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Asian Pacific American Heritage Month
Introduction:
Asian Pacific American Heritage Month (APAHM) is celebrated in May to commemorate the contributions of people of Asian and Pacific Islander descent in the United States. Congress passed a joint Congressional Resolution in 1978 to commemorate Asian American Heritage Week during the first week of May. This date was chosen because two important anniversaries occurred during this time: the arrival of the first Japanese immigrants in America on May 7, 1843 and the completion of the transcontinental railroad (by many Chinese laborers) on May 10, 1869. Congress later voted to expand it from a week long to a month long celebration. - Wikipedia
Lessons Plans:
Cultural Heritage and Diversity:
World Geography and Culture:
E-Pals:
Asian/Pacific Countries (General):
Japan:
China:
This Chinese New Year lesson encourages appreciation of Chinese culture through celebration
Chinese New Year is celebrated here with music and paper lanterns
This is a Great Wall of China research lesson
In this lesson, students experience Tiananmen Square
This art lesson explores sophisticated finger painting and the ancient Chinese artist philosophy of Chih-hua
In this inspirational story, a teacher wrote a letter to prevent the deportation of a ESL student from China and reaped great rewards
In this technology lesson, ESL learners create a video in English about Chinese culture
Chinese students learn how to ask directions at Disney World in this ESL lesson
This is a great card game for teaching months in a foreign language or any vocabulary words (was used with Chinese ESL students)
"The Cheap Crazy Doctor" is an acting dialog written for Chinese ESL/EFL students to practice and act out
This EFL lesson on soft and hard vowels employs the yin/yang symbol (sent to us from China)
"Grandfather Tang's Story" by Ann Tompert is used in this tangram (ancient Chinese puzzle) math lesson
A Chinese folk tale about fox fairies is used in this intriguing tangram lesson
This geometry lesson uses homemade tangram puzzles
This 3-day lesson is devoted to creating, exploring, and manipulating tangrams
This is a shared reading Chinese tall tale about the Emperor and the kite
This multidisciplinary kite building lesson is a great way to apply geometry and computer skills
Read this lesson and then "Go Fly a Kite"
Here students "Go Fly A Kite," and learn about drag, thrust, lift, and gravity
Here's a brief idea for making "Firework Art" on construction paper
Create artful fireworks here with a little paint, glitter, and a plastic hammer
This art lesson involves making a simulated fireworks display (for 4th of July)
Pakistan:
Saudia Arabia:
New Zealand:
India:
Tibet:
Vietnam:
Cambodia:
Other/Multiple topics:
Videos:
The Library of Congress also presents an Asian Pacific American Heritage Month audio/video page filled with webcast lectures and performances
"Sing Sakura" is an hour-long video collection of Japanese-themed performances from the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage
"Asians Rock - What's Your Story?" is the YouTube question posed by the Asia Society and responded to here by over 100 proud Asian Americans
Additional compelling Asia Society YouTube videos can be found here
These are video interviews of children's authors Laurence Yep and Janet Wong
Asian Pacific Americans veterans from World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq are interviewed here for the Veterans History Project
This a series of video interviews of past and present Asian Pacific American congressional leaders
Arar Han, co-editor of "Asian American X: An Intersection of 21st Century Asian American Voices," discusses her struggle to reconcile her ethnic identity with Asian American media stereotypes in this Boston College video (59 minutes)
KQED promotes educational videos with flash activities, lesson plans and educator's guides on Asian American communities, Japanese internment, Cambodian refugees, a Sikh family, the Angel Island immigration station, South Asian diversity and local heroes
The Korean Society offers 8 podcasts plus over 100 downloadable Korean Studies lesson plans for K-12
This Center for Asian America Media site includes 25+ video clips to illustrate the World War II internment experience of Japanese Americans and other exceptional projects
Asia for Educators
developed several well-supported multimedia video units on the Chinese topics of Confucianism and Tang Dynasty poetry; and on subjects that fit into Japan's classical, medieval, Tokugawa and modern eras
"The Power of Place: Geography for the 21st Century" is a series of 26 free video-on-demand programs for high school classrooms, eight of which are on Asian topics
HowStuffWorks.com lists video geography units on Southern Asia, especially India, Singapore, and the Pacific Islands .
