Asian Americans in New York Seminar for K-12 School Teachers

Item

Title

Asian Americans in New York Seminar for K-12 School Teachers

Description

In July of 2015, Asian American Studies Program (AASP) director Jennifer Hayashida and Chi-hui Yang ran a $104,000 National Endowment for the Humanities-funded summer seminar at Hunter College for K-12 school teachers titled "Asian Americans in New York City: Literature and Film." The goal of the seminar was to provide educators with an intellectual framework for understanding issues of identity, place, and migration through canonical and contemporary Asian American cultural production. The seminar website also serves as an online resource for educators and includes teaching resources as well as the seminar's readings.

The Hunter College Asian American Studies Program (AASP) was established in 1993. As the only academic program in Asian American studies in the CUNY system, the AASP offers a minor in Asian American Studies and other resources and programming. The AASP supports scholars, artists, and activists advancing scholarship in the fields of Asian American studies and critical ethnic studies and serves as a resource for New York City's Asian American communities. In 2006, the program was at risk of being cut due to a lack of funding. Students formed the Coalition for the Revitalization of Asian American Studies at Hunter (CRAASH) and saved the program within a year. CRAASH is now a student-run club that continues to advocate for the AASP.

Contributor

Hunter College Asian American Studies Program

Date

July 17, 2015 - July 5, 2015

Language

English

Rights

Public Domain

uri

https://asianamericanyc.hunter.cuny.edu/

“Asian Americans in New York Seminar for K-12 School Teachers”. https://asianamericanyc.hunter.cuny.edu/, CUNY DIGITAL HISTORY ARCHIVE, accessed March 10, 2026, https://stephenz.tailc22a4b.ts.net/s/cdha/item/1573