The Sea Change Podcast
By Ellen Mahoney
For more resources on advisory, mentoring, and transitions support, visit www.seachangementoring.com.
For more resources on adult SEL, visit www.circulusinstitute.org.
The Sea Change PodcastMar 11, 2021
International Schools in Crisis: An interview with Doug Walker
Psychologist Doug Walker joins us to discuss how schools can respond to communities in crisis. We discuss Ukraine, the prolonged stress that COVID has brought, and what communities need in order to be resilient and heal. An important episode for the times we are living in.
For more guidance on how school staff can best respond to students in crisis, check out this guide.
Doug Walker is the Chief Programs Director at Mercy Family Center in New Orleans. He has practiced as a Clinical Psychologist for the past twenty-three years and is celebrating his 22nd year with Mercy this year. Dr. Walker has worked alongside the international school community since 2006 in providing training and consultation in student and educator mental health and wellbeing. Dr. Walker has served as technical advisor to the US State Department’s Office of Overseas Schools in Central America and Africa. He currently serves as a consultant to the Council of International Schools and the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children. In 2016, Dr. Walker joined Fukushima University as Fulbright Specialist Scholarship recipient. During his brief tenure in Fukushima City he conducted lectures in disaster mental health, and collaborative research into peer-to-peer support post 2011 Tōhoku earthquake, tsunami and level 7 meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
A Humanistic approach to education technology at the Western Academy of Beijing
Keri-Lee is in her 21st year as an educator and has taught at schools in New Zealand, England, Indonesia, Singapore, and Switzerland prior to her appointment as the HS Learning and Tech Coach at WAB. She is passionate about supporting teachers and students in using technology to enhance learning across the curriculum.
As a parent of two teenagers, Keri-Lee recognises the challenges and opportunities that accompany being a parent in this digital age and feels well-placed to support parents in navigating these.
Outside of school, Keri-Lee is an enthusiastic foodie, loves reading Young Adult novels, traveling, and gardening.
Media Mentors, not Media Police - blog post about origins
Media Mentor Month 2021 - Blog post about our latest iteration
WAB Website - School website
Mentoring at WAB - blog post about mentoring in a hybrid model, outlining WAB’s approach.
Pear Deck templates for SEL - some of the interactive slides I have used with students that I have found useful.
Jackbox Games - some great games for connecting families across the globe while on Zoom meetings (I recommend Drawful & Quiplash especially). Great for a range of ages.
Loom for Education - Highly recommended tool for screencasting and giving feedback with video. Free pro accounts available to educators.
FlipGrid - software for recording/sharing videos and giving feedback on videos. Free and easy to use.
Help with advisory & mentoring, SEL, or Adult SEL.
One year later: DEIJ progress in international schools
Approaching the anniversary of George Floyd's murder and the subsequent global DEIJ mobilization, International School of Dakar's Dr. Nneka Johnson and the Association of International Educators and Leaders of Color's (AIELOC) Kevin Simpson join us to discuss how far the international school community has come and what work still needs to be done.
Dr. Nneka Johnson is the current Director of Innovation/DEI Coordinator at The International School of Dakar in Senegal, West Africa. She is also a member of the Association of International Schools in Africa (AISA) Professional Learning Design Team. In her role at ISD she wears many hats which include: Director of Innovation and Technology, DEI Coordinator, coordinating school accreditation, working with the board on the strategic plan, and organizing on-campus professional learning events. This is her first year leading DEI initiatives.
Prior to ISD, Nneka worked at an Independent School in Atlanta, GA for 13 years and within that time frame she lived in Sydney Australia for six months and worked for a private school as the Deputy Director of Innovation. Nneka holds a BA in Sociology from Queens College in New York City, an MS in Instructional Technology from Georgia State University, and a PhD in Curriculum and Instruction from Mercer University in Atlanta. Her doctoral dissertation centers on the fact that curriculum can change social media usage in adolescents. Not sure about this sentence
Check out these resources:
Kevin Simpson owns and operates KDSL Global. He and his team has served thousands of schools, educators, and leaders worldwide in over 25 countries. The majority of his work in education has centered on American curriculum schools overseas. Since 2008, he has been focused on education in the MENA region, assisted numerous schools with accreditation, training, development, and served as a thought partner with investors on school start-up projects. Simpson is founder of the Association of International Educators and Leaders of Color, co-founder of the UAE Learning Network, leads the GCC ASCD Connected Community. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Education and a Master of Education degree in Curriculum and Teaching from Michigan State University (USA).
