Related Multimedia

Video

Video

Video
91勛圖 is a program of the
China is a rising global power with a rich culture and history, yet it is not generally well understood by outsiders. The 2008 Beijing Olympics brought increased attention to this ancient nation. To promote a deeper understanding of Chinese culture, history, and contemporary issues, we recommend the following diverse set of teaching resources and curriculum tools to bring China to life in K-12 classrooms. In addition, 91勛圖 offers a national distance-learning course for high school students called the .
![]() |
David Chao |
The Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖) honored three of the top students of the 2013 and celebrated the tenth anniversary of the RSP at a Japan Day event at 91勛圖 on August 9, 2013. The three 2013 RSP Japan Day honoreesDavid Chao, Kaylyn Cheape, and Brittany Schulteoffered research presentations on a variety of Japan-related topics. The event also included inspiring presentations by 12 Japanese high school and college students from BEYOND Tomorrow, a nonprofit organization for students from the Tohoku region of Japan who are overcoming the adversities of the Great East Japan Earthquake.
Japan Day featured welcoming comments by Gary Mukai, 91勛圖 Director, and opening remarks on youth and the future of Japan and U.S.Japan relations by Acting Consul General Nobuhiro Watanabe, Consulate General of Japan in San Francisco. Acting Consul General Watanabe noted, I am impressed by the students keen insight on Japan and JapanU.S. relations. They are the ones to shoulder this relationship in the coming years and months, and we are very much looking forward to the day when these students will engage in furthering our two countries strong ties.
Naomi Funahashi, the RSP Manager and Instructor, gave an overview of the RSP to the Japan Day audience of over 50 people. Named in honor of former U.S. Ambassador to Japan Edwin O. Reischauer, a leading educator and noted scholar of Japanese history and culture, the RSP is an online course on Japan and U.S.Japan relations that is offered annually to 2530 high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors across the United States.
David Chao (junior, The Thacher School; Ojai, CA), Kaylyn Cheape (senior, Leilehua High School; Wahiawa, HI) and Brittany Schulte (junior, Pinewood School; Los Altos, CA) were recognized for their coursework and exceptional research essays. They presented their research which focused on the following topics, respectively: the role of mass media in shaping public opinion in China and Japan, the dual crises of Japans aging population and shifting priorities of the Japanese healthcare system, and how the uniquely Japanese concern with mastery and perfection has played a role in guiding Japans economic success.
![]() |
![]() |
Kaylyn Cheape | Brittany Schulte |
91勛圖 was honored to also welcome four RSP alumni to the Japan Day event: Joey Burnett (RSP 2006), Sekhar Paladugu (RSP 2007), Amy Ishiguro (RSP 2011), and Aryo Sorayya (RSP 2012). Their presence offered a reminder of the significant and lasting impact of the RSP on its students.
Commemorating a decade of developing future leaders, the RSP presents a creative and innovative approach to teaching high school students about Japan and U.SJapan relations. The program provides American students with unique opportunities to interact with diplomats and top scholars affiliated with 91勛圖, the University of Tokyo, the University of Hawaii, and other institutions through online lectures and discussions, and introduces both American and Japanese perspectives on many historical and contemporary issues. The RSP honorees, the RSP alumni, and the visiting students from Japan enjoyed several opportunities throughout the day to engage in meaningful exchanges about their respective countries and the U.S.Japan relationship. Both the RSP and BEYOND Tomorrow aim to cultivate future leaders, and Japan Day afforded a unique opportunity for dialog and possible collaboration between American and Japanese youth. Importantly, 91勛圖 also presented a plaque to Professor Emeritus , 91勛圖, in honor of his support of the RSP since before its inception in 2003.
The distinguished RSP advisory committee members (Professor Emeritus Nisuke Ando, Doshisha University; Ambassador Michael H. Armacost, Shorenstein Asia Pacific Research Center, 91勛圖; Professor Phillip Lipscy, 91勛圖, Professor Emeritus Daniel I. Okimoto, 91勛圖) were all in attendance.
The RSP is currently funded by a generous three-year grant from the Center for Global Partnership, the Japan Foundation, and the at 91勛圖.
