Join us for a free one-day workshop for educators at the Japanese American National Museum, hosted by the USC U.S.-China Institute and the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia. This workshop will include a guided tour of the beloved exhibition Common Ground: The Heart of Community, slated to close permanently in January 2025. Following the tour, learn strategies for engaging students in the primary source artifacts, images, and documents found in JANM’s vast collection and discover classroom-ready resources to support teaching and learning about the Japanese American experience.
Talking Points, September 9-22, 2014
Talking Points September 9 - 22, 2014
Happy Mid-Autumn Festival! 中秋节愉快!The harvest moon is upon us and it's a time for families and friends to gather, for businesspeople to settle accounts, and for the sharing of smiles and mooncakes. Tonight, we mark the occasion at the USC Pacific Asia Museum. Many Chinese and Americans will, in the words of the Tang dynasty poet Li Bai (李白), look at the moon, and think of a distant home (举头望明月,低头思故乡). Over 300,000 are far from their families, studying in each other's country.
There are three principal sources of data on such students, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Institute for International Education (IIE), and the Chinese Scholarship Council (SCS). Their information is gathered in different ways and their numbers vary. ICE offers real time information whereas the others lag by a year or two. The chart above is based on IIE data and shows how Chinese enrollments climbed rapidly after 2006. In 2009, China passed India to become the top supplier of foreign students to the U.S. According to ICE, in September 2013, there were 291,009 Chinese studying in American universities, colleges, and secondary schools. Over 90% were enrolled in higher education programs and as of July 2014 almost 45,000 of those students were in California, the most popular destination. The main subjects studied by Chinese are business and engineering.
Most Chinese in the U.S. study in large urban areas such as Los Angeles, New York, and Boston. But many can be found in relatively small places such as Lafayette/West Lafayette, Indiana home to Purdue University and other schools.In 2013, Purdue had the largest number of students from China, 4,323, including over 3,000 studying at the undergraduate level.
Some older graduate students and visiting scholars bring spouses and children. In 2013, the total number of Chinese coming to the U.S. via study programs totaled 391,068.
A recent report from the Council on Graduate Applications noted that grad school applications from China had dropped by 1-3% each year over the past two years, after increasing 19-21% each year over the previous two years. Is study in the U.S. losing its luster for Chinese? It doesn't seem so as more and more students enroll in international-oriented high school programs in China and prepare for the SAT rather than the gaokao, or Chinese higher education entrance exam. At USC and elsewhere, we are seeing a rapid increase in the number of Chinese undergraduate applications and admissions. Of USC's 3,689 students from China in 2013, 716 were undergraduates. In 2010, fewer than half than many undergrads (327) were from China.
Where do these students come from? According to a recent Brooking Institution report, most Chinese students in the U.S. come from Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Wuhan, and Shenzhen.
As the chart above indicates, comparatively few Americans study in China. Americans, though, make up the second largest group with China's international student population. South Koreans are number one. The number of Americans has been increasing steadily, though there's still a long way to go before the 100,000 goal set by President Barack Obama can be reached. It's worth noting, that about 5% of Americans who study abroad are now going to China. In 2000, only 1.9% went to China.
Especially during weak economic times, the challenge isn't just getting Americans to go to China. It's getting them to go abroad to study at all. But acquiring strong language skills, cultural competency, and a deep understanding of a place and its people's requires such immersion. With luck, when the 2015 harvest moon comes along, more Americans will see it from within China.
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橄榄球Gǎnlǎnqiú ("olive ball" or football) Watch (well, sort of)
The USC Trojans opened their season with wins against the Fresno State Bulldogs and the Stanford Cardinal.With this issue of Talking Points, we use football opponents as a way to talk about U.S.-China linkages past and present.
