To date, the Center offers general and elective courses to the University’s undergraduate students. Its Southeast Asian Emporiums 30 or SEA 30 is its most in-demand General Education course which enjoys consistent demand among students. It also offers elective courses on Japan Studies and the recently institutionalized Korea Studies which were conceptualized as interdisciplinary academic courses, much like SEA 30, that would cover various aspects of Japan and Korea and how the Filipino relates to these East Asian countries. The UPCIS Global Studies 197 course or GS 197 has been offering a range of interesting topics that are developed and redeveloped every semester. It includes courses on Japanese Traditional Performance Practices – Noh; Japanese Traditional Performance Practices – Bunraku; Global Gastronomy: Exploring the Universe of Food; A Bite of China: An Introduction to Chinese Culture and Society; Where Continents Connect: Mediterranean Cultures and Societies; Palestinian Justice, Settler-colonialism and State Violence Across the Globe; and even Cultures of Disaster: COVID-19. The GS 197 course was initiated to address the expanding interest of students on world issues as well as to serve as a “course incubator.”
The Center has also enjoyed fruitful collaborations with international university partners particularly with its Japanese counterparts, Yokohama National University, Ferris University, and Japan Women’s University. These collaborations produced multiple international student, faculty, and staff exchanges between the Philippines and Japan since 2011 particularly programmed under the Center’s active East and Southeast Asian Studies Division. More university partnerships are currently being pursued by the Center in Asia, Europe, and Latin America that will further contribute to its academics, research, and extension plans.
To date, the Center offers general and elective courses to the University’s undergraduate students. Its Southeast Asian Emporiums 30 or SEA 30 is its most in-demand General Education course which enjoys consistent demand among students. It also offers elective courses on Japan Studies and the recently institutionalized Korea Studies which were conceptualized as interdisciplinary academic courses, much like SEA 30, that would cover various aspects of Japan and Korea and how the Filipino relates to these East Asian countries. The UPCIS Global Studies 197 course or GS 197 has been offering a range of interesting topics that are developed and redeveloped every semester. It includes courses on Japanese Traditional Performance Practices – Noh; Japanese Traditional Performance Practices – Bunraku; Global Gastronomy: Exploring the Universe of Food; A Bite of China: An Introduction to Chinese Culture and Society; Where Continents Connect: Mediterranean Cultures and Societies; Palestinian Justice, Settler-colonialism and State Violence Across the Globe; and even Cultures of Disaster: COVID-19. The GS 197 course was initiated to address the expanding interest of students on world issues as well as to serve as a “course incubator.”
The Center’s extension work also records an expansive, vibrant, and productive collaboration with both international and local universities and institutions that produced conferences, symposia, public lectures, round-table discussions, film showings, open fora, and performances involving the Center’s students, faculty, and staff. The Center has also published its growing research outputs notably the Festchrift dedicated to its founding director, former Dean of the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy Dr. Consuelo Joaquin-Paz†. Today, it maintains a yearly forum that aims to showcase the learnings and takeaways of its undergraduate students from their international student exchange experiences in Japan with the Center’s partner universities, namely the Beyond Borders program.