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Mia Kimura
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A class photo is like an optical illusion. From behind the orderly, pixelated representation of this group of students, I can’t help but see the depths and nuances of their minds, courageously shared over the last six months spent in class together. As this year’s course draws to a close, I’d like to share a little about the course and this year’s students, focusing on a few unexpected qualities they demonstrated. I’d especially like to share some of their voices directly.

Stanford e-Hiroshima is a course which introduces aspects of U.S. culture and society to high school students in Hiroshima Prefecture, designed by SPICE, in collaboration with the Hiroshima Prefectural Board of Education in Hiroshima, Japan. Conducted in English over six months, the course is comprised of seven, online “virtual classroom” sessions, followed by an extensive final research project. By examining the United States through the four broad lenses of diversity, entrepreneurship, peace education, and environmental issues, as well as from two specific perspectives of Japanese history in the United States, and the Hiroshima–Honolulu sister city relationship, students are invited to draw comparisons between various facets of the United States and Japan. The ultimate mission of Stanford e-Hiroshima is to provide students with the ability to glean from fresh perspectives insights and learnings relevant to their own goals and visions for the future.

Now in its fourth year, Stanford e-Hiroshima 2023–24 commenced in September 2023 and will conclude at the end of this month, February 2024. The 29 students enrolled are first- and second-year students from 17 different high schools in Hiroshima Prefecture. They are all Japanese nationals, and several have had prior international exposure through participation in programs such as Global Miraijuku and Empowerment Program, or through homestays in Australia, Canada, and the United States. At the onset of the course, however, the majority of students expressed their concern about their ability to communicate in English.

To participate in Stanford e-Hiroshima, applicants are required to write two essays, one describing their personal goals, and another analyzing a current social challenge and describing their vision for a more ideal society. Student candidates are selected from among the applicants by the Hiroshima Prefectural Board of Education based on two criteria: clarity of purpose for joining the course, and desire to solve a social problem. Following the course Opening Ceremony, held on September 2, 2023, Mineko Kobayashi, Teacher Consultant with the Hiroshima Prefectural Board of Education, described this year’s students as impressively motivated, based on their active participation during the ceremony.

My wish for these students going forward is the same as my expectations of them in class: independent thought and 100 percent participation. I’d like for every student to find and speak their own truth, and to experience the joy of their truth being heard.

As instructor of Stanford e-Hiroshima 2023–24, I’ve had the privilege of observing and interacting with this group for nearly half a year, both in our virtual classroom and through weekly assignments and discussion boards. In an introduction to the course, I asked the students to focus on practicing skills and learning together, and highlighted my commitment to creating a space where differences such as in English language ability are respected. While I believe that there will be a place in education for translation services and generative AI tools, there is a policy against using them in this course, and there has been nothing more gratifying to me than seeing a student articulate their thoughts in front of the class, or reading a student’s unique stance written unabashedly in non-native English. These students’ strength of belief and determination to communicate just radiates off the screen and page.

In these students, I’ve observed several qualities such as being well-mannered, respectful, and hard-working. The students are exceedingly respectful of me as instructor, of our guest lecturers, and of each other. They are also respectful of schedules and deadlines. Students may not have been able to attend class due to other commitments, but no student ever showed up late to class. School work, part-time jobs, club activities, leadership roles, extensive interests and hobbies fill the plates of these students to the brim, and yet they consistently show up with their assignments complete, and full of enthusiasm to engage. These are wonderful qualities not to be taken for granted, however, there is a certain precedence for them based on my many years of interactions with Japanese students.

I’ve also observed three qualities which came as a surprise:

  1. Directness of expression. A high tolerance for ambiguity and tendency to minimize disruption is encoded in the Japanese language through, for example, its nuanced use of the passive voice, or sophisticated double negatives. Perhaps by virtue of their using English, this year’s Stanford e-Hiroshima students have surprised me by their directness. Their enthusiasm is unveiled in the use of simple, direct expressions such as “I believe,” “I think,” and “I don’t agree.” These expressions are substantiated by the use of specific, concrete, well-researched, and well-cited examples.

  2. Hunger for diversity. During the third virtual classroom we welcomed Dr. Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu to speak on the topic of “Diversity in the United States and in Japan.” The students were quick to identify differences in the way differences themselves are perceived in the two countries. They were also quick to embrace diversity. One student expressed her desire to “make friends that have similar opinions AND friends with opposite opinions.” Another student articulated the need to “see things from multiple perspectives to solve something.” Another asserted, “expressing an opinion and imposing an opinion are two completely different things. One may develop the world while the other may cause strife.” These are the voices of young adults hungry for differences.

