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ITEP Alumni Profiles

ITEP Alumni Profiles

Heidi Ashton, 2003 ITEP alum, has been actively involved in the International Education field for the past ten years, including two years working as an English Language Teacher for the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Programme in Okayama, Japan and as an International Student Advisor for the English Language Center in Boston, Massachusetts. While in at ITEP, she worked closely with the International Student Service office to create the T.A.L.K. program (or Taking Action to Learn about “K”ulture) to bring domestic and international students on campus together to talk about the effects of culture on their daily lives. Currently, Heidi is the Assistant Director for the School of International Service’s Dual Degree and Exchange Programs between American University and partner institutions in Japan and Korea.

Allison Barnes, 2006 ITEP alum and former Graduate Assistant, currently works as a Management Associate for AIG/ALICO’s (American Life Insurance Company) Center for Professional Education. Based in Dubai , she represents and travels throughout ALICO’s MEASA (Middle East, Africa and South Asia ) region to roll out, facilitate and monitor ALICO’s training initiatives. These initiatives include leadership, management and cross cultural training. Prior to ALICO, Ms. Barnes worked as a Program Manager at Full Circle International Relocations where she oversaw destination services provided to incoming foreign nationals across the United States. During her time at ITEP, she held many internships/jobs including the Council for the International Exchange of Scholars (CIES), training for the State Department’s Foreign Service Institute (FSI), and American University’s Hubert Humphrey Fellowship Program. Ms. Barnes was born in Peru and has lived in Germany, Mexico, England, and South Korea.

Kerri Bowers, 2004 ITEP alum, currently teaches high school English and works as a Literacy Coach at Cesar Chavez Public Charter School for Public Policy. As an English teacher, she is responsible for designing multicultural curricula and strives to reach the diverse learning needs of her students.  In addition, she has been trained by the Public Education and Business Coalition (PEBC) as a Literacy Coach. This role allows her to work as a teacher trainer for other Chavez School teachers.  She also volunteers as the Visiting Teacher Coordinator for AFS, an international exchange non-profit organization, where she works with and learns from educators around the globe. She encourages students interested in similar work to learn about multicultural education and curriculum design. While at ITEP she earned a formal secondary teaching certificate. 

Maureen Breslin, 2005 ITEP alum, currently works at American University as the Coordinator for Academic Support Program for Student-Athletes. After ITEP she also worked as a teacher with the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus where she ran a one-room schoolhouse with 13 students in grades 1 through 12 while traveling the United States with the circus.

Christine Burns, 2003 ITEP alum, is currently a high school teacher at the Mont'Kiara International School in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, teaching Business and Management within the International Baccalaureate curriculum.  After graduating from ITEP, she moved to Mexico City with her husband where they both worked as high school teachers at the Tecnologico de Monterrey Preparatoria for three years.  In ITEP, she focused on nonformal education.  She advises current students to develop skills in cross-cultural communications, curriculum planning, effective presentation skills (including IT), patience, curiosity. 

Melissa Crutchfield, 2005 ITEP alum and former ITEP Graduate Assistant, is currently the Implementing Partners’ Technical Advisor for the USAID-funded Ambassadors’ Girls’ Scholarship Program (AGSP), run by the Academy for Educational Development (AED) in 14 countries in Africa. In this position, she travels to Cameroon, Niger, Djibouti, Kenya and other countries in Africa to work directly with local organizations, girls and mentors. Her responsibilities include training and facilitation, monitoring and evaluation, contract and budget management, and offering technical assistance to local implementing partners and mentors. Previous positions include being a Program Officer on other USAID-funded scholarship programs for scholars from the West Bank and Gaza, Benin and Zambia; Girls’ & Adult Education Graduate Intern with the International Rescue Committee in Guinea; and English Teacher for the U.S. Peace Corps in Cameroon. She also participated in several study abroad programs in France as an undergraduate, and travels extensively for business and pleasure. Through ITEP and her graduate internship, she learned about theories of education in international development and practical skills in training, monitoring and evaluation, all of which has proven extremely useful in her professional career. Through her experiences since graduation, she has also learned the very necessary skills of working directly on USAID and other U.S. government contracts, dealing with organizational and donor bureaucracy, and proposal writing. She encourages current students to develop skills in all of these areas whenever possible.