Check out these links:
A Māori Perspective on Mentoring at the Western Academy of Beijing
Lis Wilson, High School Head of Student Wellbeing at the Western Academy of Beijing, shares stories from the school's innovative mentoring program and how her roots in New Zealand education has influenced her perspective on this critical SEL work.
More about Western Academy of Beijing's Program
Love, Rigor, & Justice in our Schools: Activist and Educator Sharif El-Mekki
Sharif El-Mekki is the Founder and CEO of the Center for Black Educator Development. The Center exists to ensure there will be equity in the recruiting, training, hiring, and retention of quality educators that reflect the cultural backgrounds and share common socio-political interests of the students they serve. The Center is developing a nationally relevant model to measurably increase teacher diversity and support Black educators through four pillars: Professional Learning, Pipeline, Policies, and Pedagogy. So far, the Center has developed ongoing and direct professional learning, mentoring, and coaching opportunities for Black teachers and other educators serving students of color.
The Center also carries forth the freedom or liberation school legacy by hosting Freedom School sites that incorporates research-based curricula and exposes high school and college students to the teaching profession to help fuel a pipeline of Black educators.
Prior to founding the Center, El-Mekki served as a nationally recognized principal and U.S. Department of Education Principal Ambassador Fellow. His school, Mastery Charter Shoemaker, was recognized by President Obama and Oprah Winfrey, and was awarded the prestigious EPIC award for three consecutive years as being amongst the top three schools in the country for accelerating students’ achievement levels. The Shoemaker Campus was also recognized as one of the top ten middle school and top ten high schools in the state of Pennsylvania for accelerating the achievement levels of African-American students.
In 2014, El-Mekki founded The Fellowship – Black Male Educators for Social Justice, an organization dedicated to recruiting, retaining, and developing Black male teachers. El-Mekki blogs on Phillys7thWard, is a member of the 8 Black Hands podcast and serves on several boards and committees focused on educational and racial justice.
For more information on Adult SEL, visit Circulus Institute.
For more information about mentoring and advisory programs in international schools, visit Sea Change Mentoring
Ancestor Research in History Class: Helping youth uncover untold histories
We are thrilled to have Dana Saxon on the podcast. She is an extraordinary educator with an inspiring story and mission. We have wanted to have Dana on for awhile now and we thought that February would be a perfect time. We celebrate black history month with Dana as we explore what it means for all young people to discover their roots and in particular how powerful it can be for young people who descended from the survivors of slavery.
Dana Saxon is the Founder & Executive Director of Ancestors unKnown, an education social enterprise with projects in the U.S., U.K., and the Netherlands. Ancestors unKnown provides schools, nonprofit organizations, universities, and corporations with curriculum and workshops related to family history research and other untold histories. After spending nearly 10 years in the education nonprofit sector in the U.S., Dana moved to the Netherlands in 2011 to study the significance of family history research among people in the African diaspora who descend from survivors of slavery. Since then, she’s traveled to multiple cities on multiple continents, introducing new audiences to some of the world’s untold histories and the power of family history research. Dana currently lives in Bristol, U.K., where she's planning to expand the reach and impact of Ancestors unKnown.
Find her work here:
- Instagram: @ancestorsunknown
- Twitter: @AncestorsUnknwn
- Facebook: facebook.com/AncestorsUnknown
- Website: http://ancestors-unknown.org
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For more information on Circulus' course on resilience for school support teams, visit our website here.
Emotional Intelligence for School Leaders & Teachers
Joshua Freedman is the CEO if Six Second and is one of the world’s preeminent experts on developing emotional intelligence to improve performance. He leads the world’s largest network of emotional intelligence practitioners, researchers, and experts, creating positive change in over 175 nations. He is one of a handful of experts in the world with over 20 years of full-time experience in this emerging field.