  3. Connectedness to past and future. During our sixth virtual classroom we welcomed Maya Mizuno, Program Coordinator at The University of Peace (UPEACE) to speak about Peace Education. As students in Hiroshima Prefecture, one of two regions which have experienced devastation as a result of deployment of nuclear weapons, the topic of peace education is not only extremely saliant but also promotes a world view in which connecting past and future is literally vital. Naivete is palatably absent from this group. “I think it is dangerous to assume that all the history we have learned in our school classes is correct or factual” wrote one student. Their interests reveal a mature understanding that they are not responsible for the past however their carrying forward an understanding of the past, and creation of a future is crucial. This student’s expression gave me goosebumps: “By feeling it through your skin, you can learn how your thoughts and the results you get from taking on challenges are connected.”


I asked guest lecturer Maya Mizuno about her experience with these students, and she shared this description:

In my session, we discuss what peace means and how we can develop society through education. The topic is quite complex. However, the students are very sharp, talented, and passionate, so they demonstrate a high level of engagement in the session activities. I always get inspired by what they contribute to the dialog among us. 

Like Hiroshima Nagasaki Peace Messengers say, “Our efforts are humble, but not powerless.” As long as we keep moving forward, even if it’s a small action, the change will come. I hope that the students carry their experience at e-Hiroshima to become global changemakers in the future.

Like Maya, I’m grateful to the students of Stanford e-Hiroshima 2023–24 for their candor and engagement over these six months. The qualities they’ve demonstrated are bellwethers of hope for our collective futures. My wish for these students going forward is the same as my expectations of them in class: independent thought and 100 percent participation. I’d like for every student to find and speak their own truth, and to experience the joy of their truth being heard. Very much in this spirit, one student reflects on her experience: “I was surprised by American education in Stanford e-Hiroshima; we students could think freely and share our own ideas with friends, and that was so fun!!!” 


SPICE is grateful to Superintendent Rie Hirakawa and Teacher Consultants Mineko Kobayashi and Noriyo Hayashi of the Hiroshima Prefectural Board of Education for their ongoing support of Stanford e-Hiroshima and its students, and to Maya Mizuno for her lecture and contribution to this article.

Stanford e-Hiroshima is one of several online courses offered by SPICE.

To stay updated on SPICE news, join our email list and follow us on Facebook, X, and Instagram.

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Instructor Mia Kimura reflects on students of this year’s Stanford e-Hiroshima course.

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The Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE), in collaboration with the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA), is excited to announce that applications for the 2024 Virtual SPICE/NCTA East Asia Summer Institute for Middle School Teachers are now open.

The application is available at https://bit.ly/3vDYgFn. The deadline to apply is March 1, 2024.

Taking place from June 24 to June 27, 2024, the institute aims to promote the integration of Asian studies into middle school social studies and language arts curricula. Participating teachers will explore the geography, cultures, religions, history, literature, and arts of East Asia, with a particular emphasis on ancient Chinese dynasties, feudal Japan, and the Silk Road. 

Four immersive sessions will be conducted synchronously via Zoom, taking place each morning from 9:30am to 12:30pm. Sessions will feature guest speakers, curriculum demos, and opportunities for teachers to engage in discussions centered on content and pedagogical approaches to teaching about Asia.  

Participants will receive comprehensive instructional materials developed by SPICE covering topics related to China, Japan, Korea, and the Asian American experience, all tailored for effective classroom use. Additionally, educators who fulfill attendance requirements by joining all four Zoom sessions, completing designated readings, and actively participating in group discussions will receive a $200 professional stipend and will qualify to earn three quarter credits (3 units) from Stanford Continuing Studies.

The institute is open to all grade 5–8 teachers in California and is designed to be most relevant for social studies and language arts classrooms.

We hope you will join us this summer and take part in a community of educators committed to a long-term engagement in the exploration of East Asian studies.

For more information about the SPICE/NCTA East Asia Summer Institute for Middle School Teachers, visit the program webpage. To apply, submit the online application by March 1, 2024.

To be notified of other professional development opportunities, join SPICE’s email list and follow SPICE on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.


In addition to this program, SPICE offers a variety of teacher PD opportunities virtually and in-person for middle school teachers, high school teachers, and community college instructors. For more information on those programs, please visit the webpages below.

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The free virtual institute will run June 24–27 and is open to all grade 5–8 teachers in California. Participants can earn a professional stipend and three units from Stanford Continuing Studies.

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Applications opened last week for Stanford e-Entrepreneurship Japan (SeEJ), an all-English online course to foster Japanese students’ creative thinking and innovative problem-solving skills to address social issues. SeEJ is offered twice annually in the fall and spring by SPICE and the non-profit organization e-Entrepreneurship in Japan. The instructors are Irene Bryant (fall) and Makiko Hirata (spring). It is open to Japanese students in their first and second years of high school. The spring 2024 course will run from early April through August.

The application form is now live at https://forms.gle/Dnj57MD88NrzR37h7. The deadline to apply is March 15, 2024 23:59 Japan Time.

