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Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education

Committed to making Stanford scholarship on global issues accessible to K–12 and community college educators and students.

Lesson Plans & Teaching Resources

We draw upon Stanford University's diverse research, top faculty, and best scholarship to develop effective lesson plans and teaching resources on international topics.

Professional Development for Teachers

We run free teacher PD throughout the year, including summer institutes for middle school and high school teachers, a fellowship for community college instructors, and half-day seminars on global issues.

Online Courses for Students

We introduce college-level scholarship on global issues to high school students in the United States, Japan, and China through interactive, synchronous online courses.
Legacies of the Vietnam War unit cover

Curriculum Spotlight: Legacies of the Vietnam War

The 20-year war in Vietnam was a prolonged and devastating conflict. In its aftermath, South Vietnamese civilians fled from the Communist takeover on perilous boat journeys that led to the formation of diasporic communities.

"Divided Memories" in the classroom

"Divided Memories" in the classroom

Spotlight: Comparing History Textbooks from China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States

SPICE develops curriculum units on a variety of global topics and themes. In this video, high school teacher Saya McKenna uses our "Divided Memories" curriculum unit in her senior history class. Watch her students critically examine perspective, bias, and historical narrative by comparing history textbook excerpts from five different societies.

Stanford Talisman at Baccalaureate

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

Envisioning and educating for a more just and inclusive future.

Featured Lesson Plans

Our lesson plans are content-rich, standards-aligned, and backed by the best Stanford scholarship available.

nk kids

Uncovering North Korea

North Korea remains one of the most misunderstood and misrepresented countries in the United States. American students largely remain uneducated about North Korea, lacking the proper context with which to understand and interpret today's current events. This curriculum unit seeks to fill this gap and strives to bring more accurate information and objectivity to the study of North Korea in U.S. high schools and beyond.
Venezuelan students protest

A Whisper to a Roar

The documentary film "A Whisper to a Roar" tells the heroic stories of courageous democracy activists in five countries around the world—Egypt, Malaysia, Ukraine, Venezuela and Zimbabwe—who risk everything to bring freedom to their people. The film's companion teacher’s guide provides materials that supplement the information and issues explored in the documentary, filmed by award-winning filmmaker, Ben Moses.
divmem textbooks

Divided Memories: Comparing History Textbooks

This unit asks students to examine prevalent history textbooks from five Pacific Rim societies and compare their coverage of sensitive historical episodes in the 20th century. As students analyze, compare, and contrast different history textbooks, they are forced to confront some large questions of history—including the possible bias of their own historical knowledge—and encouraged to become more critical consumers of information.

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