Talk about culture and education for elementary and high school principals

I gave a talk about education and culture on June 17, 2012 in front of a group of about one hundred principals of elementary and high schools in Seoul organized by the Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (서울시교육청). This “Principals Forum” was the first of its kind, a voluntary gathering of principals from around Seoul to exchange opinions on how education can be improved in Korea.

Emanuel talks with prinicipals about culture and education

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Technology, science and the odd case of evolution

Here is a recent discussion at Asia Institute on the decision in Korea to permit a textbook that purposely omits evolution (see “South Korea Surrenders to Creationist Demands”) The point I try to make is the absolute difference between science and technology, as the great Rudi Volti stressed. Confusing the two is one of the tragedies of our age.

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Wide-ranging talk about Korean literature at Seoul Selection

June 9, 2012

John Treat, Professor of Japanese literature at Yale University (from my original department of East Asian Languages and Literatures), Hank Kim, owner of Seoul Selection publishing, Gu-yong Lee president of  Korean Literary Management and the poet Seung Shin Lee met together on Saturday for a cup of coffee at Seoul Selection’s underground café near Gyungbok Palace.

Left to right: Gu-yong Lee, John Treat and Hank Kim.

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“과학기술 패러다임의 변화와 행정 ì²´ì œ” 시리즈1 패널 토론회

“과학기술 패러다임의 변화와 행정 체제” 시리즈1 패널 토론회

“The Paradigm Shift for Science and Technology & the Future Administrative Regime”

June 28, 2012 2:30-5:30 PM

National Assembly Library, Basement, First floor

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Asia Institute Gathering to talk about the Environment with Youth (Friday, June 15, 2012)

Asia Institute Gathering

Please do join us for an informal gathering for students to discuss this most critical topic:

What youth can do for the environment?”

Your presence would be greatly valued, and your suggestions as to what can meaningful responses to the environmental crisis.

(Hosted by Emanuel Pastreich, Professor of Humanitas College)

Friday, June 15

5 PM

Location Room #209 (second Floor) Neo-Renaissance Hall

Kyung Hee University (Hoegi-dong)

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Asia Institute Seminar “The Great Green Wall and the Fight against Desertification in China” JUNE 