Brian J. Daniels, 2007 ITEP graduate, is currently a Senior Content Producer at NogginLabs, Inc., a Chicago-based e-learning consulting firm, where he creates custom e-learning content for Fortune 100 companies and advises internal project teams on instruction design principles. Prior to joining NogginLabs, Brian was a Presidential Management Fellow at the General Services Administration, where he also worked in the e-learning field. During his tenure at ITEP, Brian worked as a Graduate Assistant in the ITEP program and as a Program Assistant at the American Political Science Association. Prior to joining ITEP, Brian served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Bulgaria, where he taught English as a Foreign Language to secondary school students.

Matt DeMarco is a 2003 ITEP graduate who concentrated in organizational change. He incorporates active learning into his work developing grassroots volunteer leaders for the American Farm Bureau Federation. In his role as director of leadership development he designs and delivers a variety of training programs for volunteers and staff. Prior to his work with America’s farmers and ranchers Matt spent four years as a career counselor with graduate students at Johns Hopkins University SAIS. Prior to starting the ITEP program, Matt served as a high school science teacher in the Peace Corps in Samoa. Matt currently resides in Washington, DC and travels across the country having organized training programs in 45 states.

Michelle Otterman Emmett, 1995 ITEP alum, currently works with CARE Australia as a the Coordinator for Tsunami Affected Countries, where she travels often and manages over $40 million of post-tsunami reconstruction and rehabilitation programs in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and India. Her day to day responsibilities include contract management and program monitoring and evaluation. Since ITEP, she has worked both with and for USAID on civil society programming in Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, and Indonesia. She has been living in Australia for six years with her Aussie husband and 3 year old son. She encourages students interested in similar work to develop project management skills. She was also able to use what she learned at ITEP to apply to policy and program development at more senior levels.

Chris Galaty, 1999 ITEP alum and former ITEP Graduate Assistant, is currently a high school teacher at the American School of Warsaw in Warsaw Poland teaching mathematics within the International Baccalaureate curriculum. After graduating from ITEP, Chris taught mathematics for two years at St. John’s College High School in Washington, DC before moving to Istanbul, Turkey to teach mathematics at the Koc School for three years. At the American School of Warsaw, Chris also coaches the High School Cross-Country team and the High School Math Team. In addition, Chris advises the High School Model United Nations club where he works with club members to develop the skills needed to participate in UN simulations and debate many international issues and their possible outcomes.

James T. Ham, 2005 ITEP alum, is the newly selected Country Director for Peace Corps Cameroon. Just prior to this appointment he served as Country Desk Officer for the Peace Corps Africa Region. He was responsible for the Peace Corps programs in Benin, Cameroon and Burkina Faso. He has served in this position for two years. Among the duties that he has participated in include: the closure and suspension of Peace Corps Gabon and Chad, CD Selection Panels, PCMO selection panels, APCD selection Panels and also served as the Office of Special Services Duty Officer. On three different occasions served as the Country Director for Peace Corps Cameroon. Other activities include co facilitated the Southern Africa Diversity workshop in Mozambique in 2004. Prior to becoming Country Desk Officer in the Africa Region, James Ham served as the Country Desk Assistant for the nations of Ghana, Guinea, Togo and the Ivory Coast. He assisted with the evacuation of the Volunteers in the Ivory Coast and served on the State Department Task Force during this evacuation process. Other positions served at the Peace Corps include those of Staging Director, Co-Chair Black History Month committee, member of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Observance Committee, Women's Month Committee. Mr. Ham was selected by the Director to serve as Co- Chair of the 2005 Combined Federal Campaign for Peace Corps. Mr. Ham is veteran of the United States Navy. Currently he holds a Bachelor of Arts in Middle Grades Education from North Carolina Central. An educator for over ten years teaching in urban, rural and international settings, he is a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer where he served as a teacher in Guinea. Mr. Ham speaks French fluently and was selected to participate in the International Career Advancement Program in Aspen, Colorado in 2004. James is married to Sharoya Ham and has three sons, Jeremiah 9, Myles 6 and Malachi 4.

