Amy Cheng
616 Jane Stanford Way
Encina Hall, E005
Stanford, CA 94305-6060
Amy Cheng is the instructor of Stanford e-Kagoshima City for the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖). As of 2023 she has returned to 91勛圖 on a part-time basis while she continues to work at Sony Interactive Entertainment as senior manager of a 12-member content creation team in the United States and the United Kingdom. Prior to Sony, she was a technical/education writer at Pearson Education as well as a curriculum writer for 91勛圖. In the earlier years with 91勛圖, she helped develop curricular units on Hiroshima, China in the 21st century, and U.S.Mexico relations.
In the mid-1990s, Amy was a graduate student at 91勛圖, completing coursework toward an M.A. in East Asian Studies and an M.A. in International Comparative Education at the Graduate School of Education. She received her degree from the Center for East Asian Studies in 1998. As an undergraduate, Amy studied English at the University of California at Berkeley.
Amy was born in Yokohama, Japan, and immigrated to the Bay Area in the late 70s with her family. Besides Japan, she has lived in China and South Korea.
Mia Kimura
616 Jane Stanford Way
Encina Hall, E005
Stanford, CA 94305-6060
Mia Kimura is a Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖) instructor of two student programs in Japan: Stanford e-Hiroshima, which examines key topics that define the relationship between Japan and the United States, and Stanford e-Eiri, which explores the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, with a special focus on gender equity.
Prior to joining 91勛圖, Mia worked in marketing communications, supporting foreign firms in the Japanese market, and Japanese organizations in the United States. She has also served as Principal at Poppins Active Learning School, an international program for early childhood education in Tokyo. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Cognitive Science from Brown University, and a Master of Business Administration from The Graduate School of International Corporate Strategy at Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo. She was born in San Francisco and lived in Tokyo for 25 years before returning to the Bay Area.
Mias role at 91勛圖 represents the culmination of decades of experience bridging Japanese and American business and social cultures. She also draws from background as an executive coach, defining her role of instructor as an enabler of students own curiosity and abilities to question, reflect, and learn.
91勛圖 Webinar: Baseballs Bridge to the Pacific: Celebrating the Legacy of Japanese American Baseball
Webinar recording:
When the U.S. government incarcerated over 120,000 people of Japanese descent during World War II (most of whom were U.S. citizens), Japanese Americans struggled to find a sense of normalcy behind the barbed wire. For some, this was achieved by playing baseball.
Using baseball as a lens to explore the history of Japanese Americans and the U.S.Japan relationship, this webinar offers K12 educators a virtual tour of Baseballs Bridge to the Pacific, a special exhibit currently on display at Dodger Stadium. The tour will be led by Kerry Yo Nakagawa, the founder and director of the Nisei Baseball Research Project (NBRP). The exhibit celebrates the 150th anniversary of U.S.Japan diplomacy (18722022) and chronicles the introduction and development of baseball in Japan since the early 1870s. The exhibits photos, memorabilia, and artifacts offer a unique glimpse into key milestones of Japanese and Japanese Americans in baseball over the past 150 years.
Join Nakagawa as he brings the legacy of Japanese Americans and baseball to life, live from Dodger Stadium! Attendees will receive a PDF of free curriculum materials on teaching about baseball and Japanese American incarceration, developed by 91勛圖 and NBRP for high school and community college teachers.
This webinar is sponsored by the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖), the Nisei Baseball Research Project (NBRP), the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA), and the USC U.S.-China Institute.

Online via Zoom.
Coming Full Circle: The Sejong Korea Scholars Program and Stanford
As schools across the U.S. began to close due to COVID-19 in mid-March, I was in the unique position of transitioning into online classes while already having had some experience taking fully online classes. The year before, I had completed 91勛圖s Reischauer Scholars Program (RSP), an intensive online course focusing on Japanese culture, history, and U.S.Japan relations; participating in the Sejong Korea Scholars Program (SKSP), an equivalent program, I thought, would be a similar experience.
Yet, being part of the SKSP in the midst of a pandemic framed the way I participated in and learned from the class. As the course went on, we began each Virtual Classroom with a brief discussion on COVID-19, talking amongst ourselves how we were personally doing, and how Korea was handling it as compared to the U.S. We were encouraged to read local news in Korea to learn about COVID-19, and we brought our learnings to each discussion with renewed vigor. Theres a strange and harrowing feeling you get when analyzing the course of a virus in your home country and across the Pacifican implicit understanding that this isnt just a research text to pore over, but an unprecedented moment in history were living through.
But back to the beginning. After participating in the RSP, I realized how essential it is to analyze stories from all facets.
RSP first introduced me to the concept that history is told from the winners perspective, and SKSP gave me the opportunity to delve deeply into that. I became intrigued with how history is taught and wanted to understand the other sides of stories I learned about in my textbooks. Weeks later, when we learned about the Japanese exploitation of Korean comfort women during World War II, I knew that learning about these issues from one side would simply not be enough to fully comprehend parts of history such as these. The way I learn history directly impacts how I view society and the relationships between groups of people.
