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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

    Gertrude Tape and Friend

    Gertrude Tape (left) and an unidentified girl on Clay Avenue, behind the Chinese Presbyterian Church in San Francisco, 1894.

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  • Image

    Gertrude Tape

    Portrait of Gertrude Ella Tape in the early 1890s.

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    “What a Chinese Girl Did”

    An article profiling the “accomplishments” of the Tape Family featured in The Morning Call, circa 1892.

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  • Image

    Joseph Tape Hunting

    Joseph Tape with his hunting rifle and bird dogs, circa 1880.

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    Joseph Express Office

    Photo of the Dupont and Sacramento streets (heart of the Chinese quarter) in San Francisco, circa 1895. Joseph Tape’s express office is in the second building on the left, with the horse and wagon in front.

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    Reverend Augustus W. Loomis

    Reverend Augustus W. Loomis was a Presbyterian missionary who sought to convert Chinese migrants in San Francisco to Christianity throughout the 1860s and 1870s. Prior to his work in California, Loomis worked at an Indian boarding school for Creek children. Indian boarding schools were abusive institutions that abducted Indigenous children from their homes and imprisoned them in residential complexes where students were forcibly “civilized” into white Christianity. Hundreds of Native children died in boarding schools, where they were subjected to attempted cultural genocide, unliveable conditions, and immense violence at the hands of their “caretakers.”

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    Mary McGladery

    Mary McGladery, assistant matron, Ladies’ Protection and Relief Society, who raised Mary Tape, 1869-1875.

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    Ladies’ Protection and Relief Society

    The Ladies’ Protection and Relief Society home for abandoned children (c. 1860), where Mary Tape was the only Chinese child resident.

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    Portrait of Joseph and Mary Tape

    Portrait of the Tapes in the early 1930s.

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    Mary, Mamie and Frank Tape, 1895

    Sisters Mamie (left), Emily (right), and Gertrude play together in Berkeley, circa 1895.

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  • Module

    Module 5: A Modern Chinese American Woman

    Mae Ngai

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  • Chapter

    Chapter Overview: Samoans in the United States

    Lana Lopesi

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    Module 1: Overview: Samoans in the United States

    Lana Lopesi

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  • Chapter

    Chapter Overview: Bangladeshi Americans

    Nazli Kibria, Elora Halim Chowdhury, Fariba S. Alam, and Sharbari Ahmed

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  • Module

    Module 1: Bangladeshi Migration and Settlement in the US

    Nazli Kibria, Elora Halim Chowdhury, Fariba S. Alam, and Sharbari Ahmed

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    Lesson Plan
  • Module

    Module 2: Bangladeshi Americans and the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War

    Elora Halim Chowdhury, Fariba S. Alam, Nazli Kibria, Sharbari Ahmed

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  • Chapter

    Chapter Overview: Chinese Americans and the Making of American History

    Cecilia M. Tsu and Tamara Venit Shelton

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  • Chapter

    Patsy Takemoto Mink: Fierce and Fearless

    Judy Tzu-Chun Wu and Gwendolyn Mink

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  • Module

    Module 1: Overview

    Judy Tzu-Chun Wu and Gwendolyn Mink

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