Freedman is author of the best-selling At the Heart of Leadership, as well as The Vital Organization, and INSIDE CHANGE: Transforming Your Organization with Emotional Intelligence, Whole-Hearted Parenting, plus dozens of cases and articles including The Business Case for Emotional Intelligence, The Workplace Vitality Report, and The State of the Heart. Please see the archive of his publications on 6seconds.org. He is also coauthor of six validated psychometric assessments including the EQ Leadership Report and the Organizational Vital Signs climate measure, which form the basis of many of the case studies published here. Learn more about these powerful tools to measure what matters.
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Interested in Sea Change Mentoring's online course on advisory and mentoring? Email Ellen at info@seachangementoring.com.
Interested in Circulus Institute's course on Resilience for Student and Staff support professionals? Sign up here.
S2.E1 Support for students with special needs in the international school community
April Remfrey is an educational consultant that focuses her time working with globally mobile families that have children with special needs when they are searching for a new school. April has also created an ILP/RTI goal documentation cloud-based program for international schools and serves on the board of directors for SENIA.
She has a BA in special education and elementary education at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, USA and received a Master’s Degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA in Exceptional Education. She has been a teacher for 20 years in three different countries and has experience in the public, private, and international school environments.
Since 2013, April, her husband, and daughter have lived in the Zurich, Switzerland area. Never one to sit still, April likes to hike in the stunning Swiss Alps, cook gourmet food, and play clarinet in the local concert band
Resources mentioned in this podcast:
SENIA (Special Education Network & Inclusion Association)
Adult SEL resources and professional development
Dr. Carmit-Noa Shpigelman’s research on e-mentoring for youth with disabilities
E12: Educator Resilience - Managing stress, minimizing burnout, & planning for a better tomorrow
How did teachers, school leaders, and counselors mentally prepare for another unpredictable school year? We discuss our course Reclaiming Your Resilience, teacher burnout, stress management, and why this work is so critical today,. We share what the research tells us and what we learned from our amazing participants around the world. Plus, we will tell you about our founding story which began when I was only 13!
Bios
Kristin Daniel comes to Circulus with over eighteen years of experience in education and professional development. She began her teaching career in special education in the Washington, D.C. area working with students needing learning and emotional support. She earned her doctorate at George Washington University with a focus on preparing teachers to succeed in high-need schools. During this work, she was drawn to research around teacher resilience and self-efficacy*. Her work at GW inspired her to focus on student-led, student supported instruction through teacher growth and well-being.
She led an instructional coaching program through a grant with the University of Kansas, in which she coached teachers in rural schools across the country. And she directed the learning support program at The Overlake School building teacher understanding of diverse learning. As the Associate Director of Professional Development at Global Online Academy, she helped launch GOA’s professional development program to design meaningful in-person and online learning experiences.
Kristin’s background allows her to bring a unique perspective to relationship-based and connected adult learning. She creates adult learning experiences that are personal and reflective, and that value critical learning and long-term growth. Kristin lives in Seattle, Washington, USA with her husband and their four-year-old son.
Ellen Mahoney is an alumna of international schools and has worked in education and youth development as a teacher, counselor, and director since 1997. Her primary expertise is in youth mentoring and third culture kid development. She works through a transitions-informed lens and is an active advocate for comprehensive child-safeguarding. In 2018, she was selected to be a
Council of International Schools (CIS) Affiliated Consultant.
Ellen was awarded a New York City Council Citation for her work during her time as the Director of Program Quality at iMentor where she
Increased the quality and quantity of support provided to 4800 participants and 16 school administrations by building and administering assessments, developing evidence-based strategies and creating internal efficiencies.
She is certified in mentoring program supervision by Fordham University’s School of Social Work and Big Brothers Big Sisters and has been repeatedly invited to the Summer Institute of Youth Mentoring at Portland State University, a highly selective program that unites the world’s best youth mentoring researchers with practitioners. She is a David Pollock Scholar and an Echoing Green Semifinalist.
She has served on the board of Families in Global Transitions (FIGT) and was a co-founding board member of Safe Passage Across Networks (SPAN), which facilitates the establishment of programs that address the challenges of mobility across networks of schools. Ellen’s work has been featured in publications like The Chronicle for Evidence-Based Mentoring; ECIS’s Global Insights, Ruth Van Reken and David Pollock’s
Third Culture Kids, Growing up Among Worlds, 3rd Edition
; and Jo Parfitt and Terry Anne Wilson’s
Monday Morning Emails.
