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December 2024

WEAI at 75: Celebrating a Legacy and Looking Ahead

12/09/2024 @ 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm
1501 International Affairs Building, 420 West 118th Street
New York, NY 10027 United States
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This event marks the launch of The Weatherhead East Asian Institute: 75 Years of Northeast, Southeast, and Inner Asia Studies, a 64-page, limited-edition hardcover book celebrating the people, milestones, and projects that have shaped our Institute over the past 75 years. Our event will center on a panel discussion featuring former Weatherhead directors in conversation with our current director, Lien-Hang Nguyen. Joining us will be Gerald L. Curtis, Myron L. Cohen, Andrew J. Nathan, Xiaobo Lü, Madeleine H. Zelin, and Eugenia Lean, who will reflect on the Institute’s…

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Syllabus from Scratch (for grad students)

12/11/2024 @ 1:10 pm - 2:40 pm
212 Butler Library, 535 W 114th St
New York, NY 10027
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Are you drafting a syllabus? Whether the syllabus is for the Teaching Scholars program, the academic job market, or a dream course in the future, join us to begin designing an effective, student-centered syllabus from scratch. During this Syllabus from Scratch workshop, participants will learn about the elements of an effective and inclusive syllabus, define course learning goals, and discuss assessments that can promote student learning, engagement, and accessibility in their course. Facilitated by Caitlin DeClercq, Senior Assistant Director at…

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The World on Stage: Multicultural Music and Dance at Tōdaiji Temple’s Eye-Opening Ceremony

12/11/2024 @ 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

On May 26, 752, Japan’s political, military, and monastic forces gathered to witness the eye-opening ceremony of the Great Buddha at Tōdaiji Temple in the capital city of Nara. On this occasion, the Great Buddha’s pupils were painted in, thereby enlivening the statue and transforming it into a religious icon. This activation ceremony comprised local and overseas religious specialists, as well as music and dance troupes specializing in performing arts from Japan and mainland Asia. Through the ceremony and the…

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January 2025

Showcase Your Teaching Development with the TDP

January 24 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
212 Butler Library, 535 W 114th St
New York, NY 10027
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The Teaching Development Program (TDP) offers doctoral and MFA students a means to document and articulate their teaching development at Columbia. Completion of foundational or advanced tracks in the TDP is certified by the CTL and noted on transcripts for doctoral students in Arts and Sciences, SEAS, Mailman, Nursing, Social Work, Business, Journalism, and GSAPP – and for MFA students in the and School of the Arts. For more information or to register, visit the TDP site at https://tdp.ctl.columbia.edu/. Students currently in the…

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Essentials of Teaching & Learning 1: Inclusive Teaching (In Person)

January 28 @ 10:10 am - 11:40 am

Learn about the key terms, frameworks, and principles of inclusive teaching. Join the CTL for a workshop for graduate students focused on strategies and tools for including all of your students in the learning process. We will ask how instructors can create inclusive classroom environments that set up all students for success, as well as how instructors can help students learn through the diversity of experiences and perspectives they bring to the classroom. Prior to this session, participants are expected…

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February 2025

China as a Contested Object of Thought

February 6 @ 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
403 Kent Hall, 1140 Amsterdam Ave.
New York, NY 10027 United States
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REGISTER FOR IN-PERSON ATTENDANCE REGISTER FOR ZOOM This event is free and open to the public. Registration Required Description This talk reflects upon China as a contested concept in the European humanities and their surrounding environments. In the first part, Professor Sachsenmaier will address the place of China in European scholarship, both as a subject of intellectual inquiry and as an institutionalized field. Drawing on contemporary and historical examples, he will consider and compare the specific academic traditions and institutional…

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Japan Economic Seminar

February 7 @ 1:00 am - 5:35 pm
490 Geffen Hall, Columbia Business School, 645 West 130th Street
New York, NY 10027 United States
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Introduction: David E. Weinstein, Director, CJEB; Carl S. Shoup Professor of the Japanese Economy, Columbia University Session 1: “The Last or Lasting Samurai? The Impact of Secondary Schools on Elite Formation in Early Development” (PDF) Presenter: Mari Tanaka, Associate Professor, University of Tokyo; Hitotsubashi University Coauthors: Hidehiko Ichimura, Yasuyuki Sawada, Yutaro Takayasu Discussant: Miguel Urquiola, Columbia University Moderator: David E. Weinstein Session 2: “Wage Spillovers across Sectors: Evidence from a Localized Public-Sector Wage Cut” (PDF) Presenter: Atsushi Yamagishi, Associate Professor, Hitotsubashi University Coauthor: Tsuyoshi Goto Discussant: Jiro…

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CTLgrads Office Hours (for Graduate Students)

February 7 @ 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
|Recurring Event (See all)

An event every week that begins at 2:00pm on Friday, repeating until 03/01/2025

212 Butler Library, 535 W 114th St
New York, NY 10027
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We invite current Columbia graduate students with questions about maintaining an inclusive teaching environment and all other aspects of pedagogy to drop by office hours on Fridays from 2:00–4:00 pm. We also welcome conversations about CTL fellowships, programs, services, job market preparation, and making progress in the Teaching Development Program (tdp.ctl.columbia.edu). No appointment is necessary; you can join us in-person in 212 Butler Library, or via Zoom. To join office hours via Zoom, email CTLgrads@columbia.edu to obtain the link. If you can't make office hours but…

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Staging the Corpse: Performativity and Materiality in Northern Wei Mortuary Art

February 7 @ 4:30 pm - 6:30 pm

This talk, deriving from one chapter of my current book project, examines an innovative mortuary practice developed during the Northern Wei period. Rather than concealing corpses in coffins, which was the predominant way of burying the dead in early China, residents at Northern Wei capital Pingcheng experimented with something unconventional— exposing the body on a funerary bed and placing the bed inside an architectonic chamber. I argue that this new way of burying the dead is a performative enactment of…

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LC2: Learning Through Non-traditional Modalities

February 10 @ 11:40 am - 12:55 pm
212 Butler Library, 535 W 114th St
New York, NY 10027
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CTLgrads Learning Community - Beyond the Lecture-Essay Model: Learning Through Non-traditional Modalities (Session 2) - for graduate students Through the course of their academic, professional, and personal life, students will be exposed to a range of different modalities through which they learn about the world. Pedagogical research supports learning through a diversity of modalities, as it engages different learning types and has been proven to be an effective method for active learning. Non-traditional modalities include podcasts, field trips, creative writing, art…

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