Caitlin Haugen, 2006 ITEP alum and former ITEP Graduate Assistant, is currently a PhD student in the Education Policy Leadership program at the University of Maryland specializing in International Education Policy. She also serves as the Graduate Student Association President for her department, and works as a Graduate Assistant. Her research interests include environmental adult education, ecojustice, and conceptualizing international education. She found the practical aspects of the ITEP program most helpful - including adult learning theory, creating training designs, and completing group presentations.

Jennifer Herman, Jennifer Herman works as Director of Instructional Support at Niagara University near Niagara Falls, NY. In addition to establishing a campus-wide Teaching and Learning Center, Jennifer works with faculty and staff to promote and improve assessment of student learning, the integration of technology into the classroom, and active and integrative learning. In addition to her duties as Director of Instructional Support, Jennifer teaches Multicultural Education in the Graduate School of Education at NU (beginning in fall 2008) and is working on her PhD in Comparative Education at the University at Buffalo. She regularly presents on incorporating Intercultural Training methods into faculty development practices. Read more about Niagara's Center for Instructional Support at: www.niagara.edu/is.

Alisia Kachmar, 2002 ITEP alum, is currently a Training Specialist with the US Agency for International Development's (USAID) Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA).  She designs, delivers, and evaluates courses and programs that focus on staff training and capacity building for staff and partners who respond to natural and man-made disasters abroad.  For the past two years, she has also been the Executive Coordinator for the DC metro area chapter of the Society for Intercultural Education, Training, and Research (SIETAR-DC).  During ITEP, she worked at Peace Corps headquarters and had many opportunities to test out theories and put into practice the skills and techniques she learned in class.  She also appreciated the opportunity to take Public Administration classes which opened up her eyes to the impact that training, or the lack of training, can have on an organization.  She advises current students to develop the ability to work with subject matter experts who are trying to convey technical information to non-technical colleagues, especially when the information needs to be conveyed in interesting and creative ways.

Cynthia Kirkpatrick-Tasaki, 1995 ITEP alum, currently works with the National Institutes of Health as a Lead Immigration Specialist, Division of International Services, helping to bring in the best and brightest from around the world to conduct health research that leads to new cures for diseases and health conditions. She also is the Chair for NAFSA: Association of International Educators, Region VIII, which consists of Virginia, Maryland, the District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Delaware. She worked for almost six years as an Assistant Director in the Office of International Programs and Services at George Mason University. She also worked at the University of Maryland, College Park and Salem-Teikyo University as an international student and scholar advisor for many years. She uses much of the coursework from her ITEP days such as Cross-Cultural Communication, International and Comparative Education in her work still. She and her husband, Chikara, have a 3 year old son.

Yukiko Kumazawa, 2007 ITEP alum with a TESOL certificate, is currently working as a program coordinator for Wheelchairs and Friendship Center of Asia Thailand (WAFCAT), a Thai non-profit organization that donates wheelchairs and provides scholarships for children with disabilities. She is interested in nonformal education and program design for study abroad. She hopes to pursue a career in study abroad management. She has worked for both the Japan International Cooperative Agency and Civil Society Consulting, LLC. Before ITEP, she taught English in a middle school in Japan for four years. She was an assistant Japanese teacher at a private high school in Australia and worked with an NGO helping street children in Vietnam. This past summer, she interned at a consulting company hosting a group of Chinese volunteer managers who came to the US to learn about volunteerism.

Kristina Knabke, 2007 ITEP alum, is interested in international student services and hopes to pursue a career as an international student advisor. She has worked for International Student and Scholar Services at American University. Before ITEP, she worked at UC Davis as an Activities Coordinator at an intensive English program. She also taught English in Italy and studied abroad in Spain. This past summer she traveled to Mexico, California, and Grand Cayman.

Joayne Larson, 2006 ITEP alum, holds a BA in International Relations from Tufts University. Upon graduation, she served in the Peace Corps in Far East Russia, teaching English. Her domestic work experience includes coordinating an academic mentor program for youth in affordable housing, most of whom were recent immigrants. In 2003, she moved to Santiago, Chile to assist in the formation of an English language immersion institute, CHILEidiomas. She moved to DC in August of 2004 to join ITEP. Her concentration was Education and Social Change, focusing on training and teaching. She graduated in December 2006 with a combined degree in K-12 Spanish education. She is currently employed as a fulltime Spanish teacher at Cesar Chavez Public Charter School for Public Policy in Washington, DC.

