March 2005
Volume 38
Number 2
www.clta.net

 CLTA NEWS

 California Language Teachers Association

 

"Accidental Asian" Author
To Be Brunch Speaker

 

Eric Liu is an author and educator who has served in leadership roles in national politics and media. Liu is author of "Guiding Lights: The People Who Lead Us Toward Our Purpose in Life," just out from Random House, about life-changing mentors and teachers across many cultures and walks of life. "Guiding Lights" is the Official Book of National Mentoring Month. Liu is also the author of "The Accidental Asian: Notes of a Native Speaker," a New York Times Notable Book featured in the acclaimed PBS documentary series "Matters of Race," and was editor of the Norton anthology "Next: Young American Writers on the New Generation." Liu served as a foreign policy speechwriter for President Clinton and later as White House deputy domestic policy adviser. After his service in the Clinton Administration he worked as an executive at the pioneering digital media company RealNetworks. Liu is now the host of "The Power of Voice," an NPR show on KUOW in Seattle. Liu teaches at the Evans School of Public Affairs at the University of Washington and serves on the boards of numerous national and regional organizations, including Common Cause, the Seattle Public Library, the League of Education Voters and the Asian Community Leadership Foundation.

 Friday Night Banquet Speaker


Dr. Terry Tafoya is a Native American of the Taos Pueblo and Warm Springs Nations, a clinical psychologist, and traditional storyteller. Dr. Tafoya is the executive director of Tamanawit L.L.C, an international, multicultural consulting company that specializes in bilingual education, cross-cultural competence and communication, gender and sexuality, grief and loss, Native American heritage, and spiritual healing. Dr. Tafoya is well versed in the arts of Native American and other indigenous healingrituals. He has directed the training efforts of a national program for AIDS awareness and prevention, and serves as a national consultant for the U.S. Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. His work in the areas of cultural diversity, educational methodology and philosophy, community healing, and cross cultural communication is professionally recognized worldwide. Dr. Tafoya has used American Indian ritual and cer
e mony in thousands of lectures, workshops, and keynote addresses around the world. With over 20 years of university-level teaching experience, including his work with the National Bilingual Training and Resource Center, Dr. Tafoya has worked with mental health, human sexuality, AIDS/HIV, substance abuse prevention, and bilingual education in his work as a trainer and educator. He has taught with the Kinsey Institute for the Study of Human Sexuality, Gender, and Reproduction, as faculty, and as an expert on cross-cultural sexuality. He serves as a National Consultant for the U.S. Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, and is the Chief Curriculum Writer for the Gathering of Native Americans, a national project for Native American Substance Abuse Prevention. He is also on the National Teaching Faculty for the American Psychological Association and on the International Faculty of the Milton H. Erickson Foundation for Clinical Hypnosis and Psychotherapy. In 2004, he was appointed to a panel charged with setting the standards for cross-cultural competency to be used by the U.S. Centers for Substance Abuse Treatment.

In This Issue

Front Page
About CLTA News
From the President
Greetings from the Conference Registrar!
Conference University Credit
Saturday Evening Excursions with the CLTA Board
Driving Directions to the DoubleTree Hotel, Ontario Airport
Affiliate News
Your Board, Officers, and Representatives in Action
Making Your Voice Heard is Important
The Way It Was: Defining the State's FL Organization
National Security Education act H. R. 115:
The International Flagship Language Initiative
The 22nd Annual Summer Seminar for Language Teachers
Spain 2005 - Study and Cultural Tour for Teachers