Teaching East Asia: Japan has been providing services to K-12 educators and schools since 1985 through grant-funded projects that sponsor summer institutes, study tours, one-day workshops, and classroom visits. Current grants funding Teaching East Asia: Japan activities are "Augmenting Japan Studies for K-12 Teachers" funded by The Japan Foundation, New York and the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia, funded by the Freeman Foundation.

Japan Image

Augmenting Japan Studies for K-12 Teachers: New Connections and Directions

With grant support from the Japan Foundation, New York, across the 2023-2024 academic year, the Program for Teaching East Asia (TEA) at the 澳门开奖结果2023开奖记录 (CU) will showcase Japan-related professional development and outreach programming for K-12 teachers in Colorado and across the United States in order to: 1) enhance TEA programming centered on Japan in world history and teaching Japan through children鈥檚 literature; 2) develop new directions of Japan-related programming in terms of the disciplines of poetry, natural sciences, and women鈥檚 studies; and 3) foster local to international connections among K-12 and higher education for exchange between K-12 teachers and Japan studies specialists and undergraduates and K-8 classroom students.

Japan Resource Center

Built with support from the Japanese Consulate, the US-Japan Foundation, the Freeman Foundation, and contributions from teachers and publishers, TEA鈥檚 Japan Resource Center offers teachers in the western United States an extensive collection of curriculum resources on Japan. Most materials are lent free of charge to teachers within commuting distance of the TEA offices; artifact trunks rent for a nominal fee. Please see our Japan Resource Center page for full details.

Japanese Woodblock Print Collection

TEA offers a collection of 30 late-Edo period (1800-1850s) woodblock prints for instructional use to educators at all levels. See sample prints and learn how to borrow the collection for use in your own classroom.