Not only did I learn how to start a company, or how entrepreneurship might benefit our lives, I was also able to learn the passion and joy of being useful (or rather 役に立つ).
Doria Lee, spring 2023 participant

SeEJ offers students an opportunity to engage with impactful entrepreneurs from California and beyond through its virtual classes offered twice a month on Sundays. The course will culminate in two research projects, one done individually, and the other as a group. The group project will be presented in front of several guest judges who will evaluate each group’s social innovation to address current issues. Students who successfully complete the course will receive a Certificate of Completion from SPICE and NPO e-Entrepreneurship.

Applicants need to be available and committed to attending virtual classes on the following Sunday mornings: April 21 (9:30 a.m.–12 p.m.), May 5 (10 a.m.–12 p.m.), May 26 (10 a.m.–12 p.m.), June 9 (10 a.m.–12 p.m.), June 30 (9:30 a.m.–12 p.m.), July 28 (9:30 a.m.–12 p.m.), August 11 (10 a.m.–12 p.m.). These dates and times are all in Japan Standard Time.

The impact of this course goes beyond words, and I am truly grateful for this invaluable experience.
Fumika Yamaguchi, spring 2023 participant

For more information about Stanford e-Entrepreneurship Japan, visit the program webpage. To apply, submit the online application by March 15.

Stanford e-Entrepreneurship Japan is one of several online courses offered by SPICE.

To stay updated on SPICE news, join our email list and follow us on FacebookX, and Instagram.

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Applications are now being accepted for the spring 2024 session. Interested high school students in Japan should apply by March 15, 2024.

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The following is a guest post written by Alexandra Arguello, who participated in “Introduction to Issues in International Security,” a high school course offered by SPICE and taught by Dr. Ignacio Ornelas Rodriguez.

I am Alexandra Arguello, a graduate of Everett Alvarez High School and a current undergraduate student at Harvard University pursuing a degree in International Relations. I was a participant in the “Introduction to Issues in International Security” course that was offered by SPICE and developed in consultation with scholars from the Center for International Security and Cooperation.

Salinas, California, often labeled as the #1 least educated city in the United States with a state-record dropout rate of 20 percent, posed a challenging educational environment. In this setting, the opportunity to learn, particularly about international issues, was scarce. Salinas primarily consists of first-generation, POC students, highlighting the imperative for us to stay informed about global matters and adapt our perspectives accordingly. This is why I am profoundly grateful that Dr. Ignacio Ornelas Rodriguez, a Salinas native himself, curated SPICE’s “Introduction to Issues in International Security” course specifically for communities like ours.

This 12-week college-level seminar, guided by scholars and experts in the field, enabled me to explore a spectrum of global issues—from terrorism and counterterrorism to international security, nuclear weapons, ethnic cleansing, and biosecurity. Delving into historical approaches to combating terrorism in the Middle East, North Korea’s nuclear proliferation, Russo-Ukrainian violence, and the Uyghur genocide added a profound layer to my understanding.

What intrigued me most during this journey was the perspective through which we examined solutions. These solutions were shaped by an introspective analysis of the systems and structures perpetuating inequality. This experience marked my first critical awareness of such issues, significantly expanding my insights into the world’s most pressing issues.

The conclusion of this program was unforgettable. We held a ceremony where I received recognition from the Monterey County Board of Supervisors, interacted with politicians, and formed bonds with community members. This was an experience I wouldn’t have had the opportunity to engage in if I had not participated in this program.

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Alexandra at Harvard


Upon completing the course in my senior year of high school, I began my educational journey at Harvard University. When I later obtained my admissions file, revealing what stood out to my admissions officers, SPICE’s “Introduction to Issues in International Security” course emerged as a significant factor. The admissions committee found it particularly unique that I received education at Stanford, especially given the limited educational resources in my community. (photo above courtesy Alexandra Arguello)

Now, approaching the end of my first year at Harvard, I reflect on the profound impact of the Stanford course. The course played a crucial role in shaping my academic path, leading me to pursue a special concentration in International Relations. Amid the eruption of the Israel-Palestine war, I have been able to rely on the information I learned in this program to guide conversations on campus toward political security. The insights gained during the seminar influenced my decision to delve into these critical global issues for the next four years.

Looking ahead, my aspiration is to build a career in international diplomacy and government, driven by the awareness of human rights issues intricately connected to international security. The period spent in this program remains a defining chapter in my life, and I am particularly grateful for the exposure it provided, shaping my intellectual pursuits and future aspirations.

To stay informed of SPICE news, join our email list and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

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Alexandra Arguello (far left, front row) and fellow students with Dr. Ignacio Ornelas Rodriguez.
Alexandra Arguello (far left, front row) and fellow students with Dr. Ignacio Ornelas Rodriguez; photo courtesy Ignacio Ornelas Rodriguez.
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SPICE alum Alexandra Arguello reflects on her educational journey from Salinas, California, to Harvard University and on discovering her passion for international relations.

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Applications opened this week for the Stanford/SPICE East Asia Seminars for Teachers in Hawai‘i (“Stanford SEAS Hawai‘i”), a free teacher professional development opportunity for Hawai‘i educators who wish to enhance their teaching of East Asia. Offered by the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE) with the generous support of the Freeman Foundation, Stanford SEAS Hawai‘i will select 25 teachers to participate in a fellowship from April to July 2024.