E11 - Suicide prevention starts in kindergarten - A conversation with Dr. Steven Karaiskos
To recognize Suicide Awareness Month, we are running a series of conversations about suicide prevention, postvention. and survival. For this episode ,Dr. Steven Karaiskos of Hawken School shares how developing Social and Emotional competencies in young people is an effective approach to preventing suicide, what the research tells us about the importance of belonging when it comes to suicide prevention and what educators can do in the aftermath of a suicide to support the young people around them.
If you or a loved ones needs help please check out these resources
- https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/
- If in the US, call: 1-800-273-8255
- http://www.suicide.org/international-suicide-hotlines.html
- For a complete list of resources, please visit: https://afsp.org/find-support/resources/
Dr. Karaiskos shared the following resources with us:
- Coping After Suicide - the organization I am doing some consulting work with): https://www.copingaftersuicide.com/
- Camp Kita - where I volunteer in the summer supporting kids who have had a loss to suicide.: https://campkita.com/
Steven Karaiskos is a veteran educator and emotion scientist with experience in both independent and public schools supporting and working with learners of all ages. With 20 years of experience in education, Steven’s breadth and depth of knowledge was built through active roles in district leadership, school administration, teaching Pre-Kindergarten/Kindergarten and teaching adult learners. He has trained and mentored educators in reading, behavior management, classroom management and the support of students with learning differences.
Before becoming an educator, Steven was in leadership at Starbucks Corporate. Steven has a B.A. in English, B.S. in Education, a Masters in Psychology and a PhD in Psychology with a research focus on positive psychological approaches in response to suicidal ideation. Steven has led professional development opportunities nationwide to provide learning and support for parents, educators, and students on topics such as stress & anxiety, social & emotional development, academic growth, learning differences, positive psychological approaches, gender diversity, and LGBTQ+ topics. He is a passionate activist in suicide intervention and prevention providing suicide awareness workshops for students, schools, and organizations across the country. Steven also has a personal and professional passion for suicide postvention grief and loss support through the development and implementation of coping and resiliency programming with organizations such as Camp Kita and Coping after Suicide.
Steven is currently the SEL Coordinator with the Learning Enhancement Team at a Hawken School supporting the wellness of faculty, parents, and students. He is also a professor at Cleveland State University teaching undergraduate courses in research design and personality psychology. Steven is trained in research-based programs for schools such as Responsive Classroom and RULER from the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence. A writer and a flaneur, Steven lives in in Cleveland, Ohio.
E10 - David Shapiro on youth mentoring: The power of being along for the journey
We spoke today with David Shapiro, the CEO of Mentor: The National Mentoring Partnership. Our conversation touched on the lessons that both COVID and Black Lives Matter has imparted on the youth mentoring field, the need for a collectivist approach in addressing inequity, and David's personal experience with youth mentoring.
David Shapiro's bio:
Chief Executive Officer
David Shapiro is CEO of MENTOR: The National Mentoring Partnership, the national organization unifying and elevating the youth mentoring field through expertise, advocacy, and recruitment. For more than 13 years, he has dedicated his career to driving equity through the power of relationships and is a servant leader for the mentoring movement.
Under Shapiro’s leadership, MENTOR has partnered with leading global brands including the NBA family, Nike, Starbucks, LinkedIn and others to expand the mentoring movement through recruitment; grew its national footprint to include 24 local Affiliates in communities nationwide; and has worked extensively with the Obama Foundation to center mentoring through My Brother’s Keeper Alliance. Additionally, the U.S Department of Justice Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention selected MENTOR to establish and lead the National Mentoring Resource Center.
He is a husband, father, and mentor.
E9 - International School Alumni Fight to Decolonize International Schools
Clara Reynolds and Xoài David, international school alumni, are asking international schools to face their colonial roots and current practices in the spirit of anti-racism and decolonization. Listen to their stories of how their perspectives changed about the IB and International schools once they left school and moved on to university.
Organisation to Decolonise International Schools
Twitter, Instagram: @decolonise_intl
Clara Reynolds is co-founder of ODIS, she is currently studying for a BSc in Biomedical Science at the University of Sheffield. She graduated with an IB diploma from Tashkent International School in 2017. Clara is of Portuguese and British parents, and so far has lived in four countries: the UK, Germany, Uzbekistan, and the Netherlands.