Anna Lee, 2006 ITEP alum, currently works as the program coordinator for the Intercultural Management Institute in SIS at American University.  She manages all the cross-cultural training programs, events and graduate level courses offered through IMI. She encourages students to develop a cohesive picture of the skills and knowledge they hope to gain while in the ITEP program. 

Daniel Lopez, 1995 ITEP alum, has been actively involved in the field of Service-Learning and International Education & Training for the past 20 years. While earning a BA in Spanish/International Studies and an MA in Education from American University in Washington, DC, Daniel studied for a semester with the Partnership for Service-Learning in Ecuador. He was consequently chosen to be Fulbright Scholar in Ecuador in 1993 where he conducted teacher-training workshops at Bi-national centers throughout the country. The U.S. State Department/School for International Training (SIT) sent him to Southern India in 1996 to teach American Studies as part of the English Teaching Fellowship program. Ever since, Daniel has sought opportunities to share his knowledge of the world with others and lead a variety of cross-cultural programs.  He has been a Program Director for VISIONS Service Adventures in the Dominican Republic, British Virgin Islands, Ecuador and Peru; Country Manager for Global Volunteers in Tanzania; and Team Leader in Peru for Where There Be Dragons, all volunteer-based travel organizations. Daniel has also taught in more formal academic settings in Spain, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Saudi Arabia, Panama, and Denver. Daniel currently serves on the National Steering Committee for Human Rights Education for Amnesty International and is the co-founder and Executive Director of Kindred Spirits Tour and Travel & Foundation (www.kindredspiritstourandtravel.com). In August 2006, Daniel accepted a position in Cochabamba, Bolivia as Associate Peace Corps Director for Microentreprise Development and Community Tourism Projects.

Lisa Luceno, 2007 ITEP alum, currently works full time at Mary's Center for Maternal and Child Care in the charter school for immigrant families as a teacher and trainer. Before ITEP, she was a preschool teacher in a language immersion school. She was also a Peace Corps volunteer in Bolivia and studied abroad. She spent the summer working and taking classes.

Laurin A. Marden (formerly Laurin Kinville), 1990 ITEP alum, is currently the Director of Training and Documentation for a small accounting software company in Nashua, NH. Her company sells and supports accounting software for schools, municipalities, and public utilities in the Northeast United States.  She develops and maintains training resources and programs, software help systems and online knowledge base, and content delivered via the company website.  Beforehand, she worked at the same company as Director of Support and Continuing Services.  After ITEP, she was the Documentation Supervisor for a company that sold and supported software used in satellite earth stations to monitor and control devices and Traveling Trainer and Senior Support for One Write Plus, a now-defunct accounting program for small businesses. 

Shannon McNary, 2001 ITEP alum lives in Baku, Azerbaijan with her family. She is a free-lance consultant focusing on qualitative evaluations of civil society, peace, and human rights programs in the Caucasus; policy advocacy, and NGO capacity building. She is also a corporate cross-cultural trainer for new expatriates with Prudential. Prior to her free lance work, she worked alongside a network of human rights and peace organizations utilizing participatory methodologies to engage stakeholders and build local capacities in organizational development with a focus on strategic planning, monitoring and evaluation.

Jill Arriaga Meeks, 2005 ITEP alum, is currently the Senior Education Advisor for the Safe Schools Project at DevTech System, Inc. Safe Schools is a 5 year USAID project working in Malawi and Ghana to create safe environments for all girls and boys that promote gender equitable relationships and reduce school-related gender-based violence (SRGBV) resulting in improved educational outcomes and reduced negative health outcomes. She developed a teacher training curriculum to give teachers new skills to address violence in the schools, helping them to create safer learning environments inside their classrooms. The curriculum focuses on adult-child dynamics, rights and responsibilities, positive non-violent classroom discipline, active listening, crisis management, reporting, and individual action planning helping teachers to prevent and respond to SRGBV. While at ITEP she worked on the Country Desk Unit for Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda in the Africa Region of Peace Corps Headquarters. Prior to ITEP, she was a classroom teacher, including two years as a teacher trainer in the Peace Corps in Guinea Bissau, West Africa.

