> Teaching about Japan in the Precollegiate Classroom July 7-12, 2002. This week-long seminar is designed to provide secondary school teachers with a background knowledge of Japan to enhance their teaching. While the focus is primarily on modern Japan, traditional values and ideas of Japan's past still color Japanese behavior and will be included. Japan specialists from around the United States will lead lecture/discussions on Japanese society, culture, economics, and politics. Some of the topics expected to be covered are popular beliefs, family and gender, literature, music, and the changing economic and political landscape. Because we will cover a wide range of topics in a short time, readings will be sent to participants prior to the workshop. Videos and films that complement and illustrate issues and topics discussed during presentations will be shown in the evenings. There will also be time to view other videos that could be used in the secondary school classroom . Several sessions will be devoted to curriculum. Published curriculum materials will be introduced and help will be provided so that participants can develop or expand their own personal curricular materials. Eligibility: Full-time teachers of history, geography, world cultures, world literature, and economics who currently teach or expect to teach about Japan during the coming academic year will be given preference. Applications will be reviewed and a maximum of 20 participants will be selected. Credit: This course may be taken for 1/2 unit of University of Illinois graduate credit. Participants will be responsible for their own tuition. State of Illinois teachers may elect to receive 30 CPDUs. Cost: The full cost of the workshop (workshop fee, room and board and materials) is underwritten by a grant from the Freeman Foundation. Participants will be required to pay a nonrefundable registration fee of $100 once they have been accepted into the workshop. Participants will be responsible for the cost of University of Illinois tuition if they choose to register for graduate credit. Housing: Participants will be provided housing in a private dormitory on the University of Illinois campus. Meals (Sunday dinner through Fridaylunch) will also be provided. Contact Info: Eric Beck Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies University of Illinois 230 International Studies Building1910 S. Fifth Street Champaign IL 61820 Phone: 217-244-0832 Fax: 217-244-5729 There are still a couple of places left in the workshop. The final deadline for appllications is June 1. My apologies for getting this out so late. However, if you contact Eric Beck today, he will fax you a short application, which you can fax back. I will be attending...Anyone care to join me? Evelyn Command ('i' to return to index):