GSSW Professor to Study Youth Participation as Fulbright Fellow in Taiwan
Like many Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic, and her family hardly left their neighborhood. Now, they are preparing to move across the world.
In August, Bender, the 91桃色鈥檚 Philip D. and Eleanor G. Winn Professor for Children and Youth at Risk in the , will begin her six-month term as a Fulbright Fellow at National Taipei University in Taiwan. She will work with the , which blends social work and sociology in researching youth.
鈥淥ne area they focus on is youth participation, an area that I鈥檝e been studying here in the U.S. and have wanted to spend time thinking about through an international lens this year on sabbatical,鈥 Bender says.
Much of her recent work has focused on youth participation and activism. Thus, she plans to devote part of her time to interviewing other scholars who do youth participation work to understand how they conceptualize the topic.
鈥淎nd one of my collaborators in Taiwan has connected me with a community-based organization where we鈥檒l do research with young people in an after-school program,鈥 Bender says. She also will conduct a training workshop at NTPU on Photovoice, a participatory action research method that allows participants to tell their stories through their own photographs and narratives.
The is the U.S. government鈥檚 flagship international educational exchange program. Fulbright鈥檚 network of scholars, alumni and global partners aim to foster mutual understanding between the U.S. and partner nationals, share knowledge across communities and improve lives globally.
鈥淚 feel a lot of gratitude to have this award. It鈥檚 going to create an opportunity that I never imagined,鈥 Bender says. 鈥淔olks are opening their arms to learning together across cultures and countries.鈥
In her U.S.-based research, Bender examines how young people use their voices to create social change.
鈥淢y work in the U.S. has been activism-oriented,鈥 she says, including providing guidance for programs on how to better offer support. 鈥淭aiwan tends to be more communal and collectively oriented. I鈥檓 interested to think about how participation looks there, which may include a greater focus on young peoples鈥 sense of responsibility for their community.鈥
The Fulbright Fellowship will afford her the chance to observe what participation means to young people in another culture and reflect on the differences or similarities between the two nations. While leaning more toward collective cultural experiences than the United States, Taiwan is also a capitalist country.
鈥淚t鈥檒l be interesting to see where there may be overlap and divergence between practices,鈥 Bender says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e starting to more in the U.S., partly out of the pandemicT, where many people ended up being more collectivist in responding to neighbors鈥 needs and taking care of one another when a lot of our systems fell short and couldn鈥檛 take care of us. 鈥
Her stateside research in recent years by the Corporation for National and Community Service, also known as . She and her collaborators have pursued a series of Photovoice projects; for example, in , young people document their experiences of homelessness and advocate for social change.
鈥淭hey document their experiences and then come back together in groups to dialogue about what they capture in their photos, what it represents and what recommendations they make based on what they collected,鈥 Bender says. But in the U.S., homelessness carries a great deal of stigma.
鈥淎 lot of what young people talk about is that they鈥檙e so much more than their unhoused experience. They have significant aspirations for education, for activism, for jobs and employment, for relationships,鈥 she says.
But they often find their aspirations stifled.
鈥淥nce you鈥檙e labeled as homeless and then funneled into a service system, there are not a lot of opportunities to grow as a person, follow your dreams and evolve holistically,鈥 Bender notes. 鈥淥ften, you鈥檙e positioned as a service recipient to get structured case management. They鈥檙e at a developmental age where they鈥檙e trying to figure out who they are and what they want to do in the world. And that discussion is often lacking in what our typical system response offers them.鈥
Bender鈥檚 Photovoice and youth participatory action research methods have focused on working with young people as co-researchers of their own experience.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really changed things that I thought I understood. It鈥檚 become much clearer that it鈥檚 very difficult to truly understand someone鈥檚 experience if you haven鈥檛 been through it yourself.鈥
That type of research, she has found, is rare in Taiwan, but there is great interest among her future collaborators. She has learned that Taiwanese tech-savvy youth might prefer making short videos instead of taking photographs and that they have an interest in engaging in a project that exchanges their media creations with young people in the U.S.
鈥淚 am excited that these new collaborative projects will mean expanding my tools and methods as I co-learn and co-create with young people in Taiwan,鈥 she says.
The Fulbright Scholar application cycle is currently open for 2024-25 academic year. The application deadline is September 15, 2023. Interested applicants can contact the 91桃色 Fulbright Scholar campus liaison, Leasa Weimer, at听leasa.weimer@du.edu,听with specific questions or personal consultations.