Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_K - Korean Asian Americans

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 94    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Korean Asian Americans:     more books (101)
  1. Religion and Spirituality in Korean America (Asian American Experience)
  2. Robot Stories: And More Screenplays by Greg Pak, 2005-07-01
  3. Bridging Intergenerational Gaps among Korean American Families: Asian Values Gap, Cognitive Flexibility, Coping Strategies, and Child-Parent Conflicts ... American Young Adults and their Parents by Annie Ahn, 2008-10-02
  4. Korean American: Koreans, Asian American, Filipino American, Indian American, Vietnamese American, List of Korean Americans, Hyphenated American, Korean adoptee
  5. Echoes Upon Echoes: New Korean American Writings (Asian American Writers Worksh) by Elaine Kim, 2003-03-30
  6. Asian American Issues: Chinese Exclusion Act, Asian American, Korean adoptee, Yellowface, List of Asian Americans, Model minority, Coolie
  7. Amerasia Journal (On Vietnames, Khmer, Humong, South Asian, Filipino and Korean Writings: "The Asian American Subject", 19)
  8. The Golden Mountain: The Autobiography of a Korean Immigrant, 1895-1960 (Asian American Experience) by Easurk Charr, 1996-01-01
  9. Becoming Asian American: Second-Generation Chinese and Korean American Identities by Nazli Kibria, 2003-07-25
  10. Contentious Spirits: Religion in Korean American History, 1903-1945 (Asian America) by David K. Yoo, 2010-03-31
  11. From the Land of Morning Calm: The Koreans in America (Asian-American Experience) by Ronald Takaki, Rebecca Stefoff, 1994-05
  12. The Greenwood Library of American War Reporting, Vol. 6: World War II, the Asian Theater & the Korean War (Greenwood Library of American War Reporting) by Bradley Hamm, Donald Lewis Shaw, 2005-06
  13. Becoming Asian American: Second-Generation Chinese and Korean American Identitie by Nazli Kibria,
  14. Asian Americans in Class: Charting the Achievement Gap Among Korean American Youth by Jamie Lew, 2006-03-30

1. Asian Americans In The Santa Clara Valley
Developed by Santa Clara University, this site features an extensive array of resources for asian Category Regional North America Society and Culture Ethnic...... The San Jose Asahi (Japanese American Baseball Team). korean americansPacific Islanders; South asian americans; South East asian americans.
http://www.scu.edu/SCU/Programs/Diversity/scvasian.html
Asian Americans
Santa Clara Valley
The Basics

2. Internet Resources On Asian Americans
asian americans. Multiculturalism. General Information The Half korean Page. A page expressing the "experiences needs" of Half koreans who are half asian those who are
http://newton.uor.edu/Departments&Programs/AsianStudiesDept/asianam.html
Asian Americans Multiculturalism General Information The Wen Ho Lee Case Communities ... Academic Resources Multiculturalism Does Diversity Make a Difference? The Multicultural Pavilion "Multicultural education resources & dialogues for students, educators, & activists" Myth of the Melting Pot The New Americans Pluralism Project Harvard University project aiming "to study & document the growing religious diversity of the United States, with a special view to its new immigrant religious communities": current research; events; publications; resources; news Teaching Tolerance From Southern Poverty Law Center, "a national education project dedicated to helping teachers foster equity, respect & understanding in the classroom & beyond" General Information About.com Guide: Asian-American Culture Asian-Nation: The Landscape of Asian America "your one-stop source & opportunity to explore the historical, political, social, economic, & cultural elements & issues that make up today's diverse Asian American community" Asian American Internet Sites Asian American Net "collection of regional & country-specific materials available on the Internet ... listing of the local language, as well as English, on-line newspapers & magazines ... organizations of persons of Asian descent [in North America] "

3. KoMeRiCa HomePage
Information of koreanamericans featuring who's who, business, cultural/social/political cyberspace, korean community, asian society, customs, church
http://www.KoMeRiCa.com/
Tre@SureNET Tel: 772-MALL Fax: 667-FOOD URL: http://www.komerica.com/

4. North Carolina Korean Presbyterian Church
Ministries for both first generation Koreans and second generation asian americans aimed at worshipping and serving God in accordance with his will.
http://www.nckpc.org/