The application form is now live at https://forms.gle/DSW48Jegfr5UcmBT8. The deadline to apply is February 25, 2024.

High school teachers across the state are eligible to apply. Selected teachers will strengthen their content knowledge of East Asia by learning from experts in a series of private virtual seminars (April–June) and at a culminating three-day in-person teacher institute in Honolulu in July 2024. Throughout the program, participants will explore and examine various aspects of East Asia, U.S.–Asia relations, and the Asian diaspora in the United States, including Hawai‘i. To help support their teaching of East Asia in the classroom, participants will also receive extensive teaching resources and participate in discussions about content and pedagogy.

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Institute participants engage in a place-based walkabout activity.

“I can truly say that I took away a lot from this experience,” said former fellow Michael Hamilton, who teaches AP World History and AP U.S. Government and Politics at Leilehua High School. “The lectures were outstanding, especially the pre-reading material that I have already used in some classes. Also, the curriculum demonstration provided a model for me to use in my classroom. Small group discussions with my fellow educators, and sharing with them resources has added to my toolbox.”

Mililani High School teacher Amy Boehning agreed. “The lectures and materials on Japan, China, and Korea were incredible and so useful in filling in the gaps of my own knowledge. It just tied everything together with the connections presented. I walked away from the institute a stronger teacher, inspired to continue teaching about Asia in all of the subjects I teach.”

For more information about Stanford SEAS Hawai‘i, visit the program webpage. To apply, submit the online application by February 25.

To be notified of other professional development opportunities, join SPICE’s email list and follow SPICE on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
 



In addition to Stanford SEAS Hawai‘i, SPICE offers teacher PD opportunities virtually to teachers nationwide and locally in California to middle school teachers, high school teachers, and community college instructors. For more information on those programs, please visit the webpages below.
 

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Ken K. Ito, UH Professor Emeritus of East Asian Languages and Literatures, speaks at the 2023 Stanford SEAS Hawai'i Summer Institute.
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High school teachers across the state of Hawai‘i are encouraged to apply. Application deadline: February 25, 2024.

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During a visit to Okayama Prefecture in 2019, members of the Okayama Prefectural Board of Education kindly brought me to Korakuen Garden, one of Japan’s three most celebrated gardens that dates back to the 17th century. I was especially struck by a unique bridge called Yatsuhashi (“eight bridges”), that consists of eight planks used to cross a pond. The name “yatsuhashi” comes from the Heian period (794 to 1185) collection of poems and narratives, The Tales of Ise

 

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8-plank bridge in a Japanese garden

When I think of the academic and professional pathways taken by Mariko Yang-Yoshihara, who works as an instructor and an education researcher for SPICE, I think of Yatsuhashi, which  I crossed in Korakuen Garden. (Photo above: Yatsuhashi at Korakuen, Okayama; photo courtesy Gary Mukai.)

As a graduate of the all-girls Sacred Heart Schools in Tokyo, she was nurtured to think as a global citizen and remain committed to the promotion of women’s empowerment. Since obtaining a B.A. in Literature from the University of the Sacred Heart in Japan, she has stayed actively engaged in the alumni network. I think of her years at the Sacred Heart institutions in Tokyo as the first academic plank that she crossed, navigating herself into the wider world.

The second academic plank that she crossed was in the United States where she earned a B.A. in Political Science from the University of California, Irvine, and an M.A. and a PhD in Political Science from Stanford University. Her dissertation focused on the administration of Japan’s technology and science policy, and her PhD advisor was Professor Daniel Okimoto. Yang-Yoshihara’s encounter with the ecosystem and educational approaches in Silicon Valley has laid the foundation of her commitment to cultivating the future generation of innovative and empathetic thinkers. To put it differently, her focus on innovation and education form the materials that make up the many planks that she would traverse in the subsequent years.

In 2016, she co-founded with Professor Rie Kijima (PhD, Stanford, 2013) SKY Labo, a non-profit organization which provides educational programs that embrace design thinking as a pedagogical approach, aiming to foster empathy, promote humanistic perspectives, and inspire youths to become change makers. SKY Labo’s inquiry-based program, designed to challenge the STEM gender gap in Japan and shift the perceptions of young women toward technology and engineering, obtained official support from the Gender Equality Bureau of Japan’s Cabinet Office in 2019 and received the Semi-Grand Prix of Nissan Foundation’s Rikajyo Ikusei Sho (Award Promoting the Next Generation of Women in STEM) in August 2022. Yang-Yoshihara co-authored with Kijima a book on STEAM education and design thinking, 世界を変えるSTEAM人材―シリコンバレー「デザイン思考」の核心, which was published by Asahi Shinbun Press in 2019. The book is in its second printing and was translated into the Chinese language as 硅谷是如何培养创新人才的 by the Zhejiang People’s Publishing House (浙江人民出版社) in 2021. I see SKY Labo serving as the third plank of yatsuhashi that she is traversing.

