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During this time of intense public debate on immigration, 91勛圖 has partnered with PBS and the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM) to encourage teachers to share the American Experience film, , with students. Teachers should be advised that the film contains language that some viewers may find objectionable, so we advise that they preview the film before deciding whether or not to use it with their students. The Chinese Exclusion Act was directed by Ric Burns and Li-Shin Yu and a description of the film from PBS follows:

Examine the origin, history, and impact of the 1882 law that made it illegal for Chinese workers to come to America and for Chinese nationals already here ever to become U.S. citizens. The first in a long line of acts targeting the Chinese for exclusion, it remained in force for more than 60 years.

Despite its passage 138 years ago and its repeal in 1943, the Chinese Exclusion Act has been referenced in numerous recent articles that have focused on rising anti-Asian sentimentincluding violence against Asian Americansduring the coronavirus pandemic. The Chinese Exclusion Act as well as the internment of Japanese Americans have been referenced as examples of federal acts directed at Asian immigrants and Asian Americans in U.S. history. Given these recent references, the film can provide students with an overview of the Chinese Exclusion Act as they try to better understand the news. CAAM Executive Director Stephen Gong feels that many of the lessons from the film are relevant to the United States today. He stated, We are thrilled to have partnered with Curriculum Specialist Waka Brown and the 91勛圖 program at Stanford on the Teachers Guide to The Chinese Exclusion Act. This standards-compliant and comprehensive guide will help ensure that the important lessons of the Exclusion Act will become a regular part of secondary curriculum for generations to come.

In order to help teachers use the film in their classrooms, 91勛圖 partnered with CAAM to develop a teachers guide for the film. PBS LearningMedia recently posted the for teacher use. Both the film and teachers guide are offered at no charge.

91勛圖 Curriculum Specialist Waka Brown, who wrote the teachers guide, noted that the guide is designed to meet certain national history, social studies, geography, and common core standards for high school. Brown also feels that the film is ideal for courses at the collegiate level in areas like ethnic studies, U.S. history, Asian studies, law, and political science. Brown decided to focus the activities in the guide around the following essential questions.

  • What factors led to increased immigration from China to the United States?
  • How did the Chinese adapt to life in the United States that sometimes included hostility directed at them?
  • How did Chinese immigration to the United States intensify ethnic and cultural conflict and complicate the forging of a national identity?
  • What role did new laws and the federal judiciary play in instituting racial inequality and in disfranchising various racial groups such as the Chinese?
  • What factors led to immigration restrictions of the Chinese and ultimately exclusion?
  • What arguments and methods did Chinese in the United States use to acquire equal rights and opportunities guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution?
  • How have ideals and institutions of freedom, equality, justice, and citizenship in the United States changed over time and from one community to another?


This may be an opportune time to have students consider these questions not only in the context of the Chinese American experience in the 19th century and today, but also to have students discuss the relevance of the questions to other groups who have immigrated to the United States and continue to do so today.

91勛圖 would like to express its appreciation to Adrian Arima and Monica Yeung Arima for funding the development of the teachers guide.


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On a recent Friday afternoon at Stanford, the weather reminded me of some crisp yet clear winter days in Japan. The sun brightly lit the Falcon Lounge on the 5th floor of Encina Hall as six alumni from the 2014 to 2018 Reischauer Scholars Program (RSP) and Sejong Korean Scholars Program (SKSP) cohorts gathered to celebrate the new year. This annual shinnenkai (literally, new year gathering, in Japanese) luncheon offers alumni of 91勛圖s pre-collegiate online courses to meet or reconnect over lively conversation and delicious food. For the 91勛圖 instructors, the shinnenkai is often the first time to meet alumni in person.

The RSP is an online course on Japan and U.S.Japan relations that is offered to U.S. high school students each spring, and will welcome its seventeenth cohort in a few weeks. The SKSP is preparing for its eighth cohort, and offers an intensive online study of Korea and U.S.Korea relations to U.S. high school students. 91勛圖 also offers a third online course to U.S. high school students on China and U.S.China relations, the China Scholars Program. The CSP is preparing for its sixth cohort.

