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Showing posts from January, 2020

Favorite Class at SAIS: Leaders, Followers, and Political Power

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Cady Deck, Certificate '19 + Johns Hopkins SAIS MA '20 shares her favorite class at SAIS. SAIS Paul H. Nitze Building - located just steps from many of the nation’s most prestigious think tanks, research centers, and global corporations as well as famous landmarks like the White House and the U.S. Capitol. Every HNC Certificate + SAIS MA student has to take two Asia Studies classes, and one China Studies class at SAIS in addition to taking economics classes and fulfilling core requirements. One of my favorite classes this semester is a Southeast Asia Studies class called Leaders, Followers, and Political Power. This is not a class about the “great man theory” of history. It is a class designed to answer two main questions: why do leaders lead and why do people follow them. Over the course of the semester, we have analyzed how leaders attain power utilizing different combinations of coercion, charisma, traditional authority, economic reward, or appeals to identity, ide...

Student Groups: Volunteer English Teaching

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Student blogger Amanda Walencewicz (Certificate '20) writes about the volunteer teaching group at the Hopkins-Nanjing Center.   HNC Volunteer teacher Jose Gonzalez leads his class in a game to learn directions. Every Friday, a group of Hopkins-Nanjing Center (HNC) students travels to a nearby elementary school to spend the afternoon teaching English to third grade classes. Splitting into groups, these HNC volunteer teachers work with three classes of 30 students each, teaching for 45 minutes. With the third-grade students' teacher not present, the volunteers lead the classes in games and English drills, giving the students the chance to interact with foreigners in a fun, informal way before they end classes for the week.   The school primarily serves underprivileged students that come from migrant families. Most students likely do not have access to resources like English tutoring outside of class, so the HNC volunteer teachers focus on simple vocabulary and gr...

Hopkins-Nanjing Center CHINA Town Hall

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Student blogger Amanda Walencewicz (Certificate '20) describes the Hopkins-Nanjing Center’s CHINA Town Hall event, which she helped organize in October in conjunction with the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations.    The audience in Kuang Yaming Auditorium watches the CHINA Town Hall national webcast. In October, the Hopkins-Nanjing Center  (HNC)  hosted  its first iteration of CHINA Town Hall , a program run by the National Co mmittee on U.S.-China Relations. The National Committee is  a nonprofit American organization dedicated to constructive engagement wit hin the bilateral relationship, and CHINA Town Hall is one of its f lagship programs. Now in its thir teenth year, the program consists of  two parts:  a live, national webcast with a well-known China expert ; and local events held throughout the United States and China that provide a  forum for community discussion.    This year, owing to the curren...

Class Research Trips: Yiwu and Guangzhou

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Student blogger, Brandy Darling, shares her experience traveling with her class to two cities to conduct individual research projects.   Since I am pursuing the Hopkins-Nanjing Center Certificate + Johns Hopkins SAIS MA, I have elected to pursue one English class in addition to the three required Chinese classes. In order to fulfill my international political economy concentration on time when I return to SAIS, I am taking an international law course named Injustices, Discrimination, and Group Identity. In this class, we cover injustices such as genocide, racism, and prejudices. We also learn how these issues are dealt with internationally, especially in the United States and China. Our class research project is over understanding how Africans are treated in Guangzhou, China. Guangzhou is also known as ‘Little Africa’, as it has a relatively high concentration of Africans working primarily in exporting businesses. In recent years, authorities have tightened visa requirement...