee teacher training handbook PDF below! You can use this handbook when training refugee teachers to manage their own stress and emotions in addition to classroom management of refugee student behavior, attention, and emotions. It is free, open-access, and you can right click it to download it.
Click HERE for link to English version of the Refugee Teacher Training Handbook PDF.
Click HERE for link to Burmese version of the Refugee Teacher Training Handbook PDF.
Click HERE for link to Arabic version of the Refugee Teacher Training Handbook PDF.
It is the OFFICIAL refugee teacher training handbook -- colorful, fun, engaging, and educational!
See below for what the English refugee teacher training handbook looks like (Click above to get/download a free pdf copy of it):
Click HERE for link to Burmese version of the Refugee Teacher Training Handbook PDF.
Click HERE for link to Arabic version of the Refugee Teacher Training Handbook PDF.
It is the OFFICIAL refugee teacher training handbook -- colorful, fun, engaging, and educational!
See below for what the English refugee teacher training handbook looks like (Click above to get/download a free pdf copy of it):
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Check out our training team and refugee teachers picture in the US State Department Video!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zwTCfzRIio&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Click this link to watch the US State Department International Exchange Alumni video promoting the next round of applications for the funding that supported our project. See the picture of our team and the refugee trained teachers at the start of the video (at about 19 seconds into it)!
Click this link to watch the US State Department International Exchange Alumni video promoting the next round of applications for the funding that supported our project. See the picture of our team and the refugee trained teachers at the start of the video (at about 19 seconds into it)!
Monday, March 11, 2013
Teacher Training - Pictures tell the story
Teachers breaking the ice and a positive mood for training |
Trainer having a discussion with the teachers |
Trainers providing the teachers opportunities to identify and express their emotions |
Teachers blew into balloons if trainer mentioned a source of stress that applied to them |
22
teachers proudly waving their certificate,
With
gratitude they expressed “Training was oh so great!”
It was
all smiles (and tears) for trainers and trainees,
As we
reflect and appreciate each other’s journeys.
The teachers’
passion and commitment humbles us,
To see
how much they pour out to the children inspires us!
We look
forward to closer partnership ahead,
Knowing the continuing work
ahead will be just great!
Su Chen
Training is over - Looking to the futture |
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Visiting a Refugee School in Kuala Lumpur
This is an adaption of the blog entry posted at lizdoug.blogspot.com on 6 December. 2012. This posting gives a history of the project from the point of view of a project participant (me), who was asked to be on the team that submitted a proposal to the Alumni Engagement Innovation Fund (AEIF). The proposal was to implement an "intervention" to "help empower the refugee teachers and improve the emotional and academic future of their students." Our project was selected and funded (just under $25K). Then reality set in. The majority of team members are not currently living in Malaysia. Only one team member in Malaysia, Wai Sheng, is a psychologist. The State Department disallowed paying a principal investigator/project manager. Wai Sheng jumped in as coordinator and (unpaid) project manager.
With the focus groups over, the major challenge was how to recruit and train 100 teachers. In December the effort to identify potential trainees began in earnest. Wai Sheng, two of the trainers, and I met at Malaysian Care. The conversation at Malaysian Care focused on logistic issues - how many schools, where were they located, the number of teachers in each school, and possible formats for each school. At the end of the conversation a small group of us headed out to visit a refugee school in Puda, a section of KL that houses several refugee schools.
