Colorado educators explore windows to Asia's lesser-known nations
This article originally appeared in CU Boulder Today.
While nearly every nation has a checkered past, reducing a country to a single chapter risks overlooking the richness of its history and culture.
Through a series of professional development workshops over the 2024ā25 academic year, the South, Southeast, and West Asia Outreach Program (SSEWA) of theĀ Center for Asian Studies (CAS) at CU Boulder helped teachers gain a more nuanced perspective on three conflict-affected countriesāAfghanistan, Cambodia and Vietnamāand helped reshape how some Colorado educators approach global education.
āSSEWA workshops help CU Boulder scholarship and research expand and deepen Colorado educatorsā knowledge of underrepresented regions in Asia,ā said SSEWA Outreach Coordinator Hannah Palustre.
CAS ran the SSEWA program from 2006 to 2014 and relaunched it in 2022, through a $2.2 millionĀ National Resource Center (NRC) and Foreign Language and Area Studies grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Additional funding from the CU Office for Public and Community-Engaged Scholarship and Partnerships for International Strategies in Asia allowed SSEWA to offer workshops at no cost to teachers, expanding access and impact.
āI recently learned that āsewaā means āserviceā in Nepali, which seems fitting because the SSEWA outreach program serves teachers,ā Palustre said. āAlmost three years after our relaunch, weāre seeing a growing number of repeat participantsāeducators who continue to seek global perspectives for their classrooms.ā