Liz's Fulbright in Malaysia

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Move to Malaysia

In April 2011 my husband and I move to Malaysia. We have been approved for the Malaysia My 2nd Home program. To learn about our post-work life go to Liz and Doug After Work

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Hanging Out in Penang


An up-to-date blog may be a sign of insomnia or a boring stay – neither is true for me. I have used any extra time to work on preparing the power points for my presentations – without power points I am start rambling. The presentation on “Collaborations in Malaysia” which I gave at UiTM in Shah Alam only needs tweeking. I am scheduled to give it again at a UUM (Universiti Utara Malaysia) on Wednesday morning. I have two interviews with environmental groups tomorrow, so I will hold off the tweeking until then. I am also giving a presentation on “Teaching Public Administration (MPA) in US” in the afternoon. The next day I am back to USM to talk about “Teaching Methodology for Applied Research,” largely a discussion based on the text book I have been working on.

So what kept me busy in Penang? I had two interviews on collaboration. One was to organize a Penang conference for parents of disabled persons and the other was with th head of Water Watch Penang. He is also on the Geography faculty. Otherwise I roamed campus and said "hello" and had conversations with USM colleagues. I spent a lot of time with Lina talking, eating, and doing this and that in Penang. When I arrived in Penang on Wednesday we went out for dinner – just in time for a major rain storm. The next day as I walked across campus another rain storm. Friday night Lina and I went out for a walk, went inside a mall to take advantage of the AC and came out to see rain. And then last night I waited with a friend for the rain to stop before we headed for dinner. The rain didn't stop all night. We then drove around Penang looking for a place to eat – finding a place to eat when it is raining isn’t the best idea – outdoor places were out of the question and parking is an added challenge. We both vetoed Kenny Rogers and eventually found a Chinese restaurant.

The shirt is being modeled on the torso of a USM colleagues. I posted the picture of Facebook - Brendan asked exacted when the "day was scheduled." I also sent it to NC State colleagues - one inquiry about buying such a shirt. I think that it speaks fo people everywhere.

This morning Lina and I headed back to KL. We looked like we were off to camp with suitcases, backpacks, and a bag for hand phones and the like. Lina dropped me at Shah Village Hotel and she went on to her family hope in Labu(Pumpkin in Malay)

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Visit to UiTM - Shah Alum




On Tuesday I finally met Gy. In 2006 Gy sent an e-mail to a colleague, Dave Garson, inquiring about developing a relationship between NC State and UiTM. Dave forwarded the message to me and I followed up. (Gy is the woman on the right.) Our correspondence got me started on applying for a Fulbright. Nothing came of my contacts at UiTM, Gy was preoccuppied with finishing up her dissertation. But she started me thinking and getting a plan in place.

On Tuesday I gave a presentation on my research on Collaborations in Malaysia. For the 2nd time in doing this research I was reminded that "collaboration" has a bad connotation. I promised to drop the term. I plan to switch to "Cooperation and Partnerships."

One person felt that I was studying "marginalized" groups. She seemed to have a concern about a "global agenda." I am not sure I captured her meaning correctly, but she does have a point. Although it seemed to be evident in only one of the collaborations I studied, probably a result of funding. Similarly, another mentioned that Human Rights groups have about being coopted - a problem associated with foreign funding. Of course, with foreign funding drying up this may be less of an issue.

Another felt that the disability groups had made progress on accessible transportation was that Air Asia (a success) and Rapid KL (in progress) were forced to make changes. Of course, I think that it was the activities of the disability groups that forced the change. She also wondered how much collaborations were hindered by the lack of staff and depending on volunteers - a problem with the human rights groups. I think that she is on to something there.

I also learned that I should be happy with my response rate - a number of people in the audience felt that Malaysians were less likely to respond to surveys from other Malaysians

A problem that I had noted that the audience agreed with was the difficulty in developing relations with the government. The issues are (a) developing a relationship, (b) having an impact, (c) not feeling used by government. I was also told that I probably got a better response rate to the survey, b/c I was a foreigner

Monday, July 6, 2009

Self Advocacy in Malaysia

Yesterday I had coffee with a staff member (TA) of United Voice, a self-advocacy organization for persons with learning disabilities. In the US this population may be referred to as "cognitively impaired." Members of the board of directors are learning disabled and they supervise (and can fire) TA. TA goes to meetings with other UV members/staff not as a coach, but as a partner.

