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The and the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖), with support from Hana Financial Group, are offering a very exciting and intensive professional development opportunity for secondary school teachers: The HanaStanford Conference on Korea for U.S. Secondary School Teachers. This three-day summer conference will feature scholarly lectures and curricular presentations on topics such as Korean history, North Korea, inter-Korean relations, politics, economics, culture, and U.S.Korean relations. We hope to bring together educators who are interested in incorporating Korean studies into their curricula and to provide a venue for them to learn and exchange ideas.

All conference meals and registration costs will be covered by the conference. For those who reside more than 50 miles from 91勛圖, shared hotel accommodations and reasonable airfare expenses will be covered. Each teacher will be given a $300 stipend to cover incidental expenses and also receive an excellent selection of books and complimentary teaching materials about Korea. In addition, teachers can earn an optional 2 units of credit from Stanford Continuing Studies.

Space is limited to 30 teachers from secondary schools throughout the United States. Teachers from out of town are encouraged to arrive on July 27, 2014. To apply to attend the conference, please fill out the Applicant Registration Form and return it to the address below by February 7, 2014. We will notify you once your applicant registration form has been reviewed by the selection committee. 

For more information, please contact Sabrina Ishimatsu at sishi@stanford.edu.

Paul Brest Hall West
555 Salvatierra Walk
91勛圖

Conferences

To promote a deeper understanding of Korean culture, history, and contemporary issues, we recommend the following diverse set of teaching resources and curriculum tools to bring Korea to life in K12 classrooms. In addition, 91勛圖 offers a national distance-learning course for high school students called the .

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More than one million Korean Americans currently reside in every corner of the United States, forming one of the largest Asian American communities in the United States. This unit presents a thematic overview of the diverse Korean American experience in order to expand students understanding of a community that constitutes an increasingly important part of contemporary U.S. society. A CD-ROM of projections and handouts accompany the unit, as well as a variety of class, group, and individual activities.
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Connie Straub selected a small pink jar from the bottles and utensils scattered on the picnic table. Its shrimp kind of a shrimp paste, she told her audience, giving the jar a skeptical glance. But its optional, it really doesnt matter.

Laughter erupted from the crowd of Koreans and Americans new to their cuisine. Straub, who grew up in Korea, set the jar aside and reached for a bottle of soy sauce the base, she explained, for a traditional Korean marinade.

The cooking demonstration was part of a national conference that brought nearly two dozen American teachers to Stanford to learn about Korean history, culture, security, and politics from scholars at the university and other schools. Teachers and students from Hana Academy Seoul, a private high school in South Korea, also attended.

Stanfords Korean Studies Program (KSP) co-sponsored the conference, along with the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖), an organization that works with Stanfords Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies to develop curricula on international topics for American elementary and secondary school students.

Despite Koreas growing economic clout and important role in international security, little is taught about Korean history, politics, and culture in American schools. The conference organizers are trying to change that.

South Korea is an incredibly important U.S. ally and partner, Gi-Wook Shin, founding director of KSP and a sociology professor, told the conference participants. And Korean-Americans are becoming a very important part of American society.

David Straub, the programs associate director who is married to Connie Straub, said South Korea is significant not only because of the North Korean division [and] because it is the worlds eighth-largest trading economy在ut also because of its impressive development.

Since 1979, South Koreas per-capita GDP has increased more than twentyfold. The country has also undergone sweeping political reform and dramatic social change in the last three decades.

I dont know of any other country thats developed as quickly, Straub said. Not only economically, but also socially and culturally.

91勛圖 has produced several middle and high school curriculum units focused on Korea. Each teacher attending the conference received a collection of 91勛圖 materials, and 91勛圖 staff also conducted curriculum demonstrations and shared instructional strategies during the event.

91勛圖 director Gary Mukai said he believes early exposure to the countrys history and culture could inspire students to study Korea in college and beyond.

Coverage of Korea in U.S. high schools has generally been limited to the Korean War, he said. The fact that the coverage is so limited really restricts students understanding of a very vibrant country.

Mukai told visiting teachers that he hoped the conference would lead to the creation of a community of learners including both Korean and American teachers.

The teachers appeared to be fulfilling Mukais hopes. On the first day of the conference, after a presentation by Hana Academy teachers on the Korean educational system, American and Korean teachers discussed educational policy.

James Covi, who teaches world history at Lakeside High School in Seattle, commented on Koreas efforts to move away from rigorous standardized testing in secondary education.

Here in the U.S., we look at [Korean] test scores and were quite jealous, Covi said, laughing. Maybe theres some common ground in the middle were trying to meet at?

Covi attended the conference to expand his knowledge of Korea, which he said is insufficient to teach [Korea] well. He said he enjoyed learning more about Korean culture, through events such as the cooking demonstration and presentations on the educational system, as well as about the divided peninsulas history and politics.

American teachers also learned from several visiting Korean students, who delivered short presentations on Korean society. The students also interacted with American teachers during meals and social events, answering questions about academics and daily life in Korean high schools. 

The concept of coming abroad to meet other people from this country, and to talk about my country, was really exciting, said Minji Choi, one of the students. Its a great opportunity.

But the best opportunity for cross-cultural engagement may have come in a simpler form, as Connie Straub concluded her demonstration and her audience scattered to nearby tables piled high with traditional Korean food. The spread including several varieties of the fermented and fragrant vegetable dish known as kimchi, often approached with skepticism by the uninitiated.

The American teachers quickly shed their inhibitions and then their misconceptions. Its delicious, said one, a loaded forkful raised to her mouth. The cucumber is extraordinary.

 

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PhD

Dr. HyoJung Jang is an instructor for the Sejong Korea Scholars Program at the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖). She holds a Ph.D. in Educational Theory and Policy as well as in Comparative and International Education from Penn State University, and an M.A. in East Asian Studies from 91勛圖. Previously, HyoJung was a curriculum writer at 91勛圖, where she co-authored curriculum units on Korea and China, including , , and .  

Prior to her current appointment at 91勛圖, HyoJung worked at the World Bank in the education sector for two years, supporting the efforts of the Ministry of Education of Laos in expanding the access to quality education for all children, particularly the most disadvantaged children in the poorest and remotest rural areas. Toward that end, she has conducted research and policy analysis on the basic education sub-sector in Laos, with a focus on gender, inclusive education, teacher professional development, and education financing, and collaborated with the Ministry and international stakeholders for policy reforms, strategy formulation, project design, implementation, and monitoring and evaluation efforts. 

HyoJungs academic research has been presented at national and international conferences, including the annual meetings of the Comparative and International Education Society in Washington D.C., Vancouver, Canada, Atlanta, Georgia, and Mexico City, Mexico, and the American Educational Research Association in Washington D.C. and New York, NY. 

HyoJungs research agenda broadly centers on the relationship between broader institutional characteristics (e.g., school-, educational system-, and national-levels) and gaps in student achievement outcomes across gender and class. For instance, one of her earlier studies examining the relationship between the national-level gender egalitarian measure and the gender gap in mathematics achievement cross-nationally was presented at the highlighted session of the Large Scale Cross National Special Interest Group at the 2015 Comparative and International Education Society. Another key area of HyoJungs research focuses on non-cognitive skills and achievement, and how broader institutional contexts shape that relationship. Her dissertation examined the relationship between a non-cognitive skill and academic achievement, showing how that relationship varies across more than 60 countries and what would explain the cross-national variation.    

HyoJung has led and presented at teacher seminars at Duke and Stanford Universities, as well as at the National Council for the Social Studies. She has also presented at the East Asia Regional Council of Schools in Thailand.

 

Instructor, Sejong Korea Scholars Program
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