Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Monday, February 11, 2013
9th Annual Asian Heritage Street Celebration!
| |||||||||
|
Art & Healing, Research!
Art & Healing
This is yet, another respost from Khay Hembrador's blog. This is a research paper, also from her last semester at SFSU this past 2012.
In Hembrador's words:
This was done in Grace Yoo and Darren Won's "Asian American Pro-Seminar" class, also known as "AAS 697." As stressful as this class was, it really helped me to narrow down my focus...especially as graduation came closer. Although it was completed for a passing grade in professor Yoo's class, it is, in my eyes, not complete. There is still much research to be done, more voices to be heard.....and hopefully by creating legitimate research results, we can provide much needed services to this particular community.
My research paper discussed mental health disorders and issues in the Asian American women's community. If you didn't already know, suicide and mental health disorders among our community are highest as compard to other groups of color, yet we utilize mental help services the least. What are the cultural boundaries that keep Asian American women from asking for help? Why do Asian families make "shame" and "silence" such a valuable cultural factor when dealing with problems?
Through my research, I've found that Asian culture does not teach vebal communication very well, but art has become a platform to start painful and difficult conversations in a non-verbal manner.... Read on by clicking on the link:
My research paper discussed mental health disorders and issues in the Asian American women's community. If you didn't already know, suicide and mental health disorders among our community are highest as compard to other groups of color, yet we utilize mental help services the least. What are the cultural boundaries that keep Asian American women from asking for help? Why do Asian families make "shame" and "silence" such a valuable cultural factor when dealing with problems?
Through my research, I've found that Asian culture does not teach vebal communication very well, but art has become a platform to start painful and difficult conversations in a non-verbal manner.... Read on by clicking on the link:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OLMvLfhGQc_Ivhwm-9f1BdDFDKY3LSLzPAnd-pBk7UI/edit?usp=sharing
(all citations and research sources are in the paper)
thoughts? additions? testimonials....feel free to drop me a line by personal email khay@aawaa.net
(all citations and research sources are in the paper)
thoughts? additions? testimonials....feel free to drop me a line by personal email khay@aawaa.net
Community Change & Development
Khay Hembrador started as a volunteer to AAWAA in 2010 and is now the Executive Administrator at our organization. Hembrador graduated with a BA in Asian American Studies and a minor in Health Education at SFSU this past fall 2012. During this last semester she took a class called "Asian American Studies 681: Community Change & Development" taught by Jennie Woo. This class required her and a group to take one Community Based Organization (CBO) and research everything there is to know about it. So, Khay Hembrador, Tristan Medina, Jonathan Wu, and Cristy Kim decided to write about AAWAA!
The link to the whole article:
Enjoy!
The link to the whole article:
Enjoy!
Lunar New Year Event!
Save the date! AAWAA is supporting this Lunar New Years Event!
Thursday, February 21st - AAWAA will have a booth swing by and support!
Thursday, February 21st - AAWAA will have a booth swing by and support!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)