Xoài David is co-founder of ODIS, a Paris-based book design student, writer and budding vlogger. Born of Vietnamese and French parents, Xoài has grown up in eight countries including Uzbekistan, Ghana, and Indonesia, and graduated with an IB diploma from Shanghai United International School in 2017.
E8 - The Asian experience of racist & cultural hierarchies in international schools
Danau Tanu, author of Growing Up in Transit: The Politics of Belonging at an International School, discusses the Asian experience of racism and cultural hierarchies in international schools and what teachers, school leaders, students, and alumni can do about it. Danau is an anthropologist who spent one year embedded in an international high school in Indonesia where she researched these themes and the nuanced experience of the Asian third culture kid. .
Danau Tanu, PhD, is an anthropologist and the author of Growing Up in Transit: The Politics of Belonging at an International School, the first book on systemic racism in international schools. She is an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Western Australia and was recently awarded a Japan Foundation Fellowship for postdoctoral research at Waseda University for 2021. Danau is Co-Chair of the FIGT Research Network and co-founder of TCKs of Asia.
You can purchase her book and redeem 25% off by going to her website here: https://www.danautanu.com
E7 - Is racism & white supremacy different in the expat, third culture, globally mobile world?
When Doni Aldine interviewed Robin DiAngelo, the author of White Fragility, for her Magazine, Culturs, Robin posed a question to Doni. "Does the problem of white fragility and supremacy apply to the globally mobile, international community?" At first, Doni answered, "It's different."" There was a long pause and then Robin responded, "I think it's the same." That moment led Doni on a nine month journey of introspection, research and critical analysis of the the expat, third culture, globally mobile world. In this podcast, we discuss some of the ideas she has been exploring and the stories featured in Culturs Magazine's lates issue, "It's Time to Change."
We use the following terms in this podcast:
- Third Culture Kid (TCK): a person who has spent a significant part of his or her developmental years outside the parents’ culture(s).
- Cross Cultural Kid (CCK): a person who grew up among many cultural environments for any reason.
- We refer to book, White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo
Doni (Dah-knee) Aldine's Bio: A globally mobile Afro-Latina and first-generation North American who, by age 19, lived in & identified with seven cultures on five continents. Aldine is passionate about creating community for cross-cultural populations. She has presented around the globe as a Keynote, at conferences, universities & in media as a lifestyle expert focused on entrepreneurship, marketing & cross-cultural identity. With this background, she developed university curricula for global culture identity.
Aldine uses her global, multi-cultural background, academic training, and career experience in media, management and business to position CULTURS as the first-ever digital-first print publication & product marketplace of its kind - one that addresses global and mobile cultural identities, with emphasis on hidden diversity.
About Culturs: Culturs celebrates cross-cultural and intersectional identity: Because everyone should feel like they matter.
Our content focus is 21st Century Diversity (a culturally fluid outlook that embodies a vision of the world that fast is becoming our future). We reach 1.26 million people through a print magazine distributed in Barnes and Noble, Whole Foods, Books-a-Million, Sprouts, and independent bookstores; a digital magazine, an online magazine, mobile publication, email list of 500,000, and the soon-to-launch CultursTV with more than 220 videos on Youtube.
The missing "e" in Cultur[e]s represents the often-hidden diversities of Culturs’ audience. Our content sits at the intersection of social justice, geographic mobility, and people of color and the publication was founded to give voice to immigrants, refugees, intersectional identities (multiethnic, multiracial, multicultural), and other culturally-fluid underserved populations.
We do this by producing lifestyle content that celebrates the very fluidity that most people ignore -- the cultural fluidity that represents the voice of the future -- and brings that into the mainstream.
Subscribe or purchase: Cultursmag.com/subscribe
DIGITAL EDITIONS: Issuu.com/Culturs
FREE ARTICLES ONLINE/FREE RESOURCE SIGNUP: Cultursmag.com
E6 - The Black TCK experience and racism in International Schools
Today we interview Amanda Bates, the founder and creative director of The Black Expat. We have a candid conversation about how international schools can improve the way they serve students of color, the untold stories of black TCKs, and Amanda's own experience growing up as a black TCK in both black majority and black minority countries.
We use the following terms in this podcast:
- Third Culture Kid (TCK): a person who has spent a significant part of his or her developmental years outside the parents’ culture(s).
