Rad Against Racism Session 4: Asian Sexuality and Gender: Representation & Stereotypes in American Film, Part 2
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Hai Do, E.Ed is a lifelong learner and educator. He has been at the Hamlin School teaching students since 2018. Hai proudly recognizes the complex intersections of his identity, as a queer person of color, more specifically as a mixed race Vietnamese American and trans man. His own identity and experience has driven his passion and research in diversity, equity, and inclusion in education.
Hai has his undergraduate degree from the University of San Francisco where he graduated with honors in International Studies with a minor in Global Politics and Asian Studies. After several months of research and writing, his work Asian Sexuality and Gender: Representation and Stereotypes in American Film was published in USF’s Globalizing Equity: A Survey of Rights, Representations, and Justice. He then went on to get his Master’s degree in Education from the University of the Pacific. His final research project for that program explored the relationship between gender, specifically young girls, and positive and negative self-talk. He also has been a part of panels for the NAIS People of Color Conference, CADTC Teaching Foundations, and the Bay Area Teacher Training Institute.
This lecture series is organized by the Rad Staff DEI Committee.