91勛圖

News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs

is currently accepting applications for the Spring 2019 session, which runs from April 22 to August 23, 2019. The deadline to apply is February 24, 2019.

Now in its eighth session, Stanford e-Japan is s online course for high school students in Japan. Accepted students engage in an intensive study of U.S. society and culture and U.S.Japan relations. Ambassadors, top scholars, and experts throughout the United States provide web-based lectures and engage students in live discussion sessions.

The Spring 2019 session is generously supported by the , Tokyo, Japan.

This year, Stanford e-Japan has moved to an online application system. All applications must be submitted at via the SurveyMonkey Apply platform. Applicants and recommenders will need to create a SurveyMonkey Apply account to proceed. Students who are interested in applying to the program are encouraged to begin their application early.

For more information about Stanford e-Japan, please visit .

To stay informed of news about Stanford e-Japan and 91勛圖s other student programs, join our or follow us on and .


91勛圖 offers separate courses for U.S. high school students. For more information on those, please visit (online course on Japan), (Korea), and (China).


Related articles:

 

 

All News button
1
Authors
News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs

is a distance-learning course sponsored by the , Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies (FSI) at 91勛圖. The Spring 2018 session was supported by the Capital Group and the , Japan Program, Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, FSI. Offered for the first time in 2015, Stanford e-Japan presents a creative and innovative approach to teaching Japanese high school students about U.S. society and culture and U.S.Japan relations, and most importantly, the course introduces both U.S. and Japanese perspectives on many historical and contemporary issues. The Spring 2018 cohort was the sixth group of students to complete Stanford e-Japan.


In August 2019, three of the top students of the Spring 2018 Stanford e-Japan session will be honored at an event at 91勛圖. The three Stanford e-Japan Day honoreesNaoya Chonan (Waseda University Senior High School), Miki Fujito (Senri International School of Kwansei Gakuin), and Luana Ichinose (Shibuya Senior High School)will be recognized for their coursework and exceptional research essays that focused respectively on Two Possible Ways to Adopt a Flipped Learning Method into Japanese High School Classrooms, Differing Views on the A-bomb in Japan and the U.S., and A Comparative Analysis of the Right to Resist in Japan and the U.S.

Anna Oura (Tokyo Gakugei University International Secondary School) received Honorable Mention for her research paper on A Comparative Study on Japanese and U.S. History Textbooks.

Applications for the Spring 2019 session of Stanford e-Japan will be accepted online from January 10 to February 24, 2019.

To stay informed of news about Stanford e-Japan and 91勛圖s other programs, join our and follow us on and .


Related articles:

 

All News button
1
Authors
Gary Mukai
News Type
Blogs
Date
Paragraphs

During the U.S.-Japan Council annual conference that was held in Tokyo on November 8 and 9, 2018, Rylan Sekiguchi was elected chair of the TOMODACHI Emerging Leaders Program (ELP). The ELP identifies, cultivates, and empowers a new generation of leaders in the U.S.Japan relationship. Emerging Leaders participate in leadership education, design and implement original USJC programming, and develop powerful, lifelong personal and professional friendships. A new cohort of leaders aged 2435 is selected annually through a highly competitive process. USJC Senior Vice President Kaz Maniwa, who oversees the ELP, commented, We are delighted that Rylan Sekiguchi will lead the Emerging Leaders Program next year as the chair of the Steering Committee. Rylan has shown great passion, dedication, and commitment to the Emerging Leaders Program and we look forward to his leadership.

Secretary Norman Mineta and Rylan Sekiguchi Secretary Norman Mineta and Rylan Sekiguchi

During the conference, Sekiguchi gave an overview of the ELP and shared reflections of how his professional and personal lives have embraced the mission of the ELP. Sekiguchi spoke specifically about his current work at 91勛圖 with USJC Vice Chair Norman Mineta, former Secretary of Commerce under President Bill Clinton and Secretary of Transportation under President George W. Bush. Mineta is the subject of a new documentaryco-produced by Dianne Fukami and Debra Nakatomi, and Sekiguchi is finalizing web-based lesson plans that focus on the films key themes, including immigration, civil liberties, and leadership. The documentary was screened at the conference and is anticipated to air on PBS.