- Cross Cultural Kid (CCK): a person who grew up among many cultural environments for any reason.
Amanda Bates' bio: Raised bi-culturally in the United States and Cameroon, Amanda started navigating multicultural environments at a young age. As a counselor, she helps young people and the young at heart figure out the right professional choices for them. Amanda is also the founder and creative director of The Black Expat, a digital platform focused on black identity + international living.
E5: When COVID-19 lands on a school's doorstep in Italy, community wellbeing becomes the top priority
We interview Iain Sachdev, the head of school at the International School of Monza in Milan, Italy. We talk about prioritizing wellbeing in order for learning to flourish, the power of relationships and connectedness in school communities, and the evolving role that parents play in education during COVID-19 and, perhaps, in the future of education.
You can read more about the International School of Monza and Iain Sachdev in these recent articles in Quartz Magazine and the Express and Star.
Express and Star:
Quartz Magazine:
- https://qz.com/1826369/how-coronavirus-is-changing-education/
- https://qz.com/1846552/teachers-from-wuhan-to-brooklyn-are-rethinking-what-students-need/
Iain mentions Sea Change Mentoring's "Ten Strategies for Educator Wellbeing: A Handbook for Schools During the COVID-19 Outbreak". You can access it for free here.
E4: International collaboration among public, independent, & international teachers: The Global Educator Collaborative on Facebook
We speak with Kirsten Durward, the founder of the 125,000 member Global Educator Collective group on Facebook (formerly known as the Educator Temporary School Closure for Online Learning). Kirsten talks about how to build a positive online community, what collaboration looks like across countries and schools systems, and the lessons and inspirations that have come out of this growing community.
Kirsten participated in the ISS Educator to Educator Assessment Webinar on Wednesday 15th April - to view the recording check the ISS site. She is hosting a webinar on addressing Primary Transdisciplinary units through the lens of Current Affairs on Saturday 25 April at 3 pm GMT via Toddle Talks, with a recording available on Toddle Learning Library. She is working with the team at Toddleapp.org to create The Inquiry Educator Summit (virtual) in May. To be added to a mailing list for this free event or future webinars and events via the Global Educator Collective please fill in the short form
For resources and support, please visit our website at www.seachangementoring.com/covid19
Kirsten Durward's Bio
Kirsten is the busy admin of the Global Educator Collective, a group set up to support the transition to online learning, which has become the place to be for international collaboration on learning strategies. The group has now been offered a strategic partnership by Facebook as a constructive sustainable community and was recommended by International Education in a special report to UNESCO as a core resource in supporting the transition to emergency remote learning. Kirsten considers herself a global citizen, having lived in 17 countries from her childhood in Kenya, the Middle East and Europe through her extensive career as an international educator and volunteer, she has been privileged to learn from many cultures, situations and perspectives. Mostly her learning has encouraged her to be compassionate, grateful and open minded to ideas! Currently the PYP Coordinator at KIS International School in Bangkok, Kirsten is in the process of forming a Learning Focused Education Consultancy and a Global Educator Development platform in partnership with many leading international educators. With leadership experience in 5 schools, her focus is working with educators to improve learning. An IB workshop leader, Concept based Curriculum Trainer and Cognitive Coach she offers years of expertise in Positive Pedagogy, Constructive Inquiry, Assessment Driven Learning, Transdisciplinary Learning and Curriculum Design. You can find her through her Facebook group, on Linked In or via Twitter @learnerfocused
E3: Supporting Mental Health and Wellbeing in International Schools and Universities
We speak with Katie Rigg, the Head of Safeguarding & Student Well-being at the Council of International Schools. We discuss the difference between wellbeing and mental health, the state of mental health in schools before COVID-19 and what has changed now that we are living and working during this pandemic.
To learn more about the Council of International Schools and to explore the support that the Council of International Schools is providing schools and universities at this time, visit their website.
To find more support for schools and educators, visit www.seachangementoring.com/covid19
If you are feeling hopeless, this is an indicator that you need to seek professional help and you need to talk with your loved ones about your feelings. Here are some trusted professionals and organizations that you can turn to. Please don’t try to get through this alone.