Fresno State has doubled the number of students it enrolls from China and Hong Kong since 2011. 82 were enrolled in fall 2013. Another four came from Taiwan. Exports from the Fresno area (congressional district 4) slipped a bit from 2011 ($112 million) to 2012 ($98 million). The district's top exports included computer parts, waste and scrap, agricultural crops, and machinery. Fresno, though, is best known for its agricultural output. The county ranks as America's top agricultural producer. In the 1980s and 1990s, cotton farmers there and elsewhere in the San Joaquin Valley followed output and prices in China closely, experiencing wide fluctuations in demand from China. Demand for other crops gets more attention these days. Citrus exports should help overall figures a great deal with the lifting of a Chinese ban on California citrus. The ban was imposed in April 2013 after Chinese
authorities found brown rot, a soil fungus, in some California oranges and lemons. Fresno's neighbor, Tulare County is the California's top citrus producer. Fresno lags California's Kern County in pistachio production, but has also benefited from the state's push of pistachiosales. In 2010, then California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger pushed pistachios (开心果, the smiling nut) at a Hangzhou exhibition. The Fresno-based California AlmondGrowers Association even advertises in the Shanghai subway stations. Until the current drought, almond (杏仁) and pistachio land in Fresno was more valuable (up to $25,000/acre) than citrus or other crop land. Almonds became California's top agricultural export, ahead of dairy and wine, in 2011-12. California supplies about 84% of the world's almonds. Fresno State has 62 acres of mature almond trees. Students and scholars carry out research in those fields and the university sells their output.
In the 19th century, Stanford was one of the first universities to enroll Chinese students. And, along with USC, was one of the schools enrolling the first 50 PRC students in America in 1978. In 2012, 11% of Stanford undergrads were from China or Hong Kong. 29% of Stanford's graduate students were from China. Many of these students would like to stay in Silicon Valley and some will be able to do so via the H1B work visa program. About 5% of all such visas in 2013 went to students from China and many were to permit work in Silicon Valley.Silicon Valley, of course, is responsible for much of California's high tech exports and has attracted considerable Chinese investment. Wuxi PharmaTech has a new cell therapy facility and Baidu has a new research and development facility in the area. The Baidu facility is headed by Andrew Ng, a former Stanford professor and Google scientist. The company says it will invest $300 million in the facility.
California, of course, has not always been a welcoming place for Chinese. In the late 19th century, Guangdong native Walter Fong graduated from Stanford Law. He was prohibited from admission to the California bar, though he set up a legal advice office. In 1897, he and Stanford student Emma Howse, barred from marrying in California, went to Colorado to wed.
Stanford students, though, have long been interested in China. Today they can study at the university's center on the Beijing University campus. But even in the 19th century alumni headed to China. The most famous of these was Herbert Hoover, who the San Francisco Chronicle heralded as the highest paid mining engineer (with an annual salary of $25,000 a year). Hoover's hosted alumni gatherings in his Tianjin home (with six others attending). The home was damaged in fighting between Chinese forces and Russian ones during the 1900 Boxer Rebellion. Stanford President David Jordan was in Japan during the unrest. He told the Baltimore Sun, "The national feeling is weak in China, but the feeling for ancient customs - the feeling which we call conscience, bigotry or fanaticism, according to the way it affects us - is exceedingly strong."
Hoover, of course, later lead post-World War I relief and recovery efforts in Europe. He served as president of the U.S. 1929-1933. He established the Hoover Library, now part of Stanford University, in 1919. It houses one of the richest collections of Chinese language materials and has been home to many China specialists.
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The USC U.S.-China Institute hosts and co-hosts interesting events next week. The calendar below gives additional information about these and events and exhibitions across North America. We wish you a terrific holiday and look forward to seeing you. Please join us on Facebook and Twitter, we look forward to hearing from you at uschina@usc.edu.
The USC U.S.-China Institute
Write to us at uschina@usc.edu.
USC | California | North America | Exhibitions Wallis Annenberg Hall, ANN 106
University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089
Cost: Free, please RSVP at uschina@usc.edu
Time: 7:00PM - 8:30PM
Join award-winning journalists Dan Washburn and Karl Taro Greenfeld for a discussion of Washburn's new book, The Forbidden Game: Golf and the Chinese Dream, which uses the politically taboo topic of golf to paint what critics are calling "an illuminating portrait of modern China."
09/18/2014: Contestation and Adaptation: The Politics of National Identity in China
Wallis Annenberg Hall, ANN 106 University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089 Cost: Free, please RSVP at uschina@usc.edu Time: 4:00PM - 5:30PM Please join the USC U.S.-China Institute for a discussion with Professor Enze Han of the University of London on the way five major ethnic minority groups - Uyghurs, Chinese Koreans, Dai, Mongols, and Tibetans - in China negotiate their national identities with the Chinese nation-state.
09/21/2014: 4th Annual A Day with Kung Fu Masters
USC Pacific Asia Museum 46 North Los Robles Avenue, Pasadena, California 91101 Cost: Free for members, $25 for nonmembers Time: 2:00PM The Joy of Kung Fu and USC Pacific Asia Museum present a panel discussion and demonstrations with Kung Fu masters.
