Penn Center For East Asian Studies Newsletter
2007 - 08: Issue no. 7, October 5, 2007
The CEAS Newsletter weekly notifies East Asianists in our region of events and opportunities of interest. Notices appear under six headings:
- University of Pennsylvania East Asia Events
- Regional East Asia Events
- Employment and Internship Opportunities
- Fellowship and Award Opportunities
- East Asia Study Opportunities and Queries
- Conferences and Workshops
If you have notices in these categories that you like posted here, please
send them to nriley@sas.upenn.edu.
* Indicates notices appearing here for the first time.
Featured Event
Friday, October 12, 7:00PM, Rose Recital Hall (Fisher-Bennett Hall 419)
IIIZ+
Officially formed in Darmstadt, Germany in 2001, IIIZ+ ("three zee plus," in English), a quartet born out of musical interests and experiences of Jocelyn Clark, and nurtured with Il-Ryun Chung's artistic input, features a unique combination of the three bridged east Asian zithers: Korean kayagûm, Japanese koto, and Chinese zheng--"plus" Korean percussion.
(I) University of Pennsylvania East Asia Events
Student Career & Internship Opportunities in Japan
Monday, October 8th (3:30-4:30pm)
Williams Hall 29
Are you interested in an internship and/or a job in Japan? Join us at the Panel
where we learn from our fellow students who had these experiences. The talk
will include the topics such as job hunting, work, use of Japanese language
atwork, cross-cultural issues, challenges, and achievements. You can ask more
questions in the following Q &A sessions. All the panelists studied Japanese
here at Penn.
The panel is conducted in English. Anyone interested is welcome!
Panelists:
Alicia Dai (Class of 2008, Wharton School)
-Internship at Ford Japan Limited, Summer 2006
-Majors: Finance, OPIM Minor: East Asian Studies
-Japanese class taken at the time of application: JPAN 212 (Intermediate
Japanese II)
Sam Malissa (Class of 2004, College)
-Full-time job at JET Program in Nara Prefecture, 2004-2006
-Major: American History Minor: Japanese studies
-Japanese class taken at the time of application: JPAN 112 (Beginning Japanese
IV)
Sam is currently working at the Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia.
Darren Wang (Class of 2008, SEAS)
-Internship at Nikko Citigroup Limited, Summer 2007
-Major: Electrical Engineering
-Japanese class taken at the time of application: JPAN 382 (Japanese for
Professions II)
Panel Chair:
Tomoko Takami (Lecturer in Foreign Languages, Japanese Language Program )
This event is sponsored by the Center for East Asian Studies and the Japanese
Language Program.
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Wednesday, October 10, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Ozu, Tokyo Story ( Tokyo monogatari) , 1953
Japanese Cinema Series
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Thursday, October 11, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231, Beyond the Silk Roads: Cultural Interaction and Exchange along Tang China 's Northern Borderlands
Jonathan Skaff, Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania
Historians studying China 's relations with Eurasia typically have focused on foreign conquest and Silk Road trade as the main avenues of cultural exchange. This talk will argue that the northern borderlands also played an important role. During the Tang dynasty (618-907) the China-Inner Asia borderlands were heterogeneous ecological and ethnic environments that supported farming, pastoralism, and hunting-gathering. The Tang court sought to integrate these borderlands into their empire through bureaucratic, military and diplomatic means. As the Tang exploited the people and resources of this region to augment state power, one result was increased political, economic, and social links between China , the borderlands and more distant parts of Eurasia .
Humanities Colloquium
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Friday, October 12, 7:00PM, Rose Recital Hall (Fisher-Bennett Hall 419) , IIIZ+
IIIZ+: Officially formed in Darmstadt, Germany in 2001, IIIZ+ ("three zee plus," in English), a quartet born out of musical interests and experiences of Jocelyn Clark, and nurtured with Il-Ryun Chung's artistic input, features a unique combination of the three bridged east Asian zithers: Korean kayagûm, Japanese koto, and Chinese zheng--"plus" Korean percussion.
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Thursday, October 18, 4:30PM, Huntsman Hall G55, Alliances unwound? US Policy in Korea and Asia After Roh Moo Hyun
Victor Cha, Georgetown University
Philip Jaison Distinguished Lecturer
___________
Prof. Jean Pfaelzer, who has recently published a major book about the experiences of Chinese Americans and immigrants in the US west during the late 19th and early 20th century, will give a lecture at 3 pm on Oct 24, 2007, at Penn Law School, 3400 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia 19104, Gittis Hall Lecture Room 1. The book is called Driven Out: The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans (Random House 2007).