Also in 2016, Yang-Yoshihara co-organized the Stanford-Silicon Valley U.S.-Japan Dialogue: Womenomics, the Workplace, and Women and published the final report. This conference and final report—which I see as her fourth plank—was with the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center or Shorenstein APARC, where she had once worked as a doctoral researcher, a recipient of the Barbara Hillman Research Fellowship, and a third term participant of the Asia Pacific Scholars Program. She continues to collaborate with many of the conference presenters and also Professor Kiyoteru Tsutsui, Japan Program Director, Shorenstein APARC.

Since joining SPICE in 2019, Yang-Yoshihara has utilized inquiry-based pedagogy to design, develop, and teach innovative online courses and seminars on subjects including social entrepreneurship, gender equity, and sustainability. Mariko designed and co-instructs the Stanford-Hiroshima Collaboration Project on Entrepreneurship (SHCPE), a graduate course for the Hiroshima Business Management School at the Prefectural University of Hiroshima. She has also developed a course on entrepreneurship and sustainability education in collaboration with Eikei University, Hiroshima Prefecture’s new liberal arts college. She also served as the inaugural instructor and now as an advisor to Stanford e-Eiri, a high school course that explores the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with a special focus on gender equity. The current Stanford e-Eiri instructor is Mia Kimura. I see Yang-Yoshihara’s teaching engagements at SPICE as the fifth plank of her yatsuhashi.

In addition to her role at SPICE, Yang-Yoshihara is a Visiting Professor at Tohoku University, serving as a faculty member of the School of Engineering and an academic advisor to graduate students in the Department of Management Science and Technology. She gives lectures to engage Japan’s future engineers and aspiring scientists to think at the crossroads of STEM and humanities, an approach she calls STEAM. This sixth plank illustrates how she tries to transmit her knowledge and experiences to inspire the next generation beyond the SPICE audiences. 

 

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Her research has been guided by a keen curiosity at the intersection between innovation and education. Her scholarly works can be found in volumes by academic publishers such as the MIT Press and the Tokyo University Press, as well as in peer-reviewed journals including the International Journal of STEM Education, Thinking Skills and Creativity, and Administrative Sciences. Most recently, she co-edited The Emerald Handbook of Research Management and Administration Around the World (2023, Emerald Publishing), collaborating with Dr. Simon Kerridge (University of Kent) and Dr. Susi Poli (University of Bologna). This book stands as the most comprehensive work to date on professionals in research management and administration (RMAs), providing insights and observations offered by 127 researchers and practitioners representing 50 countries across Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Australasia, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, and the Middle East. Evident in the unprecedented scale of the book is Yang-Yoshihara’s aspiration to contribute to the future generation of innovative change-makers. The ebook edition is Open Access and freely available to read online. This seventh plank that she is navigating, focusing on research, is quickly expanding with participation from people worldwide. (The book cover above was reproduced with permission from Emerald Publishing Limited.)

As for the eighth plank, I am very much looking forward to what lies ahead as she continues to drive ideas where education, innovation, and research intersect. 

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Dr. Mariko Yang-Yoshihara; photo courtesy Stanford University.
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University of the Sacred Heart in Japan and Stanford University alumna serves as a bridge to students and scholars in Japan and other parts of the world.

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Webinar recording: https://youtu.be/sp4EWuLct7E 

 

 

Following the end of World War II, more than 45,000 young Japanese women married American GIs and came to the United States to embark upon new lives among strangers. The mother of Kathryn Tolbert, a former long-time journalist with The Washington Post, was one of them.

 

Tolbert noted, “I knew there was a story in my mother’s journey from wartime Japan to an upstate New York poultry farm. In order to tell it, I teamed up with journalists Lucy Craft and Karen Kasmauski, whose mothers were also Japanese war brides, to make a short documentary film through a mother-daughter lens. Fall Seven Times, Get Up Eight: The Japanese War Brides was released in August 2015 and premiered on BBC World Television.”

 

Tolbert spent a year traveling the country to record interviews, funded by a Time Out grant from her alma mater, Vassar College. The Japanese War Brides Oral History Archive is the result of her interviews. The Oral History Archive documents an important chapter of U.S. immigration history that is largely unknown and usually left out of the broader Japanese American experience. In these oral histories, Japanese immigrant women reflect on their lives in postwar Japan, their journeys across the Pacific, and their experiences living in the United States.

 

Join Kathryn Tolbert as she describes bringing the legacy of these stories to life through the documentary film, oral history archive project, and upcoming Smithsonian traveling exhibit. Waka Takahashi Brown, SPICE curriculum writer, will also share an overview of the teacher’s guide that she developed to accompany the documentary film, which is available to download for free from the SPICE website.

 

To attend, register here.

 

This webinar is sponsored by the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE), the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA), and the USC U.S.-China Institute.

