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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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    Carved wood panel from Yogyakarta

    Growing up in Indonesia, Maya was surrounded by art through her mother’s work with artisans. This carved wood panel from Yogyakarta, artist unknown, belonged to her mother as part of her microfinance projects. It is now in Maya’s personal collection. (Source: Maya Soetoro Collection)

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    Indonesian phrase: gotong royong

    Watch Maya discuss one of her favorite Indonesian phrases: gotong royong.

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    Maya discusses living within diverse cultures and faiths

    Watch Maya discuss living within diverse cultures and faiths.

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    Taman Sari’s ruins

    As a child in the 1970s, Maya played in the Taman Sari’s ruins. This photograph of the Water Castle was taken in a much earlier time, in 1910 during the Dutch colonial era.

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    Video Maya on her childhood in Indonesia and feeling safe in “collective care”

    Watch Maya discuss her childhood in Indonesia and the safety of “collective care.”

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    Map of Asia Indonesia

    Indonesia is the fourth largest country in the world by population. The physical span of the archipelago is roughly equivalent to the length of the United States.

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    Maya Soetoro and Family

    Maya as a baby with her family, ca. 1970. From left to right: Lolo Soetoro (Maya’s father), Ann (her mother), Maya (on her mother’s lap), and Barack Obama (her older brother).

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    Ann holding Maya as a newborn

    Ann holding Maya as a newborn. They stand next to Soetoro’s grandmother, Djoeminah, whom Maya knew as Eyang Supoyo, ca. 1970.

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    Ann Dunham Soetoro and Lolo Soetoro

    Ann Dunham Soetoro (left) and Lolo Soetoro at the East-West Center, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, where they originally met as graduate students. This picture likely was taken during a trip back to Hawaiʻi in 1972.

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  • Video

    Maya Soetoro Introduction

    A brief introduction to Maya Soetoro

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    Module 2: New Homes and Returns

    Kanjana Hubik Thepboriruk

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    Module 3: Places and Spaces

    Kanjana Hubik Thepboriruk

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    Module 4: Unity and Division

    Kanjana Hubik Thepboriruk

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    Module 5: Belonging and Building Community

    Kanjana Hubik Thepboriruk

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    Module 2: Education for Liberation: Asian Americans and Third World Studies

    Diane C. Fujino

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    Module 3: Housing as a Fundamental Human Right Part I: The Price of Gentrification

    Katherine H. Lee

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    Module 4: Housing as a Fundamental Human Right Part II: Save the International Hotel

    Katherine H. Lee

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    Module 5: Labor Organizing: The New York Taxi Workers Alliance (NYTWA)

    Diane C. Fujino

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    Module 3: Adoptees

    Kimberly McKee

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