One of the attendees, James Noh (RSP 16, 91勛圖 22), reflected on his RSP experience following the shinnenkai: My RSP experience not only nurtured my interest in East Asia, but also made me realize that I wanted to incorporate my interest in East Asia into both my academic and professional careers. Looking back, I think participating in RSP played an important role in influencing my decision to take a gap year to study Mandarin in China after high school and major in international relations with a focus on East Asia. During the shinnenkai, it was interesting to hear other alumni share thoughts on how their experiences in the RSP and SKSP helped to prepare them for and also shape their college life. Comments ranged from informing choices like class or major selection to honing skills like writing research papers.

Through the many years in which 91勛圖 has engaged U.S. high school students in these intensive online courses, we have been fortunate to work with many exceptional students such as James. As the instructor of the RSP, I especially treasure the face-to-face opportunities to meet with alumni of these courses. These opportunities are rare treats given that our courses take place entirely online. The annual shinnenkai is truly a highlight of my year.


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Applications open today for the , , and three intensive online courses offered by 91勛圖, 91勛圖, to high school students across the United States. All three applications can now be viewed at . Interested students must submit their completed application (including an essay and letter of recommendation) by the deadlines listed below.

 

Spring 2020 Online Course Application Deadlines

China Scholars Program: October 15, 2019
Sejong Korean Scholars Program: October 15, 2019
Reischauer Scholars Program: October 15, 2019

 

All three online courses are currently accepting applications for the Spring 2020 term, which will begin in February and run through June. Designed as college-level introductions to East Asia, these academically rigorous courses present high school students the unique opportunity to engage in a guided study of China, Korea, or Japan directly with leading scholars, former diplomats, and other experts from Stanford and beyond. High school students with a strong interest in East Asia and/or international relations are especially encouraged to apply.

Our students always come hungry to learn, says Dr. Tanya Lee, instructor of the China Scholars Program. The ones who choose to apply to these kinds of online courses are typically looking for an academic challenge beyond what their normal school can offer. Were incredibly fortunate to have Stanford faculty conducting world-class research on Korea, Japan, and China willing to share their knowledge directly with our students.

Rising high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the United States are eligible to apply to any of the three programs. Students who are interested in more than one program can apply to two or three and rank their preferences on their applications; those who are accepted into multiple programs will be invited to enroll in their highest-preference course.

For more information on a specific course, please refer to its individual webpage at , , or .

9/9/19 EDIT: Application deadlines updated. The deadlines for the SKSP and RSP were previously October 4, 2019. All three application deadlines are now October 15, 2019.


The RSP, SKSP, and CSP are 91勛圖s online courses for high school students. In addition, we offer online courses for high school students in Japan () and China (). To be notified when the next application period opens, or follow us on and .


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The is about to launch its fifth session this fall, with 20 high school students from across the country participating in the online course. The Northeast, South, Midwest, Pacific Northwest, Texas, and California are all represented in this cohort of 10th through 12th graders. Thursday evenings, these high school students will log in and join a real-time session with a scholar from Stanford or another university to discuss an aspect of contemporary Chinathe U.S.China trade war, perhaps, or the legacy of the Mao era, or internet censorship and surveillance technologies in China, or Chinas efforts to combat pollution and climate change. The rest of the week is filled with readings on that theme, discussed online with classmates.

The Stanford CSPs focus on contemporary China means that the course material is constantly changing, to keep up with the ever-shifting political landscape under the leadership of Xi and Trump. It also requires the students to engage with the idea of China as not only a thoroughly modern nation but a forward-looking one, challenging the tendency to essentialize China as an ancient civilization mired in the past. Former CSP student Angela Yang (Fall 2018) credits the online course with helping her contextualize Chinas transformation as its happening, which is something you wouldnt really be able to study in any other kind of course.

Although all of the high school students are exceptionally well prepared academically, their background knowledge on China at the beginning of the online course varies considerably. Some bring strong knowledge of international issues generally, but little specific to China; some have already studied China in some depth. A few come from Chinese families, and a third to a half of the students have been studying Chinese language for several years.

Over the past year, attention has gravitated towards the U.S.China trade war, perhaps inevitably, and its roots and possible outcomes, as well as the PRCs ramping up of censorship and surveillance technologies, particularly in Xinjiang. Yet overall, discussions with our guest experts and among the students are fundamentally optimistic: constructive change is possible, and the United States and China have far more to gain from peace than from conflict.