Featured Speakers:

 

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Kathryn Tolbert is a former editor and reporter on the Metro, National and Foreign desks, a correspondent in Tokyo and director of recruiting and hiring at The Washington Post. She has also worked for The Boston Globe and the Associated Press. In addition, she has written about Japanese women who married American servicemen after World War II and co-directed the film Fall Seven Times, Get Up Eight: The Japanese War Brides. Tolbert is a graduate of Vassar College with a BA in Political Science and an MA in International Relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

 

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Waka Takahashi Brown is an educator and writer. She manages and teaches Stanford e-Japan for SPICE and has authored curriculum on several international topics. She is the recipient of the Association for Asian Studies’ national Franklin Buchanan Prize, and has also been awarded the 2019 Elgin Heinz Outstanding Teacher award for her groundbreaking endeavors in teaching about U.S.–Japan relations to high school students in Japan and promoting cultural exchange awareness. In addition, Brown has authored three middle-grade novels: While I Was AwayDream, Annie, Dream; and The Very Unfortunate Wish of Melony Yoshimura. She is a Stanford graduate with a BA in International Relations and an MA in Secondary Education.

Online via Zoom.

Kathryn Tolbert

616 Jane Stanford Way
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Waka Brown is a Curriculum Specialist for the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE). She has also served as the Coordinator and Instructor of the Reischauer Scholars Program from 2003 to 2005. Prior to joining SPICE in 2000, she was a Japanese language teacher at Silver Creek High School in San Jose, CA, and a Coordinator for International Relations for the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program.

Waka’s academic interests lie in curriculum and instruction. She received a B.A. in International Relations from Stanford University as well as teaching credentials and M.Ed. through the Stanford Teacher Education Program. 

In addition to curricular publications for SPICE, Waka has also produced teacher guides for films such as A Whisper to a Roar, a film about democracy activists in Egypt, Malaysia, Ukraine, Venezuela and Zimbabwe, and Can’t Go Native?, a film that chronicles Professor Emeritus Keith Brown’s relationship with the community in Mizusawa, an area in Japan largely bypassed by world media. 

She has presented teacher seminars nationally for the National Council for the Social Studies in Seattle; the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia in both Denver and Los Angeles; the National Council for the Social Studies, Phoenix; Symposium on Asia in the Curriculum, Lexington; Japan Information Center, Embassy of Japan, Washington. D.C., and the Hawaii International Conference on the Humanities. She has also presented teacher seminars internationally for the East Asia Regional Council of Overseas Schools in Tokyo, Japan, and for the European Council of International Schools in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

In 2004 and 2008, Waka received the Franklin Buchanan Prize, which is awarded annually to honor an outstanding curriculum publication on Asia at any educational level, elementary through university. In 2019, Waka received the U.S.-Japan Foundation and EngageAsia’s national Elgin Heinz Outstanding Teacher Award, Humanities category.

Instructor and Manager, Stanford e-Japan
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Waka Takahashi Brown
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I vividly remember the announcement by CBS news anchor Walter Cronkite of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. on April 4, 1968 at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennesee. I was a middle school student in San Jose, California. On the following day, nothing was mentioned in my middle school classes about Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination. In fact, in my elementary and secondary school years, I had been exposed to very little about African Americans and their history.

Martin Luther King, Jr., who was born on January 15, 1929, would be turning 95 this year, and 41 years have passed since Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday was approved as a federal holiday in 1983. SPICE recommends the use of a 13-minute lecture—titled “Civil and Human Rights: The Martin Luther King, Jr. Legacy” by Dr. Clayborne Carson—for use at the high school and college levels. Dr. Carson is the Martin Luther King, Jr. Centennial Professor Emeritus at the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law, FSI, at Stanford University. In the video lecture, Professor Carson not only discusses Martin Luther King, Jr. as a civil rights leader but also examines his larger vision of seeing the African American struggle as a worldwide struggle for citizenship rights and human rights.

A free classroom-friendly discussion guide for this video is available for download at the webpage linked above. The organizing questions that are listed in the guide are:

  • What are civil and human rights?
  • What were the significant achievements of the Civil Rights Movement?
  • What is Martin Luther King, Jr.’s legacy in terms of civil and human rights?
  • How are Martin Luther King, Jr.’s vision, ideas, and leadership still relevant today?
  • How is the American Civil Rights Movement similar and different from other rights-related movements?

 

SPICE also recommends the resources on the following websites for use in classrooms.

  • The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute supports a broad range of educational activities illuminating Dr. King’s life and the movements he inspired. Dr. Carson is the founding director of the Institute.
  • The World House Project works to realize Martin Luther King, Jr.’s vision of the world as a large house in which “we must learn somehow to live with each other in peace.” Dr. Carson is the director of the Project.
  • The educational website “What Does It Mean to Be an American?” offers six lessons on immigration, civic engagement, leadership, civil liberties & equity, justice & reconciliation, and U.S.–Japan relations. The lessons encourage critical thinking through class activities and discussions.