TVE Asia Pacific offers a nearly free collection of issue oriented video film resources here for "learners, teachers, and trainers"
Here is a searchable database of Asian related audio-visual resources, as well as teaching units, a catalog of K-12 resources and links to related websites provided by the Asian Educational Media Service (University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign)
Berkeley's Asian, Pacific, and South Asian American Video Media Resources Center hosts a large collection of videos and videographies, some of which you can view online
Access classroom guides with related discussion questions, timelines, and links for the PBS television "documemoir" series "Ancestor's in the Americas" by Loni Ding here (Check local listings for other APAHM PBS programming throughout May)
Additional Resources:
HotChalk.com - Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Resource Guide kicks off Asian Pacific American Heritage Month with videos from National Geographic and Globe Trekker.
Scholastic.com - Dream In Color
lesson plans and student activities "empower your students to learn more about Asian American heritage and celebrate heroes from a variety of Asian ethnic backgrounds."
Asia for Kids thoroughly and concisely answers the following questions:
Who are Asian Pacific Americans? How did Asian Pacific American Heritage Month come about? What is the history of each Asian Pacific American cultural group? What books and videos do you recommend for schools?
AskAsia.org presents great K-12 lesson plans for teachers as well as special activity pages for students and kids . This Asia Society site also features a great guide for starting a Chinese language program in your school.
The Kansas University Consortium for Teaching About Asia K-12 Lesson Plan Collection is excellent, extensive, and easily accessible by grade, standard, and country. They also provide online professional development courses for K-12 educators wishing to incorporate East Asian topics into their classroom teaching.
Asia for Educators - A Columbia University Initiative offers multimedia teaching units, core curriculum faculty guides, timelines, Asian art museum resources, recommended websites, and an extensive teaching material database searchable by subject area, file type, country or time period.
Library of Congress - Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month and specifically The Learning Page connects your classroom to powerful primary sources and related ready-to-use lesson plans, audio and video webcasts, online teacher resources, special presentations and an excellent K-12 bibliography.
The Smithsonian Asian American Teaching Resources Library also pairs its primary history, culture, world music and art sources with lesson plans and multi-media curriculum guides on interesting Asian Pacific American topics.
The Kennedy Center's ArtsEdge: Destination Japan site uses its collection of images, audio and text to create multi-media lessons exploring Japanese arts and culture.
Infoplease.com - Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Page brims with useful information including interactive quizzes on Asian-American History , Asian-American Leaders , Asian-American Entertainers, and an Asian Influences Crossword .
EDSITEment - APAHM May Feature Page highlights original lesson plans, activity "trips" to Asia for K-5 and 6-12 , and reviewed Internet resource links, like Ask Me About Japan .
IMDiversity.com offers many Asian Pacific American Heritage and History Month features including Frances Kai-Hwa Wang's marvelous Asian Pacific American Heritage Month for Kids article and her (More) APAHM Sites to See list.
Kids Web Japan is another fun site for young students.
HistoryOnTheNet offers a short treatment of the WWII Japanese-American internment camps topic with work sheets, word searches and crossword puzzles for a younger audience.
Colorín Colorado bilingually celebrates the "rich diversity of Asian and Pacific Americans with books, activities, resources, and ideas for ELL educators."
PBS Teachers thematically looks at the Asian American/Pacific Islander community, offering many activity ideas across multiple disciplines with additional online and print resources.
Finally, here are the vital U.S. Census Bureau facts released for Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, May 2009.
If you have any additional Asian Pacific American Heritage Month lesson plans to share, especially about the unrepresented countries, please
add them to our site !
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