Shop Houses in Puda
Malaysia has not ratified the UN Convention relating to the status of refugees; therefore, they have no legal right to be in Malaysia. (This linked article summarizes the history/summary of refugees in Malaysia.) The refugees live and blend into cities and towns, where they may crowd into small apartments. They are largely invisible to their neighbors.
|
The trainers and a refugee teacher |
The partners - our team, refugee schools, Malaysian Care A psychologist, a teacher, a community organizer |
It may be a refugee school, but it still has rules |
Team members in a classroom/meeting room |
The Library |
The center piece of the kitchen - the rice cooker |
We asked the teacher for his opinion about the need for training on children's mental health needs. He recalled how helpful it was when a group from UNHCR pointed out that one child was too quiet and needed special attention. We asked our logistic questions - the first discussion of many other similar ones to follow Among ourselves we debated reaching out to other communities, while recognizing the constraints of available time and money. Even working with a well organized community takes time - contacts have to be made and we have to convince agencies and schools that we are offering something of value.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Fulbright New Leaders Group Award for Refugee Teacher Training Intervention Research
January, 2013
Dr. Colleen O'Neal, the co-leader of this AEIF Fulbright alumni refugee teacher training project, received an award for the promotion of mutual understanding between the US and Malaysia from the organization that runs the Fulbright program - Institute of International Education. The award was in support of the refugee teacher training intervention research pilot she did in collaboration with Dr. Wai Sheng Ng and Harvest Centre from 2010-2012.
Here's Dr. O'Neal's award for mutual understanding speech:
I feel really honored to get this award. But, as a social
scientist, I was confused about how to define mutual understanding or how to
judge when this project actually achieved mutual understanding. I had concerns
that this refugee education research project might not promote mutual
understanding between the US and Malaysia where the project is based. Malaysia
is a country that is unsafe for the 90,000 Burmese refugees who have
fled to Malaysia over the past 20 years where they are educating their refugee
children, themselves, in classrooms hidden in kitchens, basement garage storage
rooms, and small, overcrowded apartments in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. My guess is
the New Leaders Group also had their doubts about how this project would lead
to mutual understanding.
But, now, looking back, I think my doubts were wrong. I think
I had made the superficial assumption that mutual understanding is like having
your first boyfriend: You idolize him and only see the good, he can do no
wrong. I think I, and this project, went from holding hands with Malaysia to a
real marriage, for both good times and bad, in a deep mutual understanding
involving brutal honesty. We were able to develop a program that could be used
by the Malaysian government, when they are ready to open school doors to
refugees, to help refugee students better prepare for and slowly transition
into government schools over time.
How did I use the New Leaders Group award? First, before I
received the New Leaders award, I tested a pilot research program during my
2010 Fulbright Scholar Award to systematically help refugee teachers with their
classroom management of refugee students’ behavior, attention and emotions so
that students could better engage with their studies. Teachers who were
Malaysian citizens trained refugee teachers. Second, in 2011, I used this New
Leaders Group award to make the refugee teacher program more sustainable and
local. I partnered with a Malaysian Fulbrighter, who’d gotten her doctorate in
the US, and I partnered with a Malaysian NGO who implemented the program.
Third, we then partnered with a large team of US and Malaysian Fulbrighters to recently
win a Fulbright Alumni award which will expand the New Leaders Group program to
study refugee teachers training other refugee teachers deep in the hidden
refugee schools in Malaysia.
How did this award change me? It was not only an awakening
to how the global is personal – in how the Burmese government’s continued
maltreatment of ethnic minorities (despite recent Burmese government promises) has
a global impact and it has a personal impact on refugee kids in Malaysia – but
it gave me a taste of real academic freedom where I could do international
research and education that I loved.
I am also a mom. My amazing husband and children were such a
supportive and necessary part of my ability to work abroad. My kids were the
real passport for this research in Asia – getting us access to Burmese
government schools, hidden refugee schools in Malaysia, and playing soccer with
refugee students, as you saw in the slideshow. I learned that families living
abroad can get entry for a project that no researcher, alone, could get entry
for. I am also a daughter-in-law of inspirational, intrepid Asia travelers. I
am a daughter too and it changed my life completely after my academic parents took
our family to live abroad for a year when I was 8, giving me the courage to
take my family to Asia for a year when my eldest child was 8.
Now that President Obama has taken a strategic pivot towards
Asia, I’ve come to realize that our honest, mutual understanding with Asian
countries will only deepen our relationships and humane treatment of our most
vulnerable even more.
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