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Case Study 1 Denise A. Connerty Assistant Vice President International Affairs Temple University
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March 11, 2011 You have a campus in Tokyo, Japan with 2000 students enrolled including 69 study abroad students. Approximately 8 weeks into the 13-week semester, a massive 9.03 earthquake strikes 227 miles from Tokyo. The earthquake is followed by a horrific tsunami. The tsunami is followed by a nuclear reactor crisis. What do you do? 2
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The Great East Japan Earthquake 9.03 magnitude, epicenter off coast of Sendai Tsunami waves that reached height 60+ feet causing massive destruction Several nuclear accidents, including Level 7 nuclear meltdowns at three Fukushima reactors Approximately 16,000 deaths, 3,000 missing No structural damage or loss of life in Tokyo 3
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Crisis Management Immediate Response/Response Team Communications – internal and external Bringing Students Home Outcome Lessons Learned 4
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Our Immediate Response Assess situation Account for all students, staff and faculty (our biggest challenge) Check for structural soundness/damage Crisis management Develop a communications plan 5
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Assembling a Response Team An intercontinental response team: President’s Office (Philadelphia) Dean of TUJ (Tokyo) Provost and his senior staff (Philadelphia) Risk Management (Philadelphia) International Affairs (Philadelphia) Student Affairs (Philadelphia) Communications (Philadelphia and Tokyo) University Counsel (Philadelphia) 6
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24/7 phone duty Talking points for staff dealing with stressed, frightened callers Frequent email communications to students, their parents and study abroad advisers Frequently update official statements and updates at university’s home page Created special email address for questions: asktuj@temple.edu Communication: students and parents 7
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Many inquiries daily from national and local media Constant requests to speak with students and their families, both here and in Japan Many requests arriving through inappropriate channels Setting up interviews with TUJ staff (but making sure they don’t feel overburdened, uncomfortable) How many students? How many students? How many students? All questions and requests referred to university communications Communications: the media 8
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March 13: U.S. State Department issued Travel Alert Very fluid; not a single event Media headlines increasingly sensational Nuclear anxiety (and widely varying perceptions) “Evacuation?” To bring, or not bring, students home 9
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U.S. State Department U.S. Embassy in Tokyo International SOS TUJ faculty and staff Japanese news sources (NHK, Japan Times) Other governments (some issued warnings advising their citizens to depart several days before U.S. did) Information Resources 10
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Daily communiqués to students and parents, copying advisers. Message to students: We understood if they felt need to depart Japan, and we would do whatever we could to help them complete semester. Many students started returning home on their own. Wednesday night call ended with the decision to move students to Osaka. Denise went to bed at 12:30 a.m. Last thing she did: Check U.S. State Department website and International SOS…but no change. 11
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March, 17 2 a.m. 12
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Factors: U.S. State Department issued Travel Warning advising US citizens to depart Tokyo Stress on staff in Japan Uncertainty and fluid nature of the crisis Helpful: There were only four more weeks of classes Orchestrating the flights (available for all students) Decision to bring study abroad students home 13
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Transportation arranged Plan created to assist study abroad students complete coursework remotely from home or on Temple’s main campus in Philadelphia. Students offered free housing in Temple dorms. All TUJ faculty developed options for students to complete coursework from home. Main campus Japanese language faculty and our on-line learning staff worked with Tokyo Japanese language faculty. The semester resumed in Japan on April 4th. Outcome 14
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Calm, knowledgeable leadership Identifying one individual to be the main point person at both ends of the crisis Excellent and skilled communications people – during the height of the crisis, we had 10-20 calls from local and national media a day An overactive imagination -- it’s hard to anticipate every conceivable scenario, and then think through in advance how various challenges and solutions will play out, but to the degree that it’s possible….. Having some sense of the technologies available to have faculty teach virtually. Lessons Learned, or the Importance of: 15
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Keeping the response team as small and manageable as possible Taking care of and protecting the front line response team If at all possible, having someone available on both sides of the pond, to provide information and answer questions during regular business hours. Handing the situation off to other teams as needed as soon as it’s reasonable to do so, i.e., undergraduate studies, housing, student affairs, etc. If you’re bringing students home, having a plan and team ready to address a range of issues and challenges: Undergraduate studies, on-line learning, student affairs, student life, residential life, counseling services 16
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