Roksana Nabavian, 2005 ITEP alum, currently works at Blackboard Inc. in Washington DC as the International Channel Partner Marketing Manager. In this role she works to promote e-learning at over 500 higher education institutions in over 60 countries. She speaks to Partners around the world on a daily basis and travels to events where Partners demonstrate the benefits of Blackboard's software platforms. Since graduating from ITEP she has worked for Discovery Education as the International Operations Coordinator and continues to teach Spanish and Italian to adults. ITEP's Multicultural Education and Cross-Cultural Communications courses have served her most in daily work experiences.

Erin Nester, 2007 ITEP alum, is currently working at World Learning in Washington, DC. She is interested in nonformal education and flexible education models, as well as integrating arts into education programs and hopes to continue working in these areas.  Before coming to ITEP, she was an English Instructor in Italy and a Peace Corps volunteer in Georgia.  In addition to these two experiences abroad, she has also studied in France. 

Christy Nichols, 2006 ITEP alum, is currently an international student advisor at American University.  Her primary focus is on student immigration, but she also coordinates the intercultural programs for international students.  These programs include orientation, language partners, travel, and cooking that are designed to deal with issues of culture shock, US multiculturalism, friendship, and cross-cultural exchange, among other things.  She encourages students to get involved in the ITEP program by voicing opinions about its design. 

Marilyn Noguera, 1998 ITEP alum, is currently an advisor to the Ministry of Health of Mozambique and US Government PEPFAR partner agencies for the logistics management of HIV/AIDS related health commodities.  As the Lead Resident Advisor in Mozambique, she will lead a project team to build the capacity of Ministry of Health staff to improve the ability of their system to deliver essential health products such as medicines and reagents when and where they are needed. Since ITEP, she has worked in health logistics at John Snow, Inc. as a trainer, writing curriculum and leading training of trainer workshops for nurses and doctors managing health supplies in African and Latin American countries.  The skills she found most useful after leaving ITEP are training delivery, curriculum development, and foreign language skills (French, Spanish, and Portuguese for her).

Mary Kathryn (Katie) Oakley, 2006 ITEP alum, is currently in Germany as part of The Robert Bosch Foundation Fellowship Program. Working at the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU), Katie has been in Germany since Summer 2007, exploring how European integration and the Bologna process are affecting educational policy, strategic planning in higher education, and student mobility within Europe and between Germany and the United States. Upon completion of her fellowship program in June 2008, Katie will return to her position as international student director for the American University Washington Semester Program, where she has traveled to several different countries recruiting international students and developing university partnerships. Before her employment at AU, Katie worked for the Botswana development training program at the Academy for Educational Development. She has also studied in Namibia and participated in an exchange program to Japan. In Spring 2007, Katie expanded her international education experiences by leading 21 students on a short-term International Business and Trade study tour of China. Katie's interests include international student exchange, study abroad programming, higher education administration, and cross-cultural training. She hopes to eventually pursue a PhD.

Jessica Van Boven O'Connor is a 2006 graduate of the ITEP program. She is a Presidential Management Fellow with the Department of State and is on temporary assignment to Embassy Brussels. Immediately after graduating from ITEP, she volunteered for a community schools organization in Zambia, where she raised over $1.4 million for orphans and vulnerable children. While at AU, she worked full time for the School of International Service and later for the Kogod School of Business. She also organized and led an Alternative Break trip for AU students to Zambia in August 2006, which linked students to volunteer and educational projects on HIV/AIDS and education, the focus of her ITEP studies. During this three week trip she met her husband, a Belgian national who was working on those same issues in Zambia. They plan to continue working in international development and public policy.
http://picasaweb.google.com/jess.oconnor/JessicaPhotos/photo#5101834543241176978

