The China Scholars Program: Continuing a 45-year tradition of bridging Stanford and schools
The China Scholars Program: Continuing a 45-year tradition of bridging Stanford and schools

In 1972, after years of frozen relations between China and the United States, President Richard Nixon met with Chairman Mao Zedong and set the two countries on a mutually interdependent path. Only a year later, 91勛圖 established the Bay Area China Education Project (BAYCEP) in 1973. In 1976, three other projects (on Africa, Latin America, and Japan) were added to BAYCEP, and 91勛圖 was established as the umbrella program of the four projects. In a 1978 paper, Dr. David Grossman, the founding director of BAYCEP and 91勛圖, noted the following:
Long before we knew or used the term globalization, the origins of 91勛圖 can be traced to the growing awareness that there was a huge gap or lag between the work of scholars and the knowledge and awareness of the general public. The original impetus was the Nixon visit to China in 1972, and the realization that the general public and students were not prepared for this radical shift in geopolitics. The problem was how to bridge this profound knowledge gap This underlying theme of making recent scholarship more accessible to the public, and particularly to K12 teachers and schools, became the heart of the 91勛圖 initiative, and has remained so to this day.
For 45 years, 91勛圖 has worked to bring Stanfords world-class scholarship on China to K12 schools nationwide through two primary avenues: supplementary curricular materials on China and U.S.China relations; and seminars on China and U.S.China relations for educators in the United States. In both of these areas, 91勛圖 has worked in collaboration with Stanford scholars, including Professor Emeritus Albert Dien, who was instrumental in the creation of BAYCEP and remains engaged with 91勛圖.
In 2017, 91勛圖 added a third branch to its work on China and K12 schools, the China Scholars Program (CSP). An online course on contemporary China and U.S.China relations, the China Scholars Program offers high school students across the United States unique access to cutting-edge research on China. Designed and instructed by Dr. Tanya Lee, each module addresses a different themesuch as U.S.China political relations or urban/rural inequalityand features a real-time discussion with a scholar from Stanford or another institution.
My students amaze me with the enthusiasm and rigor they bring to the course. They understand that a comprehensive understanding of China will be essential to navigating the international careers they want to pursue, Lee explained. In addition to keeping up with (and sometimes surpassing) rigorous reading and discussion assignments, students spend much of the term researching and writing final papers on topics of personal interest. We challenge each other, Lee says. I push them to explore areas they might not otherwise have considered, and to do so criticallybut they are so curious and motivated, I have to be quick on my feet to stay ahead of them!
One of the courses two required texts is Stanford s&紳莉莽梯;Fateful Ties: A History of Americas Preoccupation with China (Harvard University Press, 2015). I assign Fateful Ties because I love the big picture it gives us to frame all of the particular, current issues we explorenot just for its historical breadth, but for the way it integrates cultural, aesthetic, and philosophical influences the U.S. and China have had on each other along with the political and economic. And then for the students to have the opportunity to actually question Professor Chang directly is extraordinary. Other Stanford faculty who regularly participate in CSP include political scientist , economist , and sociologist .
The China Scholars Program runs twice a year. Applications for the spring 2019 CSP course are currently being accepted. Teachers should encourage highly motivated, advanced students to apply for the opportunity to learn directly from Stanford scholars. Lee remarked, I am honored to be a part of the legacy of 91勛圖s founders in extending Stanford scholarship on China beyond the walls of the university, to equip the next generation to build new bridges.
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