09/10/2014: China's Reigning Ambassador: The Giant Panda 09/12/2014: The Specter of Global China: Contesting the Power and Peril of Chinese State Capital in Zambia 09/13/2014: Last Hero in China, Co-Presented by Soja Martial Arts 09/13/2014-09/14/2014: Moon Festival in Chinatown
Central Plaza, 951 N. Broadway Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012 Time: 5:00PM - 2:00AM Los Angeles Chinatown, also referred to as "New Chinatown", celebrates its annual Mid-Autumn Moon Festival on Sept. 13. The "Chinatown Moon Festival" has been a mainstay event for 76 years, popular with Chinese-Americans and Angelenos from all walks of life. 09/13/2014: Inching Toward Convergence in the China Policies of the KMT and the DPP 09/14/2014-09/17/2014: The Association of Pacific Rim Universities: Aging in Asia 2014 09/16/2014: The Forbidden Game: Golf and the Chinese Dream featuring Dan Washburn 09/22/2014: Mapping from the Water: The Political Economy of the Selden Map
09/11/2014: China Energy 2020
Columbia Club 15 West 43rd Street (Between 5th and 6th Ave), New York, NY 10036 Time: 6:00PM - 8:15PM To better understand the future trajectory of China's energy needs, the National Committee on United States-China Relations is hosting a public event, China Energy 2020, on September 11, 2014. 09/12/2014: Panel Discussion - Also Like Life: The Films of Hou Hsiao-hsien Asia Society New York
725 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10021 Time: 6:30PM - 8:00PM A conversation on new trends in Chinese contemporary art with Thomas J. Berghuis, Curator of Chinese Art at The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Melissa Chiu, Director of Asia Society Museum and co-curator of Zhang Huan: Evoking Tradition. Co-presented by Asia Society and Storm King Art Center. In conjunction with the exhibition Zhang Huan: Evoking Tradition currently on view at Storm King Art Center. 09/16/2014: Climate Change at High Altitudes 09/17/2014: Is America's View of China Fogged by Liberal Ideas? 09/18/2014: The Lyrical in Epic Time: The Stories of Shen Congwen and Feng Zhi
Yale University, Location TBD New Haven, CT 06520 Time: 4:00PM - 5:30PM The Yale council on East Asian Studies presents David Der-wei Wang - Edward C. Henderson Professor of Chinese Literature, Harvard University & Director of CCK Foundation Inter-University Center for Sinological Studies 09/19/2014: Digital Approaches to Late Imperial Chinese Literature: Exploring Quasi-historical Texts 09/22/2014: Creating and Discarding Symbols: The Case of Mao Zedong's Golden Mangoes Below are exhibitions ending in the next two weeks. Please visit the main exhibitions calendarfor a complete list of ongoing exhibitions.
ends 09/28/2014: Shen Wei at Crow Collection of Asian Art
Crow Collection of Asian Art 2010 Flora Street, Dallas, TX 75201 Cost: Free In this exhibition presented by the Crow Collection of Asian Art, Shen Wei narrows his focus to a study of the grisaille palette and the expressive textures of oil paint. Meditations on landscape, the subtly beautiful, and the strange have long been the domain of literati artists in China. Shen Wei, with this new series, takes these meditations to new heights and profound depths. ends 10/19/2014: China's Last Empire: The Art and Culture of the Qing Dynasty . USC U.S.-China Institute | 3502 Watt Way, ASC G24 | Los Angeles | CA | 90089
Tel: 213-821-4382 | Fax: 213-821-2382 | uschina@usc.edu | china.usc.edu
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Please join us for the Grad Mixer! Hosted by USC Annenberg Office of International Affairs, Enjoy food, drink and conversation with fellow students across USC Annenberg. Graduate students from any field are welcome to join, so it is a great opportunity to meet fellow students with IR/foreign policy-related research topics and interests.
RSVP link: https://forms.gle/1zer188RE9dCS6Ho6
Events
Hosted by USC Annenberg Office of International Affairs, enjoy food, drink and conversation with fellow international students.
Join us for an in-person conversation on Thursday, November 7th at 4pm with author David M. Lampton as he discusses his new book, Living U.S.-China Relations: From Cold War to Cold War. The book examines the history of U.S.-China relations across eight U.S. presidential administrations.