 

To stay informed of SPICE news, join our email list and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

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Dr. Clayborne Carson, Martin Luther King, Jr. Centennial Professor, Emeritus.
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With start-up companies and cafes popping up throughout the city, it’s no wonder that Fukuoka is called the Silicon Valley of Japan. Meiji era schoolhouses and red-brick buildings that housed insurance companies a century ago are now being turned into start-up cafes for entrepreneurs and community cultural centers. In November 2023, the city even began offering foreign entrepreneurs a “startup visa” that allows them to stay in Japan for up to a year to help launch their businesses.

During my visit to Fukuoka in November 2023, I wasn’t surprised to learn that Fukuoka Governor Seitaro Hattori had just returned from Boston where he and his delegation—representing governmental, corporate, academic, and emerging sectors—met with Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey, hosted a pitch event for entrepreneurs, visited MIT, and promoted Fukuoka’s famous Yame green tea in New York City.

Governor Hattori (photo below) joined Stanford e-Fukuoka’s closing ceremony at the prefectural government office on a crisp November day, as U.S. and Japanese flags waved overhead. There, he addressed the 17 students who gathered from all corners of the prefecture and offered words of encouragement for their participation in the six-month course. He remarked, “Through your participation in Stanford e-Fukuoka, you have been able to experience things that can’t be learned or experienced in a regular classroom. As we confront challenging global issues and conflicts, I hope we can overcome them by holding onto what is important. Do not let the fear of making mistakes hold you back from your pursuits.”

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2022–23 Stanford e-Fukuoka honorees Rui Ogura (Chikushi Jogakuen Senior High School) and Ayumi Ryu (Kurume High School) shared their thoughts about the program and their recent visit to Stanford University in August 2023. Ogura stated, “I would like to express my sincere gratitude for giving me such a wonderful learning opportunity. Although the lecture content was extremely difficult for me, I was inspired by the high English language proficiency and proactive comments by my classmates. It made me want to work even harder.”

In her presentation at Stanford, Ogura suggested ways to rebuild a sustainable society in present-day Fukuoka based on the eco-friendly lifestyle of the Edo period. Ogura added, “Through the six-month-long Stanford e-Fukuoka program, I reaffirmed the importance of ‘staying curious.’ Kasumi-sensei encouraged me to keep asking questions. In addition to preparing for the lectures, I was asked to think about my research and presentation from many perspectives. As I prepared for my presentation, I received new questions every few days. Answering them made me reflect on my ideas from different angles.”

Ryu also shared her thoughts on the course. “There are many things that I gained through this course, but the two main ones are meeting diverse people and seeing things from multiple perspectives. By asking questions during lectures, sharing my own thoughts with guest speakers, and having discussions with other high school students, I not only learned about leadership but also learned about fellowship.”

At Stanford, Ryu presented on ways to create a sustainable food supply for residents of her hometown of Miyama City through the revitalization of akiya (abandoned buildings). Ryu added, “I learned how to think about social issues and how they are related to history. Through the class, I was able to think about solutions from new perspectives and used English in a practical way. I became more interested in social issues such as food systems and the preservation of historic buildings and enjoyed learning about the diverse backgrounds of each guest speaker. Stanford e-Fukuoka made me reconsider my vision for the future.”

This year, we welcomed guest speakers including Julie Wurfel, a Silicon Valley sustainable food entrepreneur; Erika Enomoto, an arts enthusiast and Product Manager at Microsoft; and Jan Johnson, the owner of Seattle’s Panama Hotel, a National Historic Landmark built in 1910 and steeped in Japanese American history. Students from Fukuoka also had a chance to exchange ideas with peers in the United States when they met Japanese language students from the Bronx High School of Science (my alma mater) online. Students from both countries enjoyed discussing a range of topics from anime and J-pop to differences in high school and college experiences in the United States and Japan. Many shared their mutual aspirations to study abroad in the future.

Stanford e-Fukuoka student Kokomi Wakizono (Fukuoka Futaba Senior High School) noted how it was not only students overseas but those nearby with whom she was able to connect. “Stanford e-Fukuoka was an amazing chance for me to learn how Fukuoka and Japan are connected to the United States. This program gave me an opportunity to meet different people, my age, with similar interests and ideas. It was also the first time that I connected with people in Kitakyushu and Kurume even though we live in the same prefecture. I was so surprised to see how we are so connected!” Izumi Matsumura (Nakamura Jogakuen High School) added, “This class made me realize that it’s not only important to learn about our own areas of interest. We need to think about how it might be related to something or someone else. I feel motivated to study various fields and find connections from a broader perspective. Just as Steve Jobs said, we need to ‘connect the dots.’”