Liz Maag Odongo, 2003 ITEP alum, graduated with a focus on international development and HIV/AIDS. Her first professional appointment was at the Academy for Educational Development (AED), where she worked in the Global Health, Population and Nutrition Group to support projects to end HIV/AIDS in South Africa, avian influenza in Southeast Asia and to promote family planning in the Philippines. In October of 2006, Liz left AED to co-found Public Spectacle, a grassroots nonprofit that stimulates conversation about intimate partner violence within communities through performance art. Public Spectacle works in schools, women's shelters and universities to provide direct services in identifying red flags and breaking the cycle of violence. Public Spectacle has performed at various functions including the Teen Dating Violence Conference, the American Association of University Women and, most recently, the Institute of Medicine's two-day conference on violence prevention in low and middle-income countries. In addition to Public Spectacle, Liz works as a Domestic Violence Advocate and Educator at the Women's Center in Vienna, Va., where she supports men and women leaving abusive relationships and trains local service providers. Her current projects include conducting a needs assessment of Prince William County and designing a 10 week program for parents and young boys on empathy-building skills for the Department of Justice. Liz has served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Guyana and lived as an exchange student in Venezuela.

Brinton Ramsey, 1993 ITEP alum, is currently Research Coordinator at the Coalition of Essential Schools NW/Small Schools Project in Seattle, WA where she conducts ethnographic research on school reform issues. A former Peace Corps volunteer (Thailand) and now an anthropologist and educator, Brinnie worked for eleven years as a project manager and consultant to educational non-profits in Washington, D.C., Dallas, TX, and New York City in the areas of whole school reform, diversity in higher education, and museum education. Brinnie is the author of several reports and monographs on aspects of small school redesign and holds a Masters in International Education from American University, a Masters in Anthropology from the University of Texas, and has completed 65 hours towards a PhD in Applied Anthropology at Teachers College, Columbia University.

Wendi Ralaingita, 1998 ITEP alum, is currently a Doctoral Candidate in International Education Policy at the University of Maryland, teaching a research class there as well.  She has been at the University of Maryland for over six years, taking on a number of different graduate assistantships, outside consultancies, and short-term research jobs on top of getting married and having a baby.  She is also the Coordinator of Supplemental Instruction and Tutoring Services in the Academic Support Center at American University.  Following graduation, she worked with Catholic Relief Services in Madagascar for one year in their Fellows program.  She then worked in Chicago, coordinating education services in a homeless shelter.  She considers the training skills she developed in ITEP very important.

Stephanie Rust, ITEP alum, currently manages the USAID-funded Civil Society Strengthening Project in Macedonia for the Institute for Sustainable Communities ( ISC ). The Civil Society Strengthening Project (CSSP) is a three year $5 million program that seeks to make Macedonia’s civil society a more effective, influential, and permanent partner alongside government and businesses in shaping the country’s present and future. CSSP’s approach is to support both a focused group of Leader NGOs and the sector as a whole in order to foster a better environment and increase resources for civil society, help NGOs achieve concrete results on issues that matter to citizens, and improve the sector’s image and understanding. Ms. Rust also serves as ISC ’s Balkans Development Director.

Regina (Schuman) Rabenhorst, 2007 ITEP alum and former ITEP Graduate Assistant, currently works at Chemonics International as a Program Associate in the Corporate Training Department. While in ITEP, she worked for the Humphrey Program, an international visitor program for mid-career law professionals working for human rights, where she planned and delivered a month long orientation program with a co-worker as well as planned events. Before ITEP, she managed an education and training program for out-of-school and out-of-work youth in San Francisco. She also spent 3 months as a volunteer with Pe No Chao, a Brazilian non-profit working with street children in Recife, Brazil, and one year studying Latin American economic development at the University of Costa Rica. She has traveled extensively through Central America, the Caribbean, and Brazil. Regina holds a BS in Foreign Service from Georgetown University.

Rahal Saeed, 2002 ITEP alum, is currently the Director of Aahung, a non profit organization focusing on sexual and reproductive health and rights based in Karachi, Pakistan.  Her organization does a lot of training, research and resource development, and works with health care providers, schools and community-based organizations.  Her goal is to advocate for sexual rights as fundamental human rights, a very challenging task given Pakistan's rather conservative religious (predominantly Muslim) and social culture.  After graduating ITEP, she worked for the Centre for Development and Population Activities (CEDPA) as a Program Officer secunded to the Catalyst Consortium, a five-year global USAID-funded reproductive health activity that worked in several countries in Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe.  She also consulted for several organizations primarily focused on reproductive health and HIV/AIDS.  She later worked as an Academic Advisor for American University's School of Public Affairs for an executive Master in Public Administration Program.  She also has a year old daughter and has recently moved back to Pakistan from Washington, DC.  Skills she needed after graduating include program management and administration, training, managing budgets, and report and proposal writing.