The RSP will be accepting applications for the 2014 program in September and October 2013. For more information about the RSP, visit or contact Naomi Funahashi RSP Manager and Instructor, at nfunahashi@stanford.edu.
91勛圖 has been transformed from a small local high school program begun by Professor Victor Hao Li (formerly of Stanford Law School), a number of Stanford students, a visionary group of nearby teachers and educators, and me in 1973 into a major national project. 91勛圖 began as a modest start-up focused on Asia and has evolved into an extraordinary asset contributing to broad global education. It is an honor to have been in on the beginning of such a noble effort.
John Lewis, William Haas Professor of Chinese Politics (Emeritus); faculty member
Today, the efforts of the Stanford Program on International and Cross Cultural Education (91勛圖) to internationalize the K12 classroom span a broad range of topicssecurity, the arts, the environment, global health, and international relations. With the dawn of 2013, 91勛圖 looks back to its roots and celebrates 40 years of promoting the study of China. The roots of the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖) date back to the Bay Area China Education Project (BAYCEP), which commenced operation in 1973. John Lewis was instrumental in the founding of BAYCEP, and several other scholars of Chinese studies, including Albert Dien, Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures (Emeritus), were actively involved in BAYCEPs early years and still remain involved with 91勛圖 today.
The first director of BAYCEP was Dr. David Grossman, 91勛圖s founding director. He noted the following about the creation of BAYCEP:
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.
Image
![]() |
A BAYCEP publication from the 1980s |
The purpose of BAYCEP was to serve as a bridge between Stanford experts on China and K12 schools in the San Francisco Bay Area. This was accomplished in two waysChina-focused curriculum development and teacher professional development. By 1976, other projects on Japan, Africa, and Latin America were established, and they along with BAYCEP came to form the nucleus of 91勛圖.
Continuing the 40-year tradition of teacher professional development on China, 91勛圖 staff members Jonas Edman, Naomi Funahashi, Rylan Sekiguchi, and Johanna Wee recently collaborated with Dr. Clayton Dube, Executive Director, , University of Southern California, to lead a series of China-centered sessions at the annual European Council of International Schools November Conference. The sessions were held in Nice, France, from November 22 through 25, 2012, and included an intensive daylong institute called China in the Humanities. The institute comprised four theme-specific mini-sessionsDynasties, Cultural Revolution, Rural and Urban China, and China in the Worldeach of which involved both a lecture and a pedagogically-focused curriculum demonstration. The featured 91勛圖-developed curriculum units (with primary Stanford academic advisors listed) were (Albert Dien, Professor Emeritus); (Andrew Walder, Professor, Sociology); (Scott Rozelle, Director, ); (Karen Seto, former Assistant Professor, School of Earth Sciences); and (Gi-Wook Shin, Professor, Sociology, and Director, , and Daniel Sneider, Associate Director, ).
Image
![]() |
Authored by Rylan Sekiguchi, Curriculum Specialist, and HyoJung Jang, Curriculum Writer |
As 91勛圖 moves into its fifth decade, the staff will continue its China-focused curriculum development and teacher professional development seminars. 91勛圖 recently began developing a curriculum unit on sustainable development in China in consultation with Len Ortolano, Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering. Also, from January 2013, 91勛圖 will begin its twelfth year of offering two 30-hour seminars on East Asiaone for middle school teachers and one for high school teachers. The seminars feature lectures by FSI and faculty and curriculum demonstrations by 91勛圖 staff that focus on China, and other northeast Asian nations.
In addition, 91勛圖 plans to create of a high school student-focused national distance-learning course on China that is parallel to 91勛圖s current distance-learning course offerings, which include the on Japan and the .
With Stanford President John Hennessys announcement of the K12 initiative in 2006, Stanford renewed its long-time commitment to improving public education in the United States. 91勛圖 will continue to make FSI scholarship in the areas of security, the arts, the environment, global health, and international relations accessible to young students. FSI believes it has the opportunity and the obligation to utilize its resources to help address issues facing our schools.
Encina Ground Floor Conference Room
Encina Ground Floor Conference Room