Hence, each of the modules helped me craft a multifaceted perspective of Korea and U.S.Korea relations. The lessons and lectures allowed me to understand and re-interpret modern and historical issues in a global context. From Shamanisms evolving role in Korean society, to Japanese colonial rule in Korea, to the social impacts of the Miracle on the Han River, to class and socioeconomic strata in Korean education systems, I dove into a plethora of topics through readings, lectures, and class discussions. As a high school student, I never believed I would have the honor of learning from distinguished scholars and experts, but SKSP introduced me to a variety of academics with clear passions for Korean history and culture. My learning extended beyond lectures: in discussion boards, I learned from my classmates, who shared their diverse perspectives and experiences and fostered an inclusive and challenging learning environment. We were given the chance to analyze material on our own through readings and assignments, but it was in these virtual interactions with my peers that I discovered the most. The open and constructive group that Dr. Jang and Mr. Edman facilitated was one where we could respectfully engage with one another on any topic while acknowledging at the end of the day the friendships and bonds wed made. Thus, I paired my self-led education from 91勛圖 with that of my public schooling and constructed a greater comprehensive understanding of the world.
However, it was the Korean War and North Korea units that I believe played the greatest role in not only my intellectual development, but also my personal and political growth. These two units coalesced in my final research paper project, in which I wrote about the critical role of student activism in South Korean democratization. During my research and readings, I analyzed how the March First Movement set the stage for South Korean protest culture and democratization. I recognized that of the two factions of activists post March First, I might have been in the more radical faction, the one that ended up becoming North Korea. This realization, combined with the readings and lectures from the North Korea unit, completely changed my view of geopolitics in Korea. I learned about the U.S.s role in the Korean War, and subsequently the Western portrayal of North Korea as a rogue, renegade state. I wondered, how much are we to speak about propaganda when students like me are taught lessons that shield Western imperialism with saviorism and American exceptionalism?
SKSP is not simply a fleeting online course with a broad overview of Korea, but an unparalleled opportunity to uncover Korea on an academic level few other high school students have. I hadnt expected to undergo a personal and political reckoning within myself, but it is because of this growth that I am beyond grateful for SKSP, Dr. Jang and Mr. Edmans instruction and advising, and all of my peers questions and discussions. Since then, I havent ceased to continue kindling my interest in Korean history and politics, questioning previously held beliefs, and broadening my worldview. And it is especially during a time like thisa global movement of Black Lives Matter, a local movement to change my high schools Indigenous emblem, and everything in between, all within the context of a pandemicthat it is so crucial for me to critically analyze what Ive been taught, and to keep learning as much as I can. In SKSP, Ive developed the skills necessary to do so. Its the other sides of stories, namely non-Western and non-white, that I am committed to studying, since understanding the nuances of the past can help guide us into a more equitable future.
Next fall, I begin at Stanford, hopefully on campusit feels like coming full circle, having the privilege to attend college in an institution that first allowed me to foster a genuine love for learning. Now, while many of my friends begin their college careers, I have chosen to take a gap year with the U.S. Department of States National Security Language Initiative for Youth (NSLI-Y), a rigorous and competitive academic scholarship to study a critical language abroad. As of August, the in-country program has been pushed back to 2021 due to COVID-19, but I hope to find myself in Seoul in a few months. With everything ahead of me, I know SKSP is only the beginning, as I hope to continue bridging my education to the world.
Reischauer Scholars Program
Sejong Korea Scholars Program
Read More
The following reflection is a guest post written by Sandi Khine, an alumna of the Reischauer Scholars Program and the Sejong Korea Scholars Program, which are currently accepting applications for the 2021 courses.
Maiko Tamagawa Bacha
616 Jane Stanford Way
Encina Hall, E005
Stanford, CA 94305-6060
Maiko Tamagawa Bacha is the instructor for the Stanford e-Kawasaki Program and Stanford e-KyuSan U (Kyushu Sangyo University, Fukuoka Prefecture) for the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (91勛圖).
Prior to joining 91勛圖, she worked for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan for 14 years and served in Tokyo, Japan; Bangkok, Thailand; Vientiane, Laos; and San Francisco, United States. She has experience working in different areas of international relations, including disarmament of conventional weapons, United Nations affairs, JapanLaos bilateral relations, and public diplomacy. In her most recent role as Advisor for Educational Affairs at the Consulate General of Japan in San Francisco, she had an opportunity to work closely with 91勛圖 to support its Reischauer Scholars Program, an online course on Japan and U.S.Japan relations for U.S. high school students.
Maiko received a BA in American Area Studies from University of Tokyo, and an MA in International Policy Studies from Middlebury Institute of International Studies in Monterey, California. She was born in Fukuoka, Japan, and grew up in Chiba, Japan.
Application open for 2019 Summer Institute for High School Teachers
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.
Related articles:
- The Freeman Foundation: Supporting the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia for 20 Years
- Institute highlights the teaching of Asia and the Asian-American experience