A short video that Sekiguchi shared during his speech brought applause from the audience. The captured a snippet of a performance that he and other members of presented last year. The performance celebrated swing music and the role it played in lifting peoples spirits amid the harsh reality of the Japanese-American internment, shared Sekiguchi. Through music and theater, we transported people back to a 1940s-era camp dance to educate audiences about the painful, agonizing choices that incarcerees faced. Mineta was a young boy when his family was uprooted from San Jose, California, and incarcerated in a camp for Japanese Americans in Heart Mountain, Wyoming. Mineta later became mayor of San Jose in 1971.

Through Sekiguchis reflections, audience members from both sides of the Pacific were prompted to reflect upon civil liberties during times of crisisin this case, the incarceration of Japanese Americans following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. My father was a high school student in a camp in Poston, Arizona, and the video prompted me to recall one of the few things that he shared with me about his life behind barbed wirethat camp dances and baseball brought some sense of normalcy to the lives of Japanese-American youth. By showing the video, Sekiguchis implicit message was clear: young Americans todayincluding of course, ELP membersmust be aware of the sometimes fragile nature of civil liberties. I have the good fortune of working with another ELP member, Naomi Funahashi, and during the conference, it was rewarding for me to meet many ELP alumni and members of the newest cohort and to witness the beginnings of personal and professional friendships amongst them. Sekiguchis speech set the tone for the year aheadlike a camp dance, he wants the ELP members to have fun but to always remember the serious nature of what the ELP represents.


91勛圖s web-based lesson plans will be released soon. To stay informed of 91勛圖-related news, join our or follow 91勛圖 on and . 91勛圖 also offers several traditional lesson plans on the Japanese-American internment, the role of baseball in Japanese-American internment camps, and civil liberties in times of crisis.

 

All News button
1
Authors
Gary Mukai
News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs

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.

To stay informed of 91勛圖-related news, follow 91勛圖 on  and .

All News button
1

616 Jane Stanford Way
Encina Hall, C333
Stanford, CA 94305-6060

(650) 723-6784
0
tanyalee_color.jpeg PhD

Dr. Tanya Lee is the instructor for the China Scholars Program.

She has most recently served as Outreach Coordinator for Duke Universitys Asian/Pacific Studies Institute (then the only federally funded East Asia Resource Center for the southeastern United States). From 2006 through 2009, she was Program Director of the Asian Educational Media Service at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a national outreach program facilitating the use of film and media resources for teaching and learning about Asia in K16 education. She has also collected acquisitions for the Full Frame Archive of documentary film at Duke Universitys Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library; and coordinated a Mellon-funded project at the Associated Colleges of the Midwest, synthesizing the efforts of 41 liberal arts colleges in international education.

Earlier, she taught English for two years at Yunnan Universitys Foreign Language Secondary School in Kunming, China. She has also taught English as a Second Language in Seoul, Korea; Taipei, Taiwan; and Seattle, Washington.

She completed her Ph.D. in ethnomusicology in 2011 from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, with specializations in American folk music and East Asian music. Her dissertation, a history and ethnography of a major community music school in Chicago (Music as a Birthright: Chicago's Old Town School of Folk Music and Participatory Music Making in the 21st Century), studies the meanings of music in the lives of amateur music-makers, in the context of the American folk music revival. She is currently rewriting it as a book for a general readership.

She earned an M.A. in ethnomusicology from the University of Washington, a Bachelor of Arts in East Asian Studies from Oberlin College, and a Bachelor of Music in Music History from Oberlin Conservatory of Music.

