AO
Akachukwu Obi
  • chemistry
  • Class of 2015
  • Nnewi, Anambra State, Nigeria

Oko native Akachukwu Obi to speak at TEDxBatesCollege

2014 Nov 4

Inspired by a phrase from the Bates College mission statement, eight Bates students, including Oko's Akachukwu Obi, will address the concept of the "transformative power of our differences" in the college's first homegrown TED-style event at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 8, in Bates' Schaeffer Theatre.

Obi, a 2010 graduate of the Federal Government Academy of Suleja, is a senior studying chemistry and mathematics. Now a Lewiston resident, he grew up in Nnewi, Nigeria. After Bates, he plans to get a doctorate in chemistry and teach at the academic level. Exploring paths to self-knowledge through writing, his TED address is titled "What Childhood Taught Me About Personal Identity." He is the son of Mr. Williams Obi and Mrs. Ifeoma Obi of Oko, Nigeria.

Developed in California 30 years ago, TED presentations are driven by short, engaging talks on trending themes. ("TED" stands for technology, entertainment and design.) Bates was the venue for a TEDxDirigo event in 2012, but TEDxBatesCollege is the first such program originated by members of the campus community.

"Every day, we see our classmates, professors and other members of the Bates community," says student organizer Michelle Pham, of Vancouver, British Columbia. "But you rarely get to know someone else's story. This is a great opportunity to hear those stories on a much deeper level."

Pham, a Bates senior, is organizing the event with Samreen Fatima, a junior from Karachi, Pakistan, and Daniel Oyolu, a senior from Houston.

Bates College adopted a new mission statement in 2010. Central to the four-sentence text are these words: "With ardor and devotion . . . we engage the transformative power of our differences, cultivating intellectual discovery and informed civic action."