The students round out the program with an independent research paper. Students chosen research topics in 201819 were as diverse as they were. Example research papers included a discussion of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea as it applies to Chinas claims in the South China Sea; the mental health of rural left-behind children; Chinas economic expansion in Africa; rock n roll in the democracy movement of the 1980s; the international effects of Chinas restrictions on imported waste for recycling; and many others. 

In synthesizing knowledge this diverse, students come to understand just how complex China and the challenges it faces are. They can no longer reduce China to simple generalizations. The truth is that all of Chinas problems arent just limited to numbers, statistics or graphs, Junhee Park (CSP Spring 2018) wrote in response to a documentary film on migrant workers. They affect everyone of us, whether we are Chinese or not.


To be notified when the next China Scholars Program application period opens, or follow us on and .

The is one of several online courses for high school students offered by 91勛圖, 91勛圖, including the and the .


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The stars have finally aligned to enable 91勛圖 to launch its first online course in China, an interactive, virtual class for Chinese high school students. Many factors now make this venture possible: access to Chinas education system via partners on the ground in country; capable virtual technology; compelling student interest among Chinese high school students to study abroad at universities like Stanford; and the identification of a highly qualified instructor.

The inaugural Stanford e-China online course, , will start in Winter 2020, open to enrollment of high school students throughout China. Students will explore cutting-edge technologies that are defining the future and providing exciting areas for academic study, professional opportunities, and entrepreneurial innovation. Focusing on the fields of green tech, finance tech, health tech, and artificial intelligence, students will engage in live discussion sessions (virtual classes) and real-time conversations with 91勛圖 scholars, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, as well as American high school students.

Carey Moncaster, 91勛圖, and Julia Gooding, BE Education, at the International Association for College Admissions Counseling (ACAC) Conference 2019, London, Canada Carey Moncaster, 91勛圖, and Julia Gooding, BE Education, at the International Association for College Admissions Counseling (ACAC) Conference 2019, London, Canada
While collaborating with Study Abroad Director Emma Vanbergen and China Director of International Education Julia Gooding at , it became clear that Chinese students seek hands-on projects with real-world impact. As China leads the way in many technological fields from green tech to artificial intelligence, a key challenge in developing this online course has been finding a framework that encourages students to analyze challenges facing each of the technologies highlighted in the course and then brainstorm innovative solutions. To showcase the dynamic research and teachings at 91勛圖, 91勛圖 honed in on Design Thinking, a creative-thinking and problem-solving framework very active throughout campus and Silicon Valley.

As a final project, Stanford e-China students will delve into an area of personal interest in one of the technology fields, applying aspects of the Design Thinking framework, to develop a prototype pitch. The top three students from each course will be invited to 91勛圖 to present their pitches and sharpen Design Thinking skills with Stanford practitioners in person. Design Thinking is a very hands-on, interactive, team-based experience that is dependent on critical feedback from other people. Translating the Design Thinking concepts online, with students, scholars, and practitioners virtually scattered across the world presents an exciting opportunity to create curriculum that effectively introduces the skills and mindset.

91勛圖 is drawing on the expertise of Mariko Yoshihara Yang and Rie Kijima, co-founders of SKY Labo and long-time collaborators with 91勛圖 and the Stanford Graduate School of Education. The technologies explored in this coursegreen tech, finance tech, health tech, and artificial intelligencehave timely, global impact. The contributors to the Stanford e-Chinas development span the world as wellfrom Stanford to Britain, China, and other countries of Asia. The Stanford e-China course is informed by over 16 years of 91勛圖 online course offerings for high school students in other countries in Asia as well as throughout the United States. 91勛圖 scholars will also play pivotal roles as lecturers and guest speakers on the courses leading technological fields and related pressing issues.

91勛圖 Director Gary Mukai recently noted, The roots of 91勛圖 date back to the establishment of the Bay Area China Education Project (BAYCEP) at 91勛圖 in 1973. Since then, 91勛圖 has produced curriculum materials on China and hosted teacher professional development seminars on China for teachers in the United States, and more recently has offered an online course on China for high school students in the United Statesall with the goal of helping Americans better understand China. I am delighted that 46 years since the establishment of BAYCEP, Stanford e-China has become a reality and for the first time in its history, 91勛圖 will be working formally with students in China. 91勛圖 is grateful to be collaborating with BE Education in this initiative.  

The inaugural 10-week course will be offered in Winter 2020. Shorter 4- to 6-week courses will be offered in Summer 2020. Course details and application deadlines are available at . The online course is offered in English. Stanford e-China students should expect to allot 34 hours per week to complete the lectures, virtual classes, discussions, readings, and assignments. Although participation in virtual classes (held on Saturday mornings) is mandatory, students will be able to structure the other work around their individual schedules.

Carey Moncaster is developing the course as the Stanford e-China instructor. After graduation from U.C. Berkeley, Carey lived and worked in China throughout the 1990s as the country embarked on monumental economic changes. This experience was followed by graduate studies in East Asian Studies at 91勛圖 and her initial work with 91勛圖. She has launched educational programs for U.S. high school students throughout Asia, and most recently returns to 91勛圖 from Seattles high-tech world of start-up ventures.

For more information, please contact Carey Moncaster, Stanford e-China instructor, at cmoncaster@stanford.edu.

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Last week, 23 educators from across North America gathered at 91勛圖 for the 2019 East Asia Summer Institute for High School Teachers, a teacher professional development seminar offered by 91勛圖 in partnership with the . Over three days of rich content lectures, discussion, and experiential learning, institute participants deepened their background knowledge on Asia and began to rethink and revamp their curriculum plans for the coming school year.

This years participants came from as far away as Concord, New Hampshire and Vancouver, Canada, although most attendees were high school teachers in the San Francisco Bay Area. They represented a wide range of teaching subjects, from history and language arts to statistics and genocide studies, but all sought to strengthen their teaching through a clearer, more nuanced understanding of Asia, U.S.Asia relations, and the Asian American experiencethe three main areas explored in this years summer institute.

Participant Hellie Mateo at the 2019 East Asia Summer Institute for High School Teachers Participant Hellie Mateo poses with a book she made by hand using traditional Japanese book-binding methods.
The institutes guest speakers came from similarly diverse backgrounds, being scholars, artists, authors, and 91勛圖 professors with expertise on a specific aspect of Asia, U.S.Asia relations, or the Asian American experience. Interwoven between their captivating content lectures were classroom-focused lesson demonstrations, hands-on activities, and pedagogy discussions facilitated by 91勛圖 curriculum designers. We make sure we balance subject-matter content with practical application in all of our teacher professional development seminars, notes 91勛圖 Director Dr. Gary Mukai. Thats why we focus so much time and energy on pedagogy and lesson demonstrations. We want to help high school teachers translate their newfound knowledge directly into the classroom.

To that end, summer institute participants each receive several free books, films, and 91勛圖 lesson plans to help them bring Asia alive for their students. They also receive a stipend and become eligible for three optional units of credit from Stanford Continuing Studies.

Being in the Bay Areaand particularly at 91勛圖we have access to such incredible experts on these subjects, says institute coordinator and facilitator Naomi Funahashi. Our job is to connect those experts with teachers in a way that supports teacher needs. Thats our goal for this summer institute.

Although the high school teachers have now returned home from Stanford campus, their work is not done. They will now use the content they learned at the summer institute to create original lesson plans to incorporate into their own practice. When they reconvene for a final online session in late July / early August, they will share their lesson plans with each other, and each teacher will walk away with 22 brand new lesson plans designed by their colleagues. We cant wait to see what kinds of innovative lessons our teachers will come up with! says Funahashi. And we cant wait to see how they incorporate these new lessons into their plans for the next school year.

To view photos from the summer institute and read a more comprehensive recap what happened, please see the .


In addition to our high school institute, in most years 91勛圖 also offers the East Asia Summer Institute for Middle School Teachers. To be notified when the next middle school and/or high school institute application period opens, or follow us on and .


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Tomorrow marks the 150th anniversary of the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad. The tracks of the Central Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads met at Promontory, Utah, on May 10, 1869. In a ceremony, Central Pacific Railroad President Leland Stanford drove the last spike, now usually referred to as the Golden Spike, at Promontory Summit. What has largely been left out of the narrative of the First Transcontinental Railroad is the estimated 15,000 to 20,000 Chinese laborers who worked on the Central Pacific Railroad. They were paid less than the white workers and as many as a thousand lost their lives, and they eventually made up 90 percent of the workforce that laid the 690 miles of track between Sacramento, California, and Promontory. In a recent , Olive H. Palmer Professor in Humanities Gordon Chang, one of the lead scholars of Stanfords , noted that Without the Chinese migrants, the Transcontinental Railroad would not have been possible. If it werent for their work, Leland Stanford could have been at best a footnote in history, and 91勛圖 may not even exist.