Instructor, China Scholars Program
News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs

We are excited to announce the launch of our brand new online store! The new 91勛圖 Store, located at , has been completely redesigned to serve you better. Now its easier to navigate, filter, search, and find the titles you want.

To celebrate our launch, were holding a 15%-off sale for all curriculum ordered at through September 30, 2018. Use coupon code LAUNCHSALE during checkout to redeem your discount.

Visit our new 91勛圖 Store today!

To stay informed of 91勛圖-related news, follow 91勛圖 on and .


Please note: Our old webstore is still functional currently, but we will start decommissioning it in the coming months. For all your curriculum-purchasing needs, please head to spicestore.stanford.edu. Our free multimedia material will continue to live on our main site ().

 

All News button
1
Authors
Gary Mukai
News Type
Blogs
Date
Paragraphs

Comedian Conan OBrien recently announced that he will visit Hokuei City (aka Conan Town) in Tottori Prefecture, Japan, which is well known for its sand dunes and the manga character, Detective Conan. Detective Conan was created by artist Gosho Aoyama, who was born in Hokuei. In fact, Tottoris main airport is called the Tottori Sand Dunes Conan Airport. Tourists from the United States and other countries are drawn to the sand dunes and the Manga Kingdom, a nickname for Tottori because it is the home prefecture of many famous manga artists like Aoyama.

Governor Shinji Hirai of Tottori, who leads these efforts to make Tottori a more notable tourist destination, recently met with Governor Phil Scott of Vermont to formalize a sister state relationship. Both governors hope to give their students more opportunities for exchange. These are just two examples of the increasing synergy between the United States and Tottori, the least populous prefecture in Japan. Thanks to the vision of Governor Hirai, 91勛圖 launched a distance-learning course, Stanford e-Tottori, for high school students in Tottori Prefecture in 2016. The course instructor, Jonas Edman, hopes that the course will help to build even more bridges at the grassroots level between Tottori and the United States.

Now in its third year, Stanford e-Tottori enrolls students from public and private schools in Tottori Prefecture and is a cornerstone of Tottori Prefectures Global Leaders Campus, an initiative by the Tottori Prefectural Board of Education to internationalize the curriculum in all schools in Tottori. Governor Hirais vision has provided many Tottori high school students with the opportunity to study with Edman, who engages students in English with Stanford scholars and experts on topics ranging from U.S. high schools to cultural diversity in the United States.

On August 1, 2018, Edman participated in the opening ceremony for the third year of Stanford e-Tottori. He met Superintendent Hitoshi Yamamoto, Office Director Takuya Fukushima (High School Division), several others of the Tottori Prefectural Board of Education, and the new cohort of students. Edman also visited Tottori Nishi High School and gave a special lecture to students. Though the technology that I use to teach Stanford e-Tottori has improved over the years, I have to say that it was enormously rewarding to meet my students in person, reflected Edman. Seeing them in their picturesque home prefectureand some of them in their school [Tottori Nishi High School]provided a context that cannot be replicated virtually. My online interaction with the students from now will feel different.

I also had the chance to visit Tottori Prefecture on August 26, 2018 to give the opening lecture for the third-year offering of Stanford e-Tottori. In attendance were not only the current cohort students but also three students from last years cohort. Before class began, I could feel the nervousness among the students as they anxiously waited outside the presentation room. Once class commenced, however, I could sense that their nerves started to settle down. The students gave their best during class, and I was so impressed with their efforts in particular because it was the first lecture of the course. I have no doubt that their English skills and understanding of U.S. society and culture will improve under the mentorship of Edman.

