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Asian American and Pacific Islander studies resources for the classroom

All chapters of Foundations and Futures include lesson plans and curricular tools that are designed for high school students and grounded in ethnic studies pedagogy. Feel free to search our repository of primary sources and material that helps bring Asian American and Pacific Islander histories and experiences into the classroom.  

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  • Image

    Kimiko Kitagaki Waiting for a Bus

    Young Kimiko Kitagaki waits in Oakland for a bus to transport her to a government camp. Like all other Japanese Americans, the Kitagaki family attached tags with their names and government-assigned family numbers to their suitcases. They tied the same tags to the clothing they wore.

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  • Text

    Instructions to Japanese Americans Poster

    Signs like this appeared in Japanese American communities along the West Coast in the spring of 1942 ordering them to leave their homes.

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  • Video

    American Concentration Camps

    In this short video, Japanese Americans’ accounts of life in the camps contrast with the government’s depiction of them.

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  • Image

    FBI House Raid

    FBI agents searched the homes of many Japanese American families, like this one, and the Yasui family in Hood River, Oregon.

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    Hood River Community Welcome

    Masuo Yasui led a successful effort to create a Japanese Community Hall in Hood River, Oregon, where local Issei held cultural events, holiday gatherings, and Japanese language classes for children.

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  • Image

    Signs Discriminating Against Japanese Americans

    In the decades before World War II, Japanese Americans along the West Coast faced discrimination in their daily lives: Restaurants denied them service. Barbers refused to cut their hair. Landlords would not rent to them. This woman in Hollywood, California, made clear that Japanese Americans were unwelcome.

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  • Image

    Masuo Yasui Portrait

    Masuo Yasui immigrated to the US from Japan when he was sixteen years old. He settled in Oregon’s Hood River Valley, where he became a successful farmer and businessman.

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    Module 2: The Vietnam-American War

    Thuy Vo Dang

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    Module 3: The Vietnamese Refugee Exodus

    Thuy Vo Dang

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    Module 4: Building Community in “Little Saigon”

    Thuy Vo Dang

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    Module 5: Politics and Remembrance in the Vietnamese American Community

    Thuy Vo Dang

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  • Chapter

    Chapter Overview: The Tape Family and Chinese American Civil Rights

    Mae Ngai

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  • Module

    Module 1: That Chinese Girl

    Mae Ngai

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    Lesson Plan
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    Module 2: In-Between People

    Mae Ngai

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    Lesson Plan
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    Module 3: The World’s Fair

    Mae Ngai

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  • Module

    Module 4: The Strange Career of a Chinese Interpreter

    Mae Ngai

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