A highlight in 2023 was when we were joined by renowned poet, educator, feminist, and human rights activist, Mitsuye Yamada, who was born in Fukuoka and emigrated to Seattle as a child. She shared stories of her youth, her family, and wartime incarceration in Minidoka. Stanford e-Fukuoka students flooded her with happy birthday wishes a few weeks before her 100th birthday. Yamada was delighted and shared her enthusiasm for lifelong learning and said, “We’re never too old to learn and share what we’ve learned.” With this thought in mind, I look forward to welcoming my students to the third year of Stanford e-Fukuoka in 2024.

 

Stanford e-Fukuoka was launched in Spring 2022 and is made possible through a partnership between Stanford University, the U.S. Consulate Fukuoka, and the Fukuoka Prefectural Government. I would like to extend my gratitude to the Honorable Seitaro Hattori (Governor, Fukuoka Prefecture), the Honorable Shankar D. Rao (Consul, U.S. Consulate Fukuoka), Chie Inuzuka (Director, Fukuoka American Center), and Kyoko Tomita (Teacher’s Consultant, Senior High Education Division, Fukuoka Prefectural Board of Education) for their collaboration and support in making Stanford e-Fukuoka possible. This course offers students throughout the prefecture with an opportunity to learn about U.S.–Japan relations, Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and entrepreneurship. Stanford e-Fukuoka is one of SPICE’s local student programs in Japan

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Since 2015, SPICE has offered an online course, the “SPICE/Stanford e-Course on Global Health” or Stanford e-Takatsuki to students mainly enrolled in Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School’s Global Advanced Course. Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School is located in Takatsuki City, Osaka Prefecture. 

Since its launch, the course has provided 378 students with a unique learning opportunity that includes both a broad overview of the importance of global health and a special focus on international work conducted by medical researchers and practitioners at Stanford University and beyond. The speakers from Stanford are listed below. 

  • Dr. Catherine Blish, Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford Medicine; Associate Dean for Basic and Translational Research, Stanford University School of Medicine

  • Dr. Fumiaki Ikeno, Program Director (U.S.) Japan Biodesign, Stanford Biodesign; Research Associate, Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine

  • Dr. S.V. Mahadevan, Professor of Emergency Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine; Director, Global Affairs and Strategy, Stanford University School of Medicine

  • Dr. Anurag Mairal, Adjunct Professor, Stanford Graduate School of Business; Faculty Fellow and Lead, Technology Innovation and Impact at Center for Innovation in Global Health; Director, Global Outreach Programs, Stanford Byers Center for Biodesign

  • Dr. Kazunari Sasaki, Clinical Associate Professor, Division of Abdominal Transplant, Department of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine

  • Dr. Samuel So, Lui Hac Minh Professor and Professor of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine; Founder and Director, Asian Liver Center, Stanford University School of Medicine

  • Dr. Paul Wise, Professor in Pediatrics – Neonatal and Developmental Medicine, Stanford University; Senior Fellow, Center for Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law and the Center for International Security and Cooperation, Freeman-Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University

  • Dr. Phillip C. Yang, Professor of Medicine (Cardiovascular Medicine), Stanford University School of Medicine


From September to March over the past nine years, the students have participated in “virtual classes” in English and have had the opportunity to engage the guest lecturers in question-and-answer sessions. The virtual classes have covered a variety of topics ranging from stem cell research to psychiatry. Course instructor Sabrina Ishimatsu commented:

In teaching this course, I feel so indebted to the guest lecturers who have not only shared their expertise with my students in an accessible way but also served as excellent role models. The primary aim of the course is to nurture future global leaders who have a profound awareness of the significance of global health. I am extremely honored to be part of a course that brings together leading medical professionals from Stanford and other institutions with curious and driven high school students who are interested in expanding their minds on global health topics. Many of our past speakers have said they were impressed with the students’ high level of questions.


Tsuyoshi Kudo, Takatsuki’s principal, reflected:

The education SPICE has given to Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School for the past nine years is so much that I can’t possibly put my thanks into words. I sincerely hope we’ll be able to continue this wonderful e-course. Many alumni of Stanford e-Takatsuki have gone on to pursue medical studies, and I believe that their academic studies continue to be shaped by many of the scholars whom they met in the course.

 

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Takatsuki students


On November 10, 2023, I had the opportunity to visit Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School for the first time since before the pandemic. I had the chance to meet with Principal Kudo, give a talk titled “What Does It Mean to Be a Global Citizen?” to former and current students of the SPICE/Stanford e-Course on Global Health, and meet with the faculty at the school. (Photo above courtesy of Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School; Principal Kudo appears on the far left, front row.) 

During my visit, I realized again what an exemplary school Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School is under the incredible vision and leadership of Principal Kudo. Under his leadership, Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School has obtained both “Super Science High School” (SSH) and “Super Global High School” (SGH) designations awarded by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). What an honor it has been for Sabrina Ishimatsu and me to collaborate with Principal Kudo and Takatsuki Jr. and Sr. High School for nine years. 

For more information about SPICE’s online courses for students, visit our Student Programs page. To stay informed of SPICE news, join our email list and follow us on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram.

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SPICE is currently offering the ninth year of the SPICE/Stanford e-Course on Global Health.

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