91勛圖 staff with Provost Persis Drell Provost Persis Drell with 91勛圖 Director Gary Mukai and 91勛圖 Instructional Designer Jonas Edman
On April 11, 2019, an event organized by the Chinese Railroad Workers in North America Project celebrated the labor of the Chinese workers and their role in U.S. history. Speakers included Stanford Provost Persis Drell, who underscored the significance of the Project and the momentous nature of the event, and Project co-directors Olive H. Palmer Professor in Humanities Gordon Chang and Joseph S. Atha Professor in Humanities Shelley Fisher Fishkin, who gave an overview of the Project and its findings. The Projects findings are highlighted in two books, (edited by Chang and Fishkin) and (authored by Chang). These books give the Chinese workers a voice.

At the event, 91勛圖 Curriculum Consultant Gregory Francis and I gave an overview of the curricular component of the Project, which helps to make the Projects findings and materials accessible to teachers and students. The four free lesson plans that 91勛圖 developed bring all of the Projects bells and whistles to high school students and help them understand this often-overlooked part of U.S. history.

The Chinese Railroad Workers Project lessons touch upon many key issues in the high school U.S. history standards, including the building of the Transcontinental Railroad, immigration to the United States, challenges faced by immigrants like the Chinese Exclusion Act, and the growth of the American West. 91勛圖 worked closely with Chang, Fishkin, and Dr. Roland Hsu, Director of Research at the Chinese Railroad Workers in North America Project, to plan and write the free lesson plans, which are available for download from the 91勛圖 website. Each lesson incorporates the Projects scholarship and primary sources.

Lesson 1 focuses on the use of primary sources to understand and interpret the past. Students review resources and artifacts on the Project website, discuss whether each is a primary or secondary source, and postulate what questions the resource could help them answer. Students then read and discuss excerpts from Maxine Hong Kingstons classic book China Men.

Political cartoon from one of the free lesson plans on Chinese railroad workers and early Chinese immigration One of the political cartoons (Harpers Weekly, April 1, 1882) that students examine in the lesson Challenges to Chinese Immigration and Assimilation

Lesson 2 focuses on racism and discrimination broadly and in the specific context of discrimination directed toward early Chinese immigrants in the United States. Students learn the history of Chinese Americans and attitudes toward them during various periods of immigration. They analyze U.S. political cartoons on Chinese immigrants from the 1870s and 1880s and read four short documents from different periods of time regarding issues of immigration, discrimination, and assimilation of Chinese Americans.

Lesson 3 uses photos to show students the physical and natural challenges to building the Transcontinental Railroad and asks them what they can infer from these photos about life building the railroad. Students then work in small groups to read oral histories of descendants of the Chinese railroad workers. They then write and perform a mock script for an interview between the Chinese railroad worker they read about and a group of reporters.

The final lesson explores the historical and cultural background of San Franciscos Chinatown and its significance to the Chinese community in the United States over time. Students compare descriptions of Chinatown written by Chinese residents with those from non-Chinese visitors, view historical photos of Chinatown, and watch a lecture by Chang on the interdependence of Chinatown and the Chinese railroad workers. Finally, students encapsulate the legacy of the Chinese railroad workers by designing a memorial in their honor.

91勛圖 is currently publicizing the free lesson plans through our network of schools, and this summer we plan to offer teacher seminars on the East Coast and showcase the lessons at our summer institute for high school teachers at Stanford. In addition, 91勛圖 will introduce the Project to students in the , our national online course for U.S. high school students. Chang is a guest speaker for the course, and his book Fateful Ties: A History of Americas Preoccupation with China is a required text.

