Hu Culture Curriculum Design

19
Culture-focused Curriculum Design and Implementation Wanli Hu, Ph.D. The University of Massachusetts Confucius Institute May 1, 2009

description

 

Transcript of Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Page 1: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Culture-focused Curriculum Design and Implementation

Wanli Hu, Ph.D.

The University of Massachusetts Confucius Institute

May 1, 2009

Page 2: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Contents

1. Different Focus for Different Audience

2. Course Format

3. Case Studies

Page 3: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

I. Different Focus for Different Audience• K-5

– Ancient China– Chinese Geography– Chinese Philosophy/Great Teaching– The Silk Road– Chinese Inventions and Discoveries

• 6-12 – Modern China – Sino-U.S. Relations– Contemporary China

• K-12– Highlights of Chinese Civilization

• Subject teachers – Chinese Music– Chinese Arts – Chinese Literature

Page 4: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

2. Course Model

• In the morning: a scholar provides a lecture on related academic topic

• In the afternoon: lead teachers offer workshops to transform academic knowledge into classroom skills

• In above approach, we combine both lectures with hands-on workshops

• Participant is required to write a curriculum based on his/her teaching

Page 5: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

3. Case StudiesHighlights of Chinese Civilization

• Day 1Exploring Chinese Civilization through Geography

• Day 2Chinese Philosophies/Great Teachings

• Day 3 China’s Invention & Discoveries & their Contributions

to the World • Day 4

Understanding Chinese History from 1840-1949• Day 5

China’s Rise and Its Impact on the World • Follow up day

Curriculum Sharing

Page 6: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Day I. Using Geography to Explore the Roots of Chinese Civilization

• Focus: Exploring China’s geographic characteristics and examining how

these features affected the emergence and development of Chinese civilization.

• Key question: How is Chinese civilization affected by China’s geographic

conditions?• Comparison:

Chinese civilization vs. American civilization from a geographic perspective

• Lecture & discussion: Heaven, Earth, Humanity: interaction between physical

environments and human landscapes

Page 7: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Workshops

• Making Big Maps of China – Topographic Map– China’s Climate– Agriculture Map – China’s Population Today

• A Comparison between China and the U.S.

– Size– Arable land– Oceans– Neighbors – Population

Page 8: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

http://www.asian.gu.edu.au/chinadem.htmlThe Three Zones of China’s Topography

Page 9: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

中国的降水分布

Page 10: Hu Culture Curriculum Design
Page 11: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Population of Chinahttp://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps

Page 12: Hu Culture Curriculum Design
Page 13: Hu Culture Curriculum Design
Page 14: Hu Culture Curriculum Design
Page 15: Hu Culture Curriculum Design
Page 16: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

China & the United States

ht t p : / / a f e . e a s i a . c o l u mb i a . e d u / c hi n a / g e o g / M_ USCH1 . ht m

Page 17: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Comparison

•Size•Arable land•Oceans •Neighbors •Populations•Any related topic

Page 18: Hu Culture Curriculum Design

Group discussion based on the following “Thought Questions”

• How many zones does China have? What are the major characteristics of these zones? 中国的地貌有几个部分组成?每个部分的主要特点是什么?

• Why is the Yellow River called “yellow”?为什么黄河被称为“黄色”的河流?

• Why was China‘s early civilization relatively isolated from other early civilizations? 为什么在很远的时候,中国同其他的文明相对隔绝?

• Why did Chinese name their land “Middle Kingdom (中国 )”? 为什么中国人将自己的国家称为“中央帝国(中国)”

• How do geography, climate and agriculture each determine the distribution of the Chinese population?中国的地貌,气候和农业是怎样对其人口的分布产生影响的?

• Why did China adopt a One-Child Policy? Do you think the policy is necessary to maintain the balance between natural resources and population?

• 为什么中国要采取独身子女政策?你认为这是为了保持自然资源与人口平衡的必要手段吗?

Page 19: Hu Culture Curriculum Design