Pauline A. Shams, 2005 ITEP alum, is currently working for a democracy and human rights promotion organization called Freedom House, where she has designed training agendas for professional trainers to implement and hires trainers by assessing their skills, knowledge and abilities to train effectively based on what she learned at ITEP. She utilizes her facilitation skills in leading a small group at her church and also designed and taught a six month nonformal Arabic language class for children ages 3 through 6 years old.   She uses the policy information, the qualitative and quantitative analysis tools, monitoring and evaluation skills, and educational and social change theory skills that she gained through ITEP in her current job.  While in ITEP, she found Advanced Training Program Design and learning about global policies regarding education and educational trends very helpful.  She advises students to develop good budget management skills and quantitative analysis abilities. 

Stephanie Smith is a 2005 ITEP graduate who has recently started a position in Tanzania as curriculum developer for country-wide HIV training for health care workers in Tanzania. Prior to this opportunity, she designed and facilitated training of trainers for Afghan engineers in Kabul, and worked as a local training advisor to Malagasy doctor/trainers for a large NGO in Madagascar. Prior to ITEP, Stephanie served as an AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer in Colorado to assist homeless families with services and rights to education, and taught English to middle and high school students as a Peace Corps volunteer in Madagascar.

Danielle Sodani, 2003 ITEP alum, graduated with a concentration in Educational Technology, building technical skills in web design and researched how people communicate and learn using technology online versus face-to-face.  While in ITEP she worked in non-profit fundraising, and after graduation did some independent consulting for schools and non-profits.  During this time, she was hired by the Lab School of Washington (www.labschool.org) to develop an internal website used by teachers to post homework assignments and class information for students and parents.  This website has become an integral communication tool for the school.  She also worked with Encompass Consulting (www.encompassworld.com) on an evaluation project of the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation's executive leadership program, and at American University School of Education redesigning their website and working on their accreditation process. She is currently Coordinator of Special Projects in the School of Education, Teaching and Health at American University and has continued building the educational technology skills and training skills she learned in ITEP through the development of a new electronic portfolio and assessment system, which is being introduced to all students in May 2007.  In October 2005, she designed and facilitated a series of five educational technology workshops for Archdiocese of Washington technology coordinators and teachers. She has also continued honing her fundraising and non-profit management skills through the writing and management of several federal grants.  She has also had the opportunity to teach a college-level course - Uses of Technology in Education - to students who were current teachers in DCPS.  She also has a 2 year-old son, serves as treasurer of her neighborhood community association, and is a member of the International Society for Technology in Education.  She and her husband have started their own consulting business providing technology applications and support for schools and non-profits.

Jennifer Stanton-Brand, 2003 ITEP alum, is currently an Independent Consultant and runs Beyond all Boundaries.  She provides training, coaching, and support in arenas such as culture, language, communication, group dynamics, creative thinking, and strategic planning that serve as a catalyst for individuals and organizations to challenge the paradigms of who they know themselves to be and to push far beyond what they previously dreamed possible.  While at ITEP she also received professional master certificates in Intercultural Communication and Organizational Change.  After ITEP, she was a Regional Manager at AFS Intercultural Programs, spent a summer living in Paris and attending total immersion French classes, and taught Spanish.  The skills she views as most important include facilitation, coaching, language, computers, marketing, and knowledge of organizational development and intercultural issues.

Cynthia Tasaki (maiden name Cynthia Kirkpatrick while at AU), 1995 ITEP alum, has been at George Mason University since 2001 as an International Student and Scholar Advisor and Assistant Director in the Office of International Programs and Services.  She is also Chair-Elect for NAFSA: Association of International Educators, Region VIII, which includes the DC area.  Before working at George Mason, she was an International Student Advisor at the University of Maryland from 1996 to 2001.  She received a broad base of knowledge of the field of international education while in ITEP and learned about immigration regulations from her involvement with NAFSA conferences and networking meetings and resources.  She encourages students to take advantage of networking opportunities while in ITEP and recommends Cross-Cultural Communication and Multicultural Education courses.

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