Culture-Based Well-being & Sexuality Curriculum Now Available for Chuukese & CHamoru Communities
In an effort to reduce the risk of contracting HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted
diseases in Chuukese and CHamoru communities, the Office of Minority Health Resource
Center designed a culturally relevant curriculum distinct to each community. The authors
of the curriculum will be facilitating a training next week, September 18 to September 22 at the Guam Museum.
The training, which is hosted by the Office of Minority Health in collaboration with
Guam’s Alternative Lifestyle Association (GALA), will focus specifically on the Chuukese
component of the curriculum. A press conference will be held on Tuesday, September 19 at 9:30 a.m. in the Guam Museum’s Indoor Theater to introduce the curriculum to the community at large.
The curriculum, titled Navigating Personal Wellbeing & Sexuality: A Facilitator's
Guide for Working with Chuukese and CHamoru Communities, is a culture-based resource
for peer educators, teachers, counselors, social workers, community & traditional
leaders and health care advocates who educate about personal wellness, sexuality,
HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases in Chuukese and CHamoru communities.
It includes ten lessons that address culturally distinct attitudes, myths, beliefs,
and human behavior. It also aims to explore barriers rooted in specific beliefs and
attitudes that may place individuals at greater risk of contracting HIV/AIDS and other
sexually transmitted diseases.
The authors, Dr. Lisa Linda Natividad and Dr. Timmy de la Cruz, worked with experts
with in-depth knowledge of Chuukese and CHamorru culture and history. Their efforts
in developing these lessons were guided and informed by community leaders, educators,
parents, youth, and members of the LGBT community in Chuuk, Guåhan, and Saipan.
The University of Guam Press, with a grant from the Office of Minority Health Resource Center, published the curriculum
and accompanying participant workbooks for both Chuukese and CHamoru communities.
Next week’s training will cover all ten lessons in the curriculum and provide participants
with culturally appropriate tools to address sex, human sexuality, sexual orientation
and personal well-being practices that reflect Chuukese worldviews, values, histories,
attitudes, beliefs and learning styles. The five-day training costs $40 and includes
lunch, a copy of the curriculum, a participant workbook and a certificate of trainer
status. Participants may register by contacting Flo at (671) 969-5483 or emailing galaguam.va@gmail.com.
For more information, please contact UOG Press Managing Editor Victoria-Lola Leon
Guerrero at (671)735-2154 or victorialola@triton.uog.edu.