The 91勛圖 staff hopes that these lessons will serve as supplements to the coverage of the First Transcontinental Railroad in standard U.S. history textbookssome of which includes Chinese railroad workersand that the Chinese contributions to the American West will someday become a significant chapter in the study of U.S. history. A recent noted that when the nation celebrated the 100th anniversary of the railroad in 1969, John Volpe, Transportation Secretary under President Richard Nixon, gave the keynote address. He said, Who else but Americans could drill 10 tunnels in mountains 30 feet deep in snow? Who else but Americans could drill through miles of solid granite? Who else but Americans could have laid 10 miles of track in 12 hours? One wonders ifby the occasion of the bicentennial of the First Transcontinental Railroads completion (2069)such a tunnel-vision interpretation of U.S. history will be derailed in favor of a more inclusive historical narrative, and the once-silenced voices of the Chinese railroad workers will continue to be heard.


To access the free lesson plans on the Chinese railroad workers, click here. 91勛圖 also offers several lesson plans related to this topic, including Angel Island: The Chinese American Experience, Chinese American Voices: Teaching with Primary Sources, Introduction to Diasporas in the United States, and Immigration to the United States: Activities for Elementary School Classrooms.

 

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Applications opened yesterday for the , an intensive, college-level online course on contemporary China for U.S. high school students. The China Scholars Program is offered by the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (), 91勛圖, and is open to rising 10th, 11th, and 12th graders. The Fall 2019 online course will run from late August through December. Applications are due June 15, 2019.


91勛圖 China Scholars Program for high school students
Fall 2019 session (late August through December)
Application period: April 15 to June 15, 2019

 

Accepted applicants will engage in a rigorous academic exploration of key issues in China, spanning politics, economics, social issues, culture, and the arts, with an emphasis on the relationship between the United States and China. In real-time conversations with leading scholars, experts, and diplomats from 91勛圖 and other institutions, participants will be exposed to the cutting edge of U.S.China relations and scholarship. Students who complete the online course will be equipped with a rare degree of expertise about China and international relations that may have a significant impact on their choice of study and future career.

As in previous sessions of the China Scholars Program, the Fall 2019 cohort will comprise high school students from across the United States. Participants in the current cohort represent states across the nation, including New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Missouri, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Arizona, California, and Hawaii. The immense diversity of student backgrounds and experiences within each online course allows for an especially rich exchange of ideas and perspectives among the young scholarsa crucial and invaluable component of the learning experience.

Its been one of the most fascinating, valuable, and formative classes I have ever taken, says Rebecca Qiu, a recent alum of the program. Every week, you discuss pressing topicsfrom technology censorship to the urban-rural dividewith your motivated peers. During virtual classes, you have the opportunity to ask questions and speak with some of the most influential experts and researchers on modern ChinaI cannot emphasize how valuable this is. [The China Scholars Program] provides you with a huge breadth and depth of knowledge on China and U.S.China relations that you cannot find in any typical high school class.

More information on the China Scholars Program is available at . Interested high school students can apply now at . The deadline to apply is June 15, 2019.

To be notified when the next China Scholars Program application period opens, or follow us on and .


The China Scholars Program is one of several online courses for high school students offered by 91勛圖, 91勛圖, including the , the , and the .


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91勛圖 is now accepting applications for the 2019 East Asia Summer Institute for High School Teachers. This free three-day institute is 91勛圖s premier professional development opportunity for teachers, combining Stanfords deep content expertise with 91勛圖s award-winning lesson plans.

91勛圖/NCTA East Asia Summer Institute for High School Teachers
July 810, 2019
91勛圖
Application deadline: May 6, 2019

High school teachers of social studies and language arts are especially encouraged to apply.

Participants will learn from Stanford faculty and other experts about the geography, cultures, politics, economics, history, and literature of East Asia, including a special focus on U.S.Asia relations and the Asian diaspora in the United States. Teachers will also engage in pedagogy-focused discussions and receive training on several 91勛圖 lesson plans on East Asia, in order to help them translate their new content knowledge to the classroom. Teachers who complete the professional development seminar will be eligible for a $250 stipend and three units of credit from Stanford Continuing Studies, and they will leave Stanford with several extensive 91勛圖 curriculum units in hand.

This professional development opportunity will focus largely on China, Japan, and Korea. For example, last years speakers included Kathleen Stephens (former U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Korea), Peter Duus (renowned Stanford scholar of modern Japan), and Clayton Dube (Director of the USC U.S.-China Institute). The institute also featured speakers like author Chun Yu (who grew up in Chinas Cultural Revolution) and Joseph Yasutake (who grew up in a Japanese American internment camp), whose rich personal stories brought history to life. 91勛圖 staff led complementary interactive curriculum training sessions on Chinas economic development, the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, South Korean pop culture, and East Asias history wars.