Similar organizations exist in the US, but they seem to be "under the radar." I have met people in psychology and disability services who are aware of self-advocacy, but most other folks are as uniformed as I. I hope to do some basic research on these groups when I return and examine how they function as 501(c)(3)s. I would like to learn what they do, how they do it, and how they pay for it. In addition I want to explore board operations and board/staff (and TA) relations. Any ideas?

Since Malaysia does not have an organization equivalent to ARC, United Voice becomes an important source of expertise. TA mentioned her frustration with the lack of expertise within the public sector and the constant turnover in the bureaucracy. (I think that this is part of the British legacy).

I have introduced TA and the executive director of the Association of Self Advocates of North Carolina I am sure that both groups will learn from each other. I am trying to locate scholars in the area of self-advocacy or policies for cognitively impaired persons to widen TA's network? Let me know if you know of anyone.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Packed and ready to go


Back to Malaysia tomorrow - to fill in research gaps, visit friends, eat well, and sample all the other delights of travel. I heard that my previous blog entries gave an eating tour of Malaysia - there is a lot more to the country, but the food is impossible to ignore.

Here are my bags - I could have gotten by with two but the larger bag (32 pounds) has books and various souveniers that I will shed en route. By the time I leave Penang (12 July) my backpack will fit into the suitcase. I brought books for various colleagues - so they can avoid postage rates (almost costs as much as the book). I am making 2 university presentations - a copy of my book for each university, a paper weight for the people who made the arrangements, letter openers for the office staff at USM, a few metal book marks (with a cardinal on a dogwood branch) and maple sugar candy. Last year it was Moravian cookies and Obama buttons.

My plane leaves Raleigh at 6:00 a.m. - I figure that I will be so tired that sleeping en route will be easy. I leave Atlanta around 10 a.m. for Korea and then from Korea to KL. I arrive in KL at 10:30 p.m. (24.5 hours after leaving Atlanta). I have a reservation at the Hilton in Petaling Jaya (2 nights for the price of one plus breakfast). Then I move to the familiar Shah Village.

I meet up with Mooi Lian on Friday -her family motivated our 2002 trip (4 trips ago). I meet with Sweelan of United Voices - one of my favorite sites and learning experiences in 2008. More later

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Fish

Instead of describing various meals today I am revisiting a few of our fish dinners. Seven years ago friends in Indonesia took us out for a fish dinner. Every since then I have spent much of my time in Asia satisfying my craving for fish. (Actually it started in 1971 during my first trip to Singapore. I was taken to food stalls along Changi Beach which served cockrels with killer sauce. Now the food stalls have disappeared, the land has been reclaimed from the ocean, and Changi Airport's runways have replaced the food stalls.






The above fish pictures were taken at the Kuching market. From the market to dinner plate here are four favorite appearances. The soupy fish is in an assam sauce - by googling I learned that assam is the Malaysian word for tamarind. Fish assam along with either sarawak laksa or laksa assam are two dishes I can't get enough of. The other picture is a prawn dish.



The other pictures capture two photogenic and tasty fishes




Friday, January 2, 2009

Christmas in the Tropics








When I first solicited suggestions of where to spend Christmas most people prefaced their opinions by suggesting that [name of city] had the most Christmas-like atmosphere. Since Christmas is totally associated with winter in my mind, none of their suggestions seemed likely to recreate feelings of Christmas. In truth I feel like I am in the middle of a long summer vacation

The first signs of Christmas were Santa figures and Christmas trees (masses of them) in the Malls. The visit to Santa was clearly a photo op - Santa did not really engage the kids. In a community where Christmas traditions vary widely asking about gifts may not be a good strategy. We also ran into this ballet performance at the entry of one of the malls




We decided to spend Christmas in Sarawak. As our friends said "Christmas is for family," and our friends in Sarawak are family. On Christmas Eve we had dinner with Clarence and Mooi Lian, their children, Clarence's mother & father, and his sister and her family - we feel very much a part of the family. On Christmas day we visited a kampung for an open house. [Open houses are an important part of the major holidays - Hari Raya, Deepavali, Christmas, and Chinese New Years]. The father of the family had worked with Clarence. His son (to the left) cooked most of the meal. It was tasty - he should have a bright future ahead him if he chooses to continue along the culinary route. (He is an avid fan of the Asian food channel - a passion that seems to be nation wide.)



Two days after Christmas we arrived in Singapore. It was decorated to the hilt with Christmas trees and Christmas lights. Some of the Christmas decorations disappeared on Sunday the 28th to be replaced with Chinese New Year's decorations. A continuous display of visual delights. The group of Christmas trees were at Singapore's airport and the one made up of plastic bottles was on the street. We have more photos, but I expect that readers may also find themselves experiencing visual overload.