Education Resources
The Asian American Writers’ Workshop (AAWW) is devoted to creating, publishing, developing and disseminating creative writing by Asian Americans, and to providing an alternative literary arts space at the intersection of migration, race, and social justice.
An initiative of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute at Columbia University, Asia for Educators (AFE) is designed to serve faculty and students in world history, culture, geography, art, and literature at the undergraduate and pre-college levels.
Circumambulating Objects: on Paradigms of Restitution of Southeast Asian Art (CO-OP) assembles individuals across the arts, culture and heritage fields to question entrenched systems of valuation, ownership, collecting and power as these are brought into relief through restitution processes today.
Published by Association for Asian Studies, Education About Asia is a guide to Asia-related print and digital resources, including movies, documentaries, literature reviews, classroom-tested educational programs, curriculum guides, current affairs articles, and other web resources.
GETSEA offers free and virtual mini-courses on topics in Southeast Asian studies, open to graduate students from a wide range of backgrounds. Current graduate students at a GETSEA member institution receive priority in admission to the courses, though graduate students at any institution who research in and around Southeast Asia may apply for admission to take a mini-course.
Published by the Association for Asian Studies, Key Issues in Asian Studies books are designed for use in undergraduate humanities and social science courses, as well as by advanced high school students and teachers, and will appeal to anyone with an interest in Asia.
The National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA), funded by the Freeman Foundation, is a multi-year initiative to encourage and facilitate teaching and learning about East Asia in elementary and secondary schools nationwide.
Hosted by the New York Southeast Asia Network Public University Consortium, panelists discuss how to publish Ph.D. dissertations into books as two editors with academic presses walk through best practices and tips, as well as insights from two dissertation-book authors.
SULO is a program at New York University dedicated to promoting and advancing the study of Philippine culture, history, and society through interdisciplinary research, academic courses, public lectures, and cultural events.