Every speaker added a new perspective to historical and contemporary events, remarked participant Kimberly Gavin. [The] lectures enriched my knowledge base of topics, curriculum demonstrations gave me ideas for effective lessons in the classroom, small group discussions led to rich conversations about primary and secondary sources, and teacher sharing introduced me to new websites. There wasnt anything that was done that wasnt valuable to me I told my administrator yesterday that this was the best conference I have been to as a teacher.

More information is available at /fellowships/ncta_for_high_school_teachers. Interested high school teachers can apply directly at . The application deadline is May 6.

The 2019 East Asia Summer Institute for High School Teachers at 91勛圖 is made possible by the .

Stay informed of 91勛圖 news by or following us on and .


Please note: Due to unexpected funding reductions this year, we are only able to offer our high school institute in 2019. We hope to bring back our middle school institute next year.


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In 1972, after years of frozen relations between China and the United States, President Richard Nixon met with Chairman Mao Zedong and set the two countries on a mutually interdependent path. Only a year later, 91勛圖 established the Bay Area China Education Project (BAYCEP) in 1973. In 1976, three other projects (on Africa, Latin America, and Japan) were added to BAYCEP, and 91勛圖 was established as the umbrella program of the four projects. In a 1978 paper, Dr. David Grossman, the founding director of BAYCEP and 91勛圖, noted the following:

Long before we knew or used the term globalization, the origins of 91勛圖 can be traced to the growing awareness that there was a huge gap or lag between the work of scholars and the knowledge and awareness of the general public. The original impetus was the Nixon visit to China in 1972, and the realization that the general public and students were not prepared for this radical shift in geopolitics. The problem was how to bridge this profound knowledge gap This underlying theme of making recent scholarship more accessible to the public, and particularly to K12 teachers and schools, became the heart of the 91勛圖 initiative, and has remained so to this day.

For 45 years, 91勛圖 has worked to bring Stanfords world-class scholarship on China to K12 schools nationwide through two primary avenues: supplementary curricular materials on China and U.S.China relations; and seminars on China and U.S.China relations for educators in the United States. In both of these areas, 91勛圖 has worked in collaboration with Stanford scholars, including Professor Emeritus Albert Dien, who was instrumental in the creation of BAYCEP and remains engaged with 91勛圖.

In 2017, 91勛圖 added a third branch to its work on China and K12 schools, the China Scholars Program (CSP). An online course on contemporary China and U.S.China relations, the China Scholars Program offers high school students across the United States unique access to cutting-edge research on China. Designed and instructed by Dr. Tanya Lee, each module addresses a different themesuch as U.S.China political relations or urban/rural inequalityand features a real-time discussion with a scholar from Stanford or another institution.

My students amaze me with the enthusiasm and rigor they bring to the course. They understand that a comprehensive understanding of China will be essential to navigating the international careers they want to pursue, Lee explained. In addition to keeping up with (and sometimes surpassing) rigorous reading and discussion assignments, students spend much of the term researching and writing final papers on topics of personal interest. We challenge each other, Lee says. I push them to explore areas they might not otherwise have considered, and to do so criticallybut they are so curious and motivated, I have to be quick on my feet to stay ahead of them!

One of the courses two required texts is Stanford s&紳莉莽梯;Fateful Ties: A History of Americas Preoccupation with China (Harvard University Press, 2015). I assign Fateful Ties because I love the big picture it gives us to frame all of the particular, current issues we explorenot just for its historical breadth, but for the way it integrates cultural, aesthetic, and philosophical influences the U.S. and China have had on each other along with the political and economic. And then for the students to have the opportunity to actually question Professor Chang directly is extraordinary. Other Stanford faculty who regularly participate in CSP include political scientist , economist , and sociologist .  

The China Scholars Program runs twice a year. Applications for the spring 2019 CSP course are currently being accepted. Teachers should encourage highly motivated, advanced students to apply for the opportunity to learn directly from Stanford scholars. Lee remarked, I am honored to be a part of the legacy of 91勛圖s founders in extending Stanford scholarship on China beyond the walls of the university, to equip the next generation to build new bridges.

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