High school students from Tottori Prefecture with 91勛圖 Director Gary Mukai and Stanford Visiting Scholar Junichiro Hirata High school students from Tottori Prefecture with 91勛圖 Director Gary Mukai and Stanford Visiting Scholar Junichiro Hirata
Following the class, Fukushima took Stanford Visiting Scholar Junichiro Hirata and me to Mitaki-en, a village nestled in the mountain town of Chizu in Tottori Prefecture. While strolling around Mitaki-en, I was reminded of a different era and was pleasantly overwhelmed by my sensesmost notably the sound of a babbling brook, the smell of an earthen floor of a home from the early 20th century, the taste of powdered green tea, the feel of a tatami mat, and the sight of a faint waterfall. The preservation of this village struck me as symbolic of the people of Tottoripeople who seem to have a gift for successfully integrating innovation with tradition.

The Tottori Prefectural Board of Education encourages its students to appreciate Tottoris historic ties to agriculture and fisheries and its natural beauty. Tottori is also said to be Japans best place for stargazing. Simultaneously, the Board of Education instills in its students a need to see the world in a grain of sand through courses like Stanford e-Tottori. To me, helping students appreciate the delicate balance of innovation and tradition lies at the heart of Tottori Prefectures Global Leaders Campus, and 91勛圖 is honored to be a part of this initiative.

 

All News button
1
News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs

Since 2010, Stanford Global Studies (SGS) has partnered with community colleges through innovative projects such as the Stanford Human Rights Education Initiative and the (EPIC) to bring together faculty and administrators committed to developing global and international studies. Jonas Edman works with SGS and FSI staff and faculty on this partnership, which has the goal of establishing a growing network of EPIC alumni who are developing innovative programs to internationalize curricula at the community college level.

From August 8 to 10, 2018, SGS convened a three-day summer intensive workshop for ten new EPIC fellows to launch this years EPIC Fellows Program. The 201819 EPIC Fellows are:

  • Marina Broeder, Mission College, California
  • Mary Conroy-Zouzoulas, San Jose City College, California
  • Dave Dillon, Grossmont College, California
  • Jennifer Fiebig, Pasadena City College, California
  • Andrew Hill, St. Philips College, Texas
  • Chigusa Katoku, Mission College, California
  • Philip Tran, San Jose City College, California
  • Don Uy-Barreta, De Anza College, California
  • Nancy Willet, College of Marin, California
  • Irene Young, St. Philips College, Texas

The institute featured talks by Stanford faculty, including talks on global competencies by , universities making knowledge in a global era by , using films in classrooms by , using maps in classrooms by , and China under Mao Zedong by . In addition to the talks, the EPIC fellows were introduced to library resources, including digital, map, and archival resources; as well as resources from 91勛圖 and .

The EPIC Fellows will work collaboratively with Stanford staff for one academic year (AugustMay) on self-designed projects aimed at developing global competencies and awareness among community college students. From this month, the EPIC Fellows will participate in online seminars during which they will explore cutting-edge research in global studies with Stanford faculty and staff and develop innovative curricular materials and extra-academic programs to implement in their classrooms and at their home campuses. The fellowship will culminate at an end-of-year symposium on May 18, 2019 at 91勛圖 that will bring together faculty and administrators from community colleges and four-year universities committed to fostering global studies on their campuses.

To stay informed of 91勛圖-related news, follow 91勛圖 on and .

All News button
1
Authors
Gary Mukai
News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs
As Stacy Shimanuki delivered her presentation about the Pacific War (194145), I was reflective of the fact that the 73rd anniversary of the surrender of Japan, August 15, 1945, was five days away. Stacy was one of several American and Japanese high school students who were honored by 91勛圖 during an annual event called Japan Day at 91勛圖 on August 10, 2018. The top three students of (fall 2017 cohort) and three students of the (2018 cohort) gave presentations on their course research papers. The Reischauer Scholars Program (RSP) is a distance-learning course on Japan and U.S.Japan relations that is offered annually to high school students in the United States, and Stanford e-Japan is a distance-learning course on the United States and U.S.Japan relations that is offered twice annually to high school students in Japan.
 
For me, Japan Day is not only a day of recognition of students but is also symbolic of the close friendship between the United States and Japan that has evolved from a once-bitter rivalry. Though the six students had met their instructors Naomi Funahashi (RSP instructor; Dr. Rie Kijima taught the latter part of the 2018 RSP course) and Waka Takahashi Brown (Stanford e-Japan instructor) in online virtual classrooms, it was their first time meeting face-to-face. Although they had never met before, it was remarkable to me how the students on both sides of the Pacific seemed almost like old friends by the end of the day.
 
Japan Day opened with comments by the Honorable Tomochika Uyama, Consul General of Japan in San Francisco. He stated,  
 
The JapanU.S. alliance is the cornerstone of security, stability, and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region. As we look at the global challenges we face today, I believe that we must strive to ensure that our special relationship remains strong and vital. One way to accomplish this is by preparing the best and brightest of our young people with the kind of learning opportunities that will deepen mutual understanding. It is my belief that the Reischauer Scholars Program and Stanford e-Japan are admirably working toward this goal by providing the knowledge and expertise our young people will need as future leaders in JapanU.S. relations. 
Before the student presentations, Consul General Uyama took the time to speak with each of the honorees.
 
  RSP honorees Stanford e-Japan honorees
  • Grace Rembert, Bozeman High School, Bozeman, Montana
  • Stacy Shimanuki, Amador Valley High School, Pleasanton, California
  • Valerie Wu, Presentation High School, San Jose, California
  • Amane Kishimoto, Kyoto Prefectural Rakuhoku Senior High School, Kyoto
  • Yurika Matsushima, Keio Girls Senior High School, Tokyo
  • Jun Yamasaki, Shibuya Kyoiku Gakuen Senior High School, Tokyo
 
The students presented on topics ranging from open innovation, employment and people with disabilities, and the U.S. and Japanese educational systems to language and nationalism, literature on the atomic bombing of Japan, and urbanization in Japan. Brown and Funahashi had high praise for their students. Im always so proud of our e-Japan award winners, stated Brown. Their level of research is at such a high level, and to be able to conduct their presentations in English and with such poise is an amazing achievement for students at such a young age. During the presentations by her students, Funahashi reminded the audience, These are high school students! Without fail on Japan Day, Funahashi hears audience members complimenting the intellect of her students and how articulate they are. 
 
Waka Brown and Naomi Funahashi at podium Waka Brown and Naomi Funahashi at podium
Attendees represented people from the Stanford community and the U.S.Japan community in the Bay Area, including Dr. Takeo Hoshi, Director, Japan Program, and Junichiro Hirata, Visiting Scholar, Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, FSI; and Dr. Kazuhiko Hasegawa, Executive Director, San Francisco Office, Osaka University, Kathleen Kimura, Japan Society of Northern California, and Dr. Yoichi Aizawa, Executive Director, San Francisco Office, Waseda University. Amanda Minami Chao and David Chao were recognized for their many years of support to 91勛圖.   
 
Following the formal program, the students enjoyed a tour of 91勛圖. The 91勛圖 staff and I were left hoping that someday we would see them again as undergraduate or graduate students on campus and more importantly, hoping that they will remain friends to further strengthen the decades of friendship between Japan and the United States. 
 
To stay informed of 91勛圖-related news, follow 91勛圖 on and .

Funding for 91勛圖s distance-learning courses is generously provided by Amanda Minami Chao and David Chao, and Jean Mou and Yoshiaki Fujimori. Funding for the 2018 RSP was generously provided by Gen Isayama, the Center for Global Partnership/The Japan Foundation, and The Japan Fund, FSI. Funding for the Stanford e-Japan 2017 courses was generously provided by the United States-Japan Foundation, and for the Stanford e-Japan spring 2018 course by Noriko Honda Chen, Harry Gunji, Akira Horiguchi, Paul Li, Tomonori Tani, and the Capital Group Companies. 

 
All News button
1
Subscribe to United States