- International Therapists Directory (therapists familiar with the issues of expatriates and third culture kids and families)T
- The Truman Group (therapists offering remote psychotherapy, specializing in the international community)
- United Kingdom – Shout
Text HELLO or START to 85258
- Australia – Lifeline (available 6:00pm–Midnight (AEST), 7 days a week
Text 0477 13 11 14
- Canada – Crisis Text Line
Text HOME to 686868
- United States – CrisisTextLine
Text HOME to 741741
Katie Rigg's bio
Katie’s primary responsibility is to help CIS and school and university members to keep children and young people safe and to support and strengthen their mental health and well-being. In this capacity Katie carries out and supports research into new areas, develops resources, provides guidance and oversees professional development.
Prior to joining CIS Katie worked as a safeguarding and employment lawyer in London, where she helped her law firm to establish its Safeguarding Unit in May 2015. In that role Katie helped schools, universities and other organisations to prevent and respond effectively to harm and abuse. Katie has also worked in the areas of human rights and public interest law in Argentina and Hungary.
Katie is currently undertaking a professional doctorate at the International Centre for Research into Child Sexual Exploitation, Violence and Trafficking, focusing on how schools can build effective responses to abuse and harm between students. After graduating with a first class degree in history and political science from Trinity College, Dublin, Katie studied international public law at the University of Cordoba, Argentina and subsequently completed a law degree in England. Katie speaks fluent French and Spanish.
E2: Best Practices in Online Learning During COVID19 from Global Online Academy
We speak with Michael Nachbar about his years of experience running one of the top blended learning organizations in our community. He shares with us the insights he has gleaned along the way, both for remote teams and remote learning.
You can check out the resources that we discussed in this episode at:
https://globalonlineacademy.org/covid-19
https://seachangementoring.com/covid19
Join us as we speak with Michael Nachbar, expert in online learning.
Michael is the Executive Director of Global Online Academy, a pioneering network of schools and educators reimagining learning to empower students and educators to thrive in a globally networked society.
Michael is a frequent speaker and workshop facilitator at national and international conferences, and presents on such topics as educational trends impacting schools, modern teaching and learning, and global education.
Michael is an active board member for several education organizations, including the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), Independent School Association Network (ISAnet), and Jump! Foundation. He has served as a founding board member of the Mastery Transcript Consortium, as well as for Summer Search.
You can follow Michael on Twitter at @michaelnachbar.
E1: Crisis Response for Schools and Educators
We speak with Dr. Suzanne Anderson, psychotherapist and expert in crisis response for schools. Dr. Anderson has been working with schools and the international community for the last 20 years and is currently supporting international schools facing the Coronavirus pandemic.
She is the author of several articles circulating the international school world, including:
The Danger and Opportunity of Covid-19 for International School Educators
Understanding the Mental Health & Social Impact of the Coronavirus: Finding the Middle Path
Alongside the National Organization for Victim's Assistance, she recently co-hosted the webinar, "Covid-19: The Mental Health Impact & Resilience for International Educators", which reached educators in over 17 countries.
You can find her work at https://www.restorativecommunityconcepts.com
We. mentioned this Facebook group in the episode and this book, SuperSurvivors
You can learn more about Sea Change Mentoring's work and find additional resources related to COVID-19 at https://www.seachangementoring.com
Speaker Bio:
Suzanne M. Anderson, DPST, MSS, RSW – 0145, CCR
Dr. Anderson is a psychotherapist in private practice with Restorative Community Counselling (a service
of Restorative Community Concepts) in Singapore where she has lived and worked since 1999. Suzanne
is a certified NOVA crisis responder and trainer. Over more than 20 years, Suzanne has trained crisis
responders and responded to crises in the United States, Canada, Yugoslavia, Singapore, India, Thailand,
Indonesia, Vietnam, China and Myanmar. Incidents to which Suzanne has responded include natural
disasters, industrial accidents and intentional-harm incidents (i.e. industrial plant explosion, hurricane,
tornado, plane crash, earthquake, cyclone, tidal surge, tsunami, terrorist attacks, drowning,
school-based crises, suicides as well as working with war refugees). Suzanne has provided crisis
responder training and supervision for local, national businesses and primary, secondary and tertiary
educational institutions. Suzanne’s doctoral research focused on investigating the impact of trauma on
women trafficked and sexually exploited in the Mekong countries and applying the research results to
the development of training for aftercare workers.