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Wednesday, October 24, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Kurosawa, Stray Dog (Nora inu) , 1949
Japanese Cinema Series
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Thursday, October 25, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231, Like Donkeys Killed after Grinding the Wheat: War Veterans and the Politics of Martial Citizenship and Patriotism in China , 1949-2006
Neil Diamant, Dickinson College
Even though the Chinese Communist Party captured state power as a result of its superior military organization and leadership, and claims legitimacy
on the basis of its wartime nationalism, almost nothing has been written about what happened to the millions of rank and file soldiers and junior officers who
returned to villages and cities after the guns of war died down. How were veterans of the Korean War treated upon their return? How did ordinary citizens assess the legitimacy of that conflict? If "patriotism" is said to have been a rising sentiment in the PRC, why would war heroes complain that they felt like "dirty socks that are tossed aside" ? This lecture, which is based on years of archival research in urban and rural China , will address these and other questions.
Issues in Contemporary East Asia Lecture Series
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My name is Hue Chuyen and I am a monk at Pagoda Phat Hue in Frankfurt, Germany. Venerable Thich Thien Son, the Abbot and Zen Master of the Pagoda, is holding a free talk at the McCleland Conference Room at the Pennsylvania Hospital on October 26 . He is deeply versed in Buddhist philosophy (texts and applications) and psychology from both Eastern and Western standards. Ven. Thich Thien Son, who has been featured in National Geographic and Geo magazines, is the President of the European Buddhist University and was recently awarded the 2007 Spirit of Business Award by The European Community Of Experts in Marketing And Sales for his 'innovative and strategic concepts for spirit in management'.
I would like to extend an invitation to students and professors of the University's East Asian programs and possibly post the event on the website. Could you guide me in the best way to make this event known to the member of the East Asian Studies program?
Thank you for your help,
Hue Chuyen
(For more information regarding the event and Pagoda please visit www.phathue.com)
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Wednesday, October 31, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Kurosawa, To Live (Ikiru) , 1952
Japanese Cinema Series
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Thursday, November 1, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231, Hunger and History: Mencius, Malthus, and Mao in China
Lillian M. Li, Swarthmore College
The prevention of famine and hunger has been part of Chinese political thinking since ancient times, and hunger and famines helped shape China 's history especially in the twentieth century. Drawing from her recently published book, Fighting Famine in North China : State, Market, and Environmental Decline, 1690s-1990s (Stanford University Press, 2007), Professor Li will speak about how “Polarities such as food vs. population, man vs. nature, [rich vs. poor], or state vs. market drastically oversimplify history. . . . The story of famine, and fighting famine, is a story of human choice and human will, not of historical inevitability or historical determinism.”
Humanities Colloquium
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Wednesday, November 7, 7:00PM, Logan Hall Terrace Room , The History and Music of the Japanese Chikuzen Biwa
Yoko Hiraoka
Yoko Hiraoka will present a lecture/recital of Japanese Biwa music. This 5-stringed lute with a powerful and raw timbre, has a history in Japan of at least 1300 years, and has been used both as a story-telling medium, and sometimes as an accompaniment to chanted religious texts and sutras.
Ms. Hiraoka's biwa repertoire draws mainly upon episodes from the Tale of Heike. This great masterpiece of Japanese literature has continued to retain a hold on the imagination of Japanese audiences throughout the centuries. Yoko brings not only her depth of training in biwa, but also her joy in the old stories to the genre. She explains about the context of the music and the history and importance of biwa in Japanese culture from the Heian period (794-1185) into the 20th Century. Most of all she brings to life with accomplished storytelling, the engaging characters and the supernatural and larger than life events surrounding them, as sung poems accompanied by the biwa.
http://www.japanesestrings.com/
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Wednesday, November 7, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Kurosawa, Seven Samurai (Shichinin no samurai) , 1954
Japanese Cinema Series
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Thursday, November 8, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231 , Unfolding Beauty and Beyond: Korean Screen Paintings of Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910)
Hyunsoo Woo, Associate Curator of Korean Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art
While a folding screen is one of the popular painting formats in Korea , screen paintings functioned not only as fine art works, but also provided many other practical roles in daily life of Joseon dynasty. Screen paintings sometime became architectural components as a room divider or, a protection against the wind. They were also used as a backdrop at special occasions such as birthdays, weddings and funerals. The subject matter of screen paintings therefore often reflected auspicious wishes associated with a specific event or location. Using examples of the late Joseon dynasty's screen paintings, this lecture will explore meanings and symbolism hidden behind their visual charm.
Korean Lecture Series
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Wednesday, November 14, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Kurosawa, Itami, Tampopo , 1985
Japanese Cinema Series
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Thursday, November 15, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231 , Circulated Originality: Reconsidering Literary Connections Between Tao Qian, Ying Qu and the Wei-Jin Tradition of the Recluse
Pauline Lin, Bryn Mawr College
This paper re-evaluates the originality of Tao Qian's (365-427) poetry by exploring Tao's literary connection to the Cao-Wei poet Ying Qu ?? (190-252). While most commentators since the Song Dynasty have dismissed this odd pairing -- first espoused by Zhong Rong (469?-518) in his Shipin -- this paper discovers striking literary similarities between the two while uncovering Ying's less-read but once-famous epistles, which provide a far broader literary range than his extant Baiyi shi . Further evidence from the works of minor Eastern Jin period poets highlights a circulation of linguistic idioms and dictions for the retired-recluse gentleman that critics came to associate strongly and solely with Tao Qian. By considering the transmission and preservation of the Wei-Jin poets' works this paper will investigate why Tao Qian has become a forceful poetic voice, why Ying Qu's works gradually became less known, and why Tao Qian's connection to Ying Qu and the minor poets in the tradition became underplayed, if not forgotten.
Humanities Colloquium
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Wednesday, November 28, 12:00PM, The Forum in Stiteler Hall , The Welfare State or Faith? Explaining Weak Islamist Mobilization in Malaysia
Kikue Hamayotsu, Postdoctoral Fellow, Columbia University
Issues in Contemporary East Asia Lecture Series
Co-sponsored with the Penn Comparative Politics Workshop and the Middle East Center
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Wednesday, November 28, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Miyazaki , Princess Mononoke (Mononokehime ), 1997
Japanese Cinema Series
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Wednesday, December 5, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Kitano, Fire-works (Hana-bi) , 1997
Japanese Cinema Series
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Japanese Cinema Series
Fisher-Bennett Hall, Room 231
Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
9/12 Kurosawa, Rashômon , 1950
9/19 Mizoguchi, The Life of Oharu (Saikaku ichidai onna) , 1952
9/26 Mizoguchi, Ugetsu (Ugetsu monogatari) , 1953
10/3 Ozu, Late Spring (Banshun) , 1949
10/10 Ozu, Tokyo Story ( Tokyo monogatari) , 1953
10/24 Kurosawa, Stray Dog (Nora inu) , 1949
10/31 Kurosawa, To Live (Ikiru) , 1952
11/7 Kurosawa, Seven Samurai (Shichinin no samurai), 1954
11/14 Itami, Tampopo , 1985
11/28 Miyazaki , Princess Mononoke (Mononokehime), 1997
12/5 Kitano, Fire-works (Hana-bi) , 1997
Offered in conjunction with Art History 210 and Film 223: Postwar Japanese Cinema and Visual Culture
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A Harmonious Information Society? Social Stratification, ICT & Media in China
A one-day symposium to be held on January 25, 2008 generously supported and hosted by the Center for Global Communication Studies at the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania.
Economic development and ‘informatization' in China have gone hand in hand. While the growth of the economy over the years has been and still is at an incredible rate, the adoption rate of information technology, such as that of mobile phones and the internet, has been just as, if not even more impressive. However, with recent discussions about the construction of a ‘harmonious society' appearing on the political agenda, the focus has started to shift from economic growth to the problem of achieving more overall societal balance. This shift in official discourse acknowledges the need to address social problems, including the tensions between state and market forces, a growing gap between the rich and the poor and widening disparities between the urban and rural population. While there has been research on social stratification in China, little attention so far has been paid to the role information technologies and the media play in this process.
First, what are the social consequences of an increasing informatization of the Chinese society? Who are the main users of new technologies and what are they using them for? And what happens to those who are left out, who do not have the access, or the education to develop the skills and literacy necessary to work with digital media? A deeper underlying question perhaps is, where did these technologies come from and why were they so generously supported? What roles do economic and political considerations play in shaping the diffusion of technology that can be adopted for either repressive or emancipatory purposes?
Second, what is the role of the media in addressing social inequality? In the light of an increasing stratified society, how do the media, both the traditional and the new media, represent competing voices and interests and how do they communicate these disagreements to the public? How do members of the public make sense or fail to make sense of these media representations?
On Friday January 25, 2008, we will bring together an impressive group of scholars for a one-day symposium to address these contentious questions. Our panels include renowned scholars coming from a wide range of disciplines, such as, communication, political science, anthropology, sociology, cultural studies and China studies. Participation among all those attending will be enthusiastically encouraged.
For more information about the symposium, please contact Lokman Tsui <ltsui@asc.upenn.edu>
(II) Regional East Asia Events
Current Exhibitions in the Chinese Art Galleries at The Metropolitan Museum of Art:
Bridging East and West: The Chinese Diaspora and Lin Yutang
September 15, 2007?February 10, 2008
Douglas Dillon Galleries for Chinese Painting and Calligraphy
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Excellence and Elegance: Decorative Arts of the Eighteenth-Century Qing Court
August 25, 2007?November 25, 2007
Florence and Herbert Irving Galleries for Chinese Decorative Arts
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*Center for the Study of Religion, Princeton University , is pleased to announce the following lecture in the series Crossroads of Religion and Politics:
“Religion in Reform-Era China: A Political Economic Approach”
The lecturer is Fenggang Yang , an Associate Professor of Sociology at Purdue University .
The lecture will be on Tuesday, October 9, 2007 at 4:30 p.m. in Robertson Hall Bowl 016 on the Princeton University Campus.
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ICAS Liberty Foundation
presents
ICAS Fall Symposium 2007
www.icasinc.org
Humanity, Peace and Security
The Korean Peninsula Issues
October 10, 2007 Wednesday 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
National Press Club
Washington DC
On-Line Registration
Moderator: Sang Joo Kim ( ICAS Sr Fellow & Executive Vice President)
Speakers
Gordon G Chang (Author; www.icasinc.org/2007/2007b/b070914a.html)
China's Strategic Evolution and Security Sphere
Dennis Halpin ( ICAS Fellow; Professional Staff, Foreign Affairs Committee, US House of Representative)
North Korean Counterterrorism and Nonproliferation Act
Terence P Jeffrey (Editor-in-Chief, CNS News Service)
Basic Principles of the US Foreign Policy
Tong Kim (Visiting Scholar, SAIS, Johns Hopkins University; www.icasinc.org/2007/2007b/b070926a.html)
A Road to Peace in the Korean Peninsula: Insights and Challenges
Jeffrey G Lewis (Director, Nuclear Strategy & Nonprolifereation Initiative, New America Foundation) Nuclear Non-proliferation Issues and North Korea
Nicholas Szechenyi (Fellow and Assistant Director, Office of Japan Chair, CSIS )
Blueprint for an Old Japan? Japan's Policy Debate in a Strategic Context
NB: Programme subject to change
Discussants
Choon Ki Yoo (Director & Associate Vice President for Regional Affairs, ICAS Liberty Foundation)
Michael Marshall (Editor-in-Chief, United Press International Washington Bureau Chief)
(list in progress)
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Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars cordially invite you to:
October 12, 2007, 4:00 -5:30 p.m.
Nation Building in South Korea: Koreans, Americans, and the Making of a Democracy
Featuring Gregg Brazinsky: Professor of History and International Affairs at the George Washington University, and author of Nation Building in South Korea: Koreans, Americans, and the Making of a Democracy.
with
William W. Stueck Jr., Distinguished Research Professor of History at the University of Georgia, and an authority on U.S. diplomatic history, particularly American relations with Asia. Stueck is the author and editor of many books, including Rethinking the Korean War: A New Diplomatic and Strategic History.
Brazinsky and Stueck will discuss Brazinsky's new book "Nation Building in South Korea: Koreans, Americans, and the Making of a Democracy," in which he explores how US-backed development initiatives and Korean agency combined to fuel Korea's rapid economic growth.
A reception will follow the event. Please RSVP to nkidp@wilsoncenter.org
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John Stevens Aikido & Zen Art Workshop
October 18-21, 2007
Classical Aikido Training:
Thursday October 18 and Friday October 19:
10am.-12noon and 1pm.-3pm.
Location- Doylestown Rock Gym, Doylestown, PA.
(directions: doylestownrockgym.com/directions.php)
Fee: $45.- per day
Info and registration: contact Jeff at shinnen@earthlink.net
Zen Art/Aikido/the “Sword and Brush” Art Exhibit/Sale/Workshops:
Saturday October 20 and Sunday October 21:
Location: Nakashima Woodworkers, 1847 Aquetong Rd.
New Hope, PA.
Directions: nakashimawoodworker.com
Saturday October 20:
10am.- Special Nakashima Woodworkers Tour
$35.- per person includes light lunch
(pre-registration required)
1pm. -Special curator lecture by John Stevens (n/c)
1:30pm-4pm.- Zen Art Exhibit and lectures (n/c)
(informal bokken and jo training- misogi no ken,
misogi no jo, and other weapons katas)
Sunday October 21:
10am.- Zen Brush Calligraphy Workshop
$35.- per person includes light lunch
(pre-registration required)
1pm.- 4pm (same as Saturday)
Info and registration: contact Joe at homeikandojo@aol.com or
Phone- 215 901 9115
(Photos of last years workshop available on request.)
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P. Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art
Princeton University
2007–2008 Events
Tang Center Lecture Series:
Body Talk in Two Chinese Films by Director Jiang Wen
Jerome Silbergeld, Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University
Body Visible
Tuesday, 9 October 2007
4:30 pm, 101 McCormick Hall
Naming the Beast
Thursday, 11 October 2007
4:30 pm, 101 McCormick Hall
For more information, please visit our web site at http://tang.princeton.edu/lectureseries.html
Registration
There is no registration fee, but advance registration for the symposium is required. Information about registering online or by telephone can be found at http://tang.princeton.edu/lectureseriesreg.html
Lecture
Thursday, 18 October 2007
Cary Y. Liu, Princeton University Art Museum
Between the Titans: Constructions of Modernity and Tradition at the Dawn of Chinese Architectural History
4:30 pm, 106 McCormick Hall
Lecture
Thursday, 6 December 2007
Craig Clunas, Oxford University
Patterns Cut in Stone: The Kingly Replication of Culture in Ming China
4:30 pm, 106 McCormick Hall
Co-sponsored by the Tang Center for East Asian Art and the Department of Art and Archaeology
Graduate Student Symposium in East Asian Art
The Art of Opposition
Saturday, 16 February 2008
9:00 am to 5:00 pm, 101 McCormick Hall
Keynote Speaker: Richard Kraus, University of Oregon
For more information, please visit our web site at http://tang.princeton.edu/AO.pdf
Lecture
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
Joseph Earle, Japan Society
From Form to Picture: Japanese Sword Fittings in an Age of Peace
4:30 pm, 106 McCormick Hall
Conference
Art History, Buddhist Studies, Tibet: New Perspectives from the Tibet Site Seminar
Friday to Sunday, 7–9 March 2008
101 McCormick
Co-sponsored by the Center for the Study of Religion and the Tang Center for East Asian Art at Princeton University. Support also provided by the Henry Luce Foundation, which sponsored the Tibet Site Seminar in 2007.
For more information, please visit the Tibet Site web site at http://www.princeton.edu/TibetSem/program-conference.htm
Lecture
Thursday, 10 April 2008
Annette Juliano, Rutgers University
Intersections: Defining the Cultural Dynamic of North China in the Sixth Century
4:30 pm, 106 McCormick Hall
Please visit our web site at http://tang.princeton.edu/index.html
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JAPAN GROUP II is a group interested in Japanese arts and culture. We do several events each year. If you are interested in joining or joining any of the events please contact Shirley Luber at luber@lubergallery.com
The events for this season are:
Sunday, October 7 Zen Garden and St Peters Village
We will visit a 56 acre zen garden in Chester County..explore St Peters village have lunch there and then visit bonsai collection. e will go by bus $60. members $65 non-members.
Sunday, Nov 11 The Sackler Gallery in Washington, DC Traveling by bus Members $45. non members $50
Paintings and ceramics from the Price Collection
Sunday December 9 . Dinner at the Fuji Restaurant in Haddonfield Members $35. Non members $40
A very special dinner planned just for us. Limited space.
(III) Employment and Internship Opportunities
Student Career & Internship Opportunities in Japan
Monday, October 8th (3:30-4:30pm)
Williams Hall 29
Are you interested in an internship and/or a job in Japan? Join us at the Panel
where we learn from our fellow students who had these experiences. The talk
will include the topics such as job hunting, work, use of Japanese language
atwork, cross-cultural issues, challenges, and achievements. You can ask more
questions in the following Q &A sessions. All the panelists studied Japanese
here at Penn.
The panel is conducted in English. Anyone interested is welcome!
Panelists:
Alicia Dai (Class of 2008, Wharton School)
-Internship at Ford Japan Limited, Summer 2006
-Majors: Finance, OPIM Minor: East Asian Studies
-Japanese class taken at the time of application: JPAN 212 (Intermediate
Japanese II)
Sam Malissa (Class of 2004, College)
-Full-time job at JET Program in Nara Prefecture, 2004-2006
-Major: American History Minor: Japanese studies
-Japanese class taken at the time of application: JPAN 112 (Beginning Japanese
IV)
Sam is currently working at the Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia.
Darren Wang (Class of 2008, SEAS)
-Internship at Nikko Citigroup Limited, Summer 2007
-Major: Electrical Engineering
-Japanese class taken at the time of application: JPAN 382 (Japanese for
Professions II)
Panel Chair:
Tomoko Takami (Lecturer in Foreign Languages, Japanese Language Program )
This event is sponsored by the Center for East Asian Studies and the Japanese
Language Program.
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*WORLD LANGUAGE INTERN OF WORLD LANGUAGES FOR INTERNATIONAL BACCALAUREATE PRIMARY AND MIDDLE YEARS PROGRAM SCHOOLS
Chinese / Italian / Spanish
SUMMARY OF RESPONSIBLITIES
This is instructional work in planning and teaching communication in World Languages to students in grades K-8. World Language Interns will provide students with instruction in World Languages and associated cultures using a variety of published and self-developed materials to present subject matter. Work involves the use of audio-lingual techniques as well as discussions and demonstrations to reinforce oral communication skills. Significant to the informed instruction is the focus on the School District 's World Languages general education standards and the ongoing use of the formal and informal classroom and School District World Languages skills assessments.
ELIGIBILITY
Teachers do not need certification. However, they do need to be citizens of the United States or permanent residents.
ESSENTIAL RESPONSIBILITIES
" Provides instruction in World Languages emphasizing communication in meaningful social situations
" Uses a variety of published and self-developed materials to provide instruction in World Languages and associated cultures
" Uses the techniques of discussion and demonstration as well as audio-visual aids to reinforce the use of World Languages by students
" Uses audio-lingual techniques to reinforce students' oral World Language communication skills
" Provides instruction that encourages students to use World Languages as tools for inquiry-based learning
REQUIRED KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES
" Knowledge of the principles, practices and methods of elementary, and/or middle grade and/or secondary education
" Knowledge of one of the above specified World Languages including history and culture
" Knowledge of the contents, materials and methodologies and practices utilized within World Language education at the elementary school, middle grade levels preferred
" Knowledge of authentic performance assessment principles
" Ability to fluently speak, read and write one of the above specified World Languages
" Ability to select and organize curriculum content and apply appropriate instructional methods
" Ability to plan and prepare lessons
" Ability to use and apply audio-lingual methods and materials to classroom situations
" Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing
" Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationship with faculty, administrators, supportive staff, parents, and students
REPORTING RELATIONSHIPS
" The World Language Intern is expected to report to the classroom teacher as well as to the principal. The specifics of the reporting relationship are to be determined at the school level.
" Criminal, child abuse, FBI clearances are required. Three clearance checks will cost $60.
ATTENDANCE, PUNCTUALITY AND COMPENSATION
" The World Language Intern is expected to work according to the determined/ agreed upon schedule with the school principal.
" The International Baccalaureate Middle and Primary Program Schools rely on the World Language Intern to deliver the World Language services required by the International Baccalaureate Organization.
" World Language Intern will be compensated at the hourly rate of $20.00 ( School District of Philadelphia ) 's rate
CONTACT
If you are interested in, and qualified for, this exciting opportunity, please email to
Teresa Pica at teresap@gse.upenn.edu or Cheri Micheau at cheri@gse.upenn.edu
(IV) Fellowship and Award Opportunities
(V) East Asia Study Opportunities and Queries
*Foreign Language Program
Expand Your Foreign Language Skills at our small, relaxed classes that are designed to help
students develop basic speaking and listening skills for real-life situations.
Starting October 8
Mandarin, Part 1, Monday or Wednesday 7pm – 9pm
Mandarin, Part 6, Tuesday 7:15pm – 9:15pm
Korean, Part 1, Thursday 7pm – 9pm
Korean, Part 3, Wednesday 4:30pm – 6:30pm
$100 for 10 weeks; Textbooks not included.
Each part is equivalent to around 15 hours of classroom instruction.
Contact languages@ihphilly.org for more information.
(VI) Conferences and Workshops
Center for East Asian Studies
University of Pennsylvania
642 Williams Hall
255 S. 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305
Tel: 215-573-4203; Fax: 215-573-2561
E-mail: ceas@ccat.sas.upenn.edu |
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