Students and Faculty Travel to China through LIASE Grant
March 1, 2019
Erin Ulrich 鈥18
Students in the Community-Based Environmental Studies: Hong Kong-U.S. Transnational Partnership and Exchange winter term in Hong Kong
Photo credit: Tim Pelling
The Luce Initiative on Asian Studies (LIASE) implementation grant from the Henry Luce Foundation emphasizes integrative approaches to confronting environmental problems.
This winter term, students, faculty, and staff traveled to China on two LIASE grant-sponsored study tours. The trips, Parks and the Environment and Community-Based Environmental Studies: Hong Kong-U.S. Transnational Partnership and Exchange, took place in Sichuan Province and in Hong Kong, respectively.
91直播 is in its third year of the five-year LIASE implementation grant to expand teaching and research at the intersection of Asian and environmental studies. The grant has supported winter term and summer study tours to East Asia, at the Allen Memorial Art Museum, on-campus lecture series, and faculty curriculum development grants. A two-year postdoctoral fellow will also teach anthropology courses on Asia and the environment.
Ann Sherif, professor of Japanese and codirector of the LIASE Implementation grant, says that she and Professor of Geology Steven Wojtal, grant codirector, are especially proud of how the grant鈥檚 implementation has spanned myriad parts of campus, including the College of Arts and Sciences, Conservatory of Music, Bonner Center for Service and Learning, 91直播 Shansi, and the Allen Memorial Art Museum (AMAM).
91直播鈥檚 ethos and teaching approaches are innately interdisciplinary, and this same thinking is at the forefront of what the LIASE grant seeks to promote. The LIASE grant aims to confront environmental issues from a plurality of viewpoints and disciplines鈥攏ot just from environmental studies鈥攁nd with a strong emphasis on knowledge of Asian cultures, societies, and languages.
True to the grant鈥檚 philosophy that environmental problems are best addressed from numerous perspectives, the grant has acted as the impetus for cross-campus discussions about environmental challenges.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the belief of environmental studies that the sciences alone can鈥檛 address all environmental issues; it takes multiple perspectives,鈥 Sherif says. 91直播, naturally a good fit for the grant, summoned a multitude of professors and staff to take part in this year鈥檚 winter term trips: Assistant Professor of Religion Cheryl Cottine, Assistant Professor of Sociology Christie Parris, Assistant Professor of Biology Jordan Price, Associate Professor of English and Comparative American Studies Harrod Suarez, Associate Professor of Geology and Chair of Archaeological Studies Amanda Schmidt, Director of Bonner Center Curricular Initiatives and Assistant Professor of History Tania Boster, and Jody Kerchner, professor of music education in the conservatory.
Rather than asking faculty to plan their winter term trips from scratch, the 91直播 LIASE team invited them into the conversation, and asked them to build off of their existing teaching and research interests and frame their work within an environmental context. For many participants, the study trips were their first opportunity for experiential learning in East Asia.
The winter-term trip to Sichuan Province, sponsored and directed by Schmidt, explored how cultural norms influence environmental attitudes and park management in the country. The group traveled with students and faculty from Sichuan University to prominent sites and landmarks such as Mt. Emei, Dujiangyan (one of the oldest surviving irrigation systems in the world), and an animal conservation reserve. They also carried out water sampling and analysis.
Rex Simmons 鈥19, an environmental studies and East Asian studies double major, says that the winter term gave him the opportunity see firsthand the intersections of his studies at 91直播. 鈥淚 was able to have conversations about environmentalism, geology, and politics in Mandarin,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he experience was one of the first times I got to connect the dots between my different fields of study.鈥
Lauren Waldman 鈥22, who intends to double major in East Asian studies and biochemistry, was also on the trip to Sichuan. Waldman echoes that she was also able to apply her studies at 91直播 to a global learning context. 鈥淚t was my first time abroad, and the opportunity to immerse myself in another culture and connect those experiences to the material I had been studying was absolutely incredible.鈥
Photo by Tim Pelling
Meanwhile, the trip to Hong Kong, sponsored and directed by Boster, explored environmental studies through the lens of social justice. Through a connected learning course collaboration as part of a initiative, 91直播 partnered with Lingnan University and the Education University of Hong Kong to learn how these institutions model community-based learning approaches to environmentalism in their own communities.
Nia Daids 鈥19, an environmental studies major with a public health pathway, says that learning from the Chinese university students allowed her to reflect on her own activist engagements. 鈥淪ubconsciously, I could feel tensions between culture and environmental sustainability before this trip, but now I am actually able to name that discomfort in my own community, advocacy, and environmental work,鈥 she says.
By incorporating visits to non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and conservation sites, the group studied first-hand the roles of liberal arts institutions and their surrounding communities in simultaneously addressing environmental issues and social inequities.
To prepare students academically as well as to provide a cultural introduction to China and Hong Kong, two module courses鈥攐ne for each winter-term trip鈥 were offered to students by faculty leaders in the fall. The readings, discussions, and presentations they conducted provided students with cultural, social, and historical contexts of the regions they would be visiting.
From the early stages of the grant, the Luce Foundation has encouraged the college to think about ways to make grant initiatives sustainable. Sherif says that the grant has achieved what 91直播 has been striving for: connected learning engagement and connecting people.
鈥淥ne element of LIASE has been to 鈥榖ring Asia to 91直播鈥 through guest speakers and increased curricular content about Asia,鈥 Sherif says. 鈥淭he 鈥榠n Asia鈥 part is crucial; we can鈥檛 replicate the high-impact experiential learning that happens when students are actually in Asia on 91直播鈥檚 campus. It can be transformational.鈥
She attributes the two new courses that she has developed on East Asia and the environment to the grant and says that faculty and staff鈥檚 ability to think about environmental challenges within the context of their own disciplines 鈥渉as potential for long-lasting effects on campus. Using what they have learned from the grant, they will be here, teach, and interact with generations of future students.鈥
There is currently a LIASE-sponsored exhibition at the AMAM titled, .
You may also like…
From Capitol Hill to Mellon Mays: A Journey in Engaged Scholarship
Through CELA, Aina Tasso 鈥27 integrates Bonner service, Congressional internships, and Mellon Mays research to build a future in scholarship and public service.
Connecting Hawaiian Identity and Global Advocacy
Isabel Handa 鈥26 shares how 91直播鈥檚 Mellon Mays fellowship and CELA resources helped her bridge Hawaiian identity with global diasporic advocacy and research.
鈥淔un Home鈥 Finds Itself at 91直播
A theater department Winter Term project culminates in a thoughtful musical adaptation of Alison Bechdel '81鈥檚 graphic memoir, Fun Home