English Ministry

ÀÌ°÷ ½°£: 04:44 AM EST Çѱ¹ ½°£: 05:44 PM
- NCKPC ÁöÅ´ÀÌ -
Return to Top of Page
Back a Page Back Home
¿¬¶ôÁÖ¼¼¿ä: webmaster@nckpc.org
North Carolina Korean Presbyterian Church
116 Tom Wilkinson Road
Durham, North Carolina 27712
Tel: (919) 471-1168
Fax: (919) 620-1598
Online
Site

5. Some Noteworthy Americans Of Asian Or Pacific Island Heritage
Find information about its research scholarships, its MA and minor degree programs, and its publications. Read course descriptions.
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/asiabio.htm
Some Noteworthy Americans of Asian or Pacific Island Heritage
Welcome to the Internet School Library Media Center Asian American Biography Page. The following are individuals of Asian or Pacific Islands descent of possible interest to students. Students can do research and add to this list. This page is linked to Asian American Resources
The following list was researched on the Internet. The individuals listed are just a tiny sample of noteworthy Americans. If you find any errors, I would appreciate your sending me corrections. Links are to biographical information where possible. In some cases biographical information was not available. In such cases, a link is made to some resource on the Internet in which the individual is identified.
The ISLMC is a meta-site for librarians, teachers, parents and students. You can search this site, use an index or sitemap . Revised 7/26/00
Related Sites: AAV APA Women's Wall of Fame
The Pride of Lebanon

Who Is Who. Prominent Chinese Americans

Indian-Americans of the Century
... Asian Americans in Non-Profit Agencies
Asian American Architects
Maya Lin
Vietnam Memorial designer
Ieoh Ming Pei, Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate, 1983

6. Korean Americans : A Juvenile Bibliography
the Internet School Library Media Center korean American juvenile For other links,see asian Pacific Islands for the nations of Asia and americans of asian
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/mulkoreanamer.htm
Korean Americans
A Juvenile Bibliography
Welcome to the Internet School Library Media Center Korean American juvenile bibliography page. For other links, see page. For bibliographies for the nations of Asia and Americans of Asian heritage, see . The ISLMC is a preview site for teachers, librarians, parents and students. You can search this site, use an index or sitemap
General Nonfiction
Fiction
General Nonfiction
*Lee, Lauren. Korean Americans New York: Marshall Cavendish, 1995.
Wong, Janet S. A Suitcase of Seaweed, and Other Poems
A collection of poems that reflect the experiences of Asian Americans, particularly their family relationships. Reviews at
[Back to Top]
Balgassi, Haemi. Tae's Sonata . Houghton Mifflin, 1997. Ages 9 to 12
Tae, a Korean American eighth grader, tries to sort out her feelings when she is assigned a popular cute boy as a partner for a school report and later has a falling out with her best friend. Reviews at Related pages: Haemi Balgassi Teacher Resource File
Choi, Sook Nyul. Halmoni and the Picnic Ill. by Karen Milone. Houghton Mifflin, 1993. (8) Picture book.

7. Linking The Past To Present: Asian Americans Then And Now
The grouping of asian americans together, then, makes sense in light of with theexplosive growth of new Filipino, korean, South asian Indian, and
http://www.askasia.org/frclasrm/readings/r000192.htm
Linking the Past to Present: Asian Americans Then and Now
  • Click Here for Related Lesson, The Asian American Experience Our children should not be placed in any position where their youthful impressions may be affected by association with pupils of thc Mongolian race.
    San Francisco School Board, l905
    In response to the challenge of changing demographics more than a century ago, the San Francisco School Board established a segregated Chinese Primary School for Chinese children to attend, including those who were American-born. By the turn-of-the century after Japanese immigrants had settled in the wake of Chinese exclusion, the School Board also applied the Chinese segregation policy to Japanese students. School superintendent, Aaron Altmann, advised the city's principals: "Any child that may apply for enrollment or at present attends your school who may be designated under the head of 'Mongolian' must be excluded, and in furtherance of this please direct them to apply at the Chinese School for enrollment." Throughout their history, Asian Americans have confronted a long legacy of exclusion and inequity in relation to school policies and practices, particularly during periods of changing demographics, economic recession, or war. In spite of historic, linguistic differences, distinct Asian nationalities have been grouped together and treated similarly in schools and in the larger society. The grouping of Asian Americans together, then, makes sense in light of historic links from the past to the present.

8. Understanding Our Perceptions Of Asian Americans
asian americans number more than 9.1 million in the US and represent more than SouthAsia; Afghani and Iranian from Central Asia; and korean, Japanese, and
http://www.askasia.org/frclasrm/readings/r000191.htm
Understanding Our Perceptions of Asian Americans
By Peter N. Kiang, Ed. D.
Graduate College of Education, University of Massachusetts at Boston
Related Lesson:
    Perceptions: Asian Americans A waitress asked: "Where are you from?" I told her my great-grandfather came to work the mines in New Mexico. My grandfather was a tailor in Oakland and my mother was born in Stockton. And the waitress interrupted and without any hesitation said: "So how do you like your new country?" a Chinese American attorney He asked the price of beef. Then he said: "You Koreans charge too much." My brother said: "I'm not Korean, I'm Cambodian." But he's mad. He says: "You Koreans rip us off." a Cambodian-born store owner The growth and diversification of the Asian American population in recent years has been nothing short of phenomenal. Driven by sustained immigration and refugee resettlement during the 1970's and 1980's, Asian Americans have emerged as the nation's fastest growing racial group. Given that the school-age Asian American population doubled in the 1980's and is expected to double again between 1990 and 2020, our schools and the larger society must confront some critical questions. For example, what do we know and what can we teach and learn about Asian Americans? Asian Americans number more than 9.1 million in the U.S. and represent more than thirty different nationalities and ethnic groups, including Samoan, Tongan, Guamanian, and native Hawai'ian from the Pacific Islands; Lao, Hmong, Mien, Kmhmu, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Thai, Burmese, Malay, and Filipinos from Southeast Asia; Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Indian, and Sri Lankan from South Asia; Afghani and Iranian from Central Asia; and Korean, Japanese, and Chinese from East Asia. In the year 2000, the six largest Asian nationalities in the U.S. will be Filipinos, Chinese, Vietnamese, Koreans, Asian Indians, and Japanese. The diversity of Asian Americans, in terms of their various languages, cultures, and histories is remarkable.

9. APAnet - Asian Pacific American Network
Learn about the activities sponsored by this student organization. Includes a calendar of events and links to other campus organizations. Welcome to the home page of the Council of Pan asian americans.
http://www.apanet.org/
login home about projects login home about projects ... contact us

10. Deaf Asian Americans - Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Filipino, Vietnamese Deaf And
and society. National asian Deaf Congress Official web site of thenational organization for deaf asian americans. NADC Chapters
http://deafness.about.com/cs/asianamerican/
zfp=-1 About Deafness/Hard of Hearing Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
Deafness/Hard of Hearing
with Jamie Berke
Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS FAQ on Deafness and Hearing Loss Sign Language Glosary Feature Article Index ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
Subscribe to our newsletter.
Advertising Free Credit Report
Free Psychics

Advertisement
Asian American Deaf People
Guide picks Articles about and links to organizations and people in the deaf Asian American community.
Asian American

Feature article on the deaf Asian American community on the Internet. Asian American Bibliography
Bibliography of deaf and Asian materials. Primarily articles. Asian Deaf Club At the Rochester Institute of Technology/National Technical Institute for the Deaf, there is a club for deaf Asian students. Deaf-AsianUSA-News Discussion list for the deaf Asian American community. Deaf South Asians Small site listing names and contact information for deaf South Asians who have attended college in the United States. Has pop-up ads. Deaf Viet Site devoted to deaf Vietnamese culture, education, and society.

11. Lesson: Impact Of War With Asia On Asian Americans <
has played a key role in shaping the history as well as perceptions of asian americans from all ethnic backgrounds. Cold War (1948 early 1960's). korean War (1950-1953)
http://www.askasia.org/frclasrm/lessplan/l000076.htm
Impact of War with Asia on Asian Americans
Portions adapted from CTIR, University of Denver. Reprinted with permission of the publisher.
Materials: Political cartoons from 1940's and 1990's
Handout: "Images of the Chinese and Japanese" (Gallup poll)
"How to Tell Your Friends from The Japs" article (students will need to do initial library research to find a copy of this article) Rationale:
The relationship between the United States and Asia has played a key role in shaping the history as well as perceptions of Asian Americans from all ethnic backgrounds. The recent influx of Vietnam, Hmong and Cambodian refugees can be directly linked to U.S. involvement in Vietnam and Cambodia. The identity of Filipino Americans was in limbo for quite some time (during U.S. rule 1901-46) due to their historical status as "wards" or American "nationals" with U.S. passports without the right to citizenship. The most obvious example is the relationship between the U.S. and Japan, both during World War II and during recent years.
The way that most Americans perceive Asian people, and thus, Asian Americans, is heavily influenced by the nature of our political relations with a particular country. Unfortunately, when relations with a nation like Japan are not good, not only are Japanese Americans targeted due to their ancestral affiliation, but any group that bears a resemblance to the Japanese often suffers as well.

12. The White House Initiative On Asian Americans And Pacific Islanders
of korean Immigration to the United States. President George W. Bush's Administration's asian americans and Pacific
http://www.aapi.gov/
The javascript used on this site for creative design effects is not supported by your browser. Please note that this will not affect access to the content on this web site.
The INITIATIVE Newsletter
President Bush's Proclamation on the Centennial of Korean Immigration to the United States President George W. Bush's Administration's Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders Appointees "Improving Quality of Life of Approx., 13 Million Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders"
On June 6, 2001, President George W. Bush signed Executive Order 13216 to increase opportunities for and improve the quality of life of approximately thirteen million Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders living in the United States and the U.S.- and Pacific Island jurisdictions. This action renews a previous Executive Order, which established the President's Advisory Commission and a federal Interagency Working Group on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. HRSA HHS The White House Accessibility ... Privacy

13. ICC - Asian Americans & Cancer
(13). A significant number of korean americans have never heard of the Pap smeartest. (14). Southeast asian women have higher invasive cervical cancer incidence
http://iccnetwork.org/cancerfacts/cfs3.htm
iccnetwork.org/cancerfacts News Cancer Facts Biennial Symposium Resources ... Search this site
Who We Are "Asian American" refers to persons whose familial roots originate from many countries, ethnic groups and cultures of the Asian continent, including (but not limited to): Asian Indian, Bangladeshi, Bhutanese, Burmese, Cambodian, Chinese, Filipino, Hmong, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Malayan, Mien, Nepalese, Pakistani, Sikh, Sri Lankan, Thai and Vietnamese. According to US Census Data, the Asian American population consists of these percentages of ethnicities: 23.8% Chinese, 20.4% Filipino, 12.3% Japanese, 11.8% Asian Indian, 11.6% Korean and 8.9% Vietnamese. Seventy percent of US Asians are immigrants who entered the US during one of three distinct immigration waves: before 1975, between 1975-1979, and 1980 or later. Most Asian Americans who have arrived since 1965 still live in ten large metropolitan areas. In 1996, an estimated four in ten Asian Americans lived in California. These US Asian-born individuals emigrated from countries with the overall lowest breast cancer rates in the world.

14. Ethnic Communities
damage suffered by korean americans suggested that sai-gu was a model-minoritymyth backlash where korean americans took the hit for all asian americans.
http://www.capaa.wa.gov/koreanamericans.html

15. The White House Initiative On Asian Americans And Pacific Islanders
Gaelic. Today, korean americans live throughout the United States,representing one of our largest asianAmerican populations. As
http://www.aapi.gov/events/koreancent.htm
The javascript used on this site for creative design effects is not supported by your browser. Please note that this will not affect access to the content on this web site.
President Bush's Proclamation on the Centennial of Korean Immigration to the United States
For a printer-friendly version, download the PDF File By the President of the United States of America
A Proclamation
From every corner of the world, immigrants have come to America to discover the promise of our Nation. On January 13, 1903, the first Korean immigrants to the United States arrived in Honolulu, Hawaii, on the SS Gaelic. Today, Korean Americans live throughout the United States, representing one of our largest Asian-American populations. As we commemorate the centennial anniversary of Korean immigration to the United States, we recognize the invaluable contributions of Korean Americans to our Nation's rich cultural diversity, economic strength, and proud heritage.
For the past century, Korean immigrants and their descendants have helped build America's prosperity, strengthened America's communities, and defended America's freedoms. Through their service in World War I, World War II, the Korean Conflict, the Vietnam War, and other wars, Korean Americans have served our Nation with honor and courage, upholding the values that make our country strong.

16. This Page Does Not Exist Anymore
Includes History of korean Art and korean American artists´ archive. the museumtells the story of Japanese americans around the Collection of asian Art.
http://www.universes-in-universe.de/america/us_asia/english.htm
Universes in Universe - Worlds of Art
This page does not exist anymore.
to the main page

[after 5 seconds you will be forwarded authomatically]

17. Diese Seite Existiert Nicht Mehr
Translate this page asian americans / Asien in USA Verzeichnisse, Überblick Asia and asian American ResourcesAsiatische und Museen, Sammlungen korean American Museum of Art and
http://www.universes-in-universe.de/america/us_asia/
Universes in Universe - Welten der Kunst
Diese Seite existiert nicht mehr.
zur Startseite

[nach 5 Sekunden werden Sie automatisch weitergeleitet]

18. UC Davis News & Information :: News Services : Asian Americans
talk about current events and issues for korean americans. the 100th anniversary ofkorean immigration. Contact Richard Kim, asian American Studies, (530) 754
http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/services/Asian_American_issues.lasso
This service is provided by UC Davis News Service, 530-752-1930 Current News Agriculture Business/Government/
Law
...
UC Davis experts: Asian Americans
The University of California, Davis, has campus experts available to provide commentary related to Asian American topics. If you are looking for sources on any related topics, please contact Susanne Rockwell, News Service, (530) 752-9841, sgrockwell@ucdavis.edu , or Julia Ann Easley, News Service, (530) 752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu.
Pane thnicity
Sociologist Dina Okamoto documents patterns of Asian American panethnicity by looking at rates of collective action, organizational formation and intermarriage. She looks at the ways in which labor market processes, such as competition and occupational segregation, affect pan-Asian efforts. Okamoto studies race and ethnicity on a broader scale as well as immigration issues. She also researches occupational sex segregation and how individual characteristics, such as marital status and whether or not one has children, affect women's occupational choices. Contact: Dina Okamoto, (530) 752-6772, dkokamoto@ucdavis.edu

19. PoliticalCircus.com - Asian Pacific American Politics - Asian Americans Prefer P
participating in the poll (67%), followed by South asian americans (16%) (Indian,Pakistani, Bangladeshi and IndoCaribbean), korean americans (10%), Filipino
http://www.politicalcircus.com/archive/article_1045.shtml
Search for in Entire Site APA Heritage Month PoliticalCircus Audio PoliticalCircus Bookstore PoliticalCircus Comics PoliticalCircus Diaries Report: On the Ballot Report: RingLeaders Report: Roll Call Alert Report: S.A.Y. Tools: Activism Census Civil Rights Community Development Economy Education Environment Hate Crimes Health Immigration Language Rights Legal Letters to the Editor Racial Profiling Redistricting Terrorism Youth About Sept. 11 Anniversary Top 30, Under 30 Home About Support Submit ... Feedback
EXCLUSIVE FEATURES
Today's Front Page

APA Heritage Month

PoliticalCircus Audio

PoliticalCircus Bookstore
...
About

HOT TOPICS
Census

Civil Rights

Community Development
Economy ... Youth Report: On the Ballot News Asian Americans Prefer Pataki Nov 11, 2002 By RPG Newswire NEW YORK CITY (RPG Newswire) - Over 3,000 Asian American voters, responding to a multilingual exit poll at 16 sites in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, demonstrated strong support for New York State Governor George Pataki, with voters citing jobs and the economy as the major factor influencing their vote. 19% of those surveyed voted for the first time, reflecting the large proportion of new citizen voters in the Asian American community.

20. Sa-I-gu - Viewing Race Film
rioters were black. The korean minority became a scapegoat for feelingsabout all asian americans in these troubled times. Before SaI
http://www.viewingrace.org/browse_sub.php?film_id=383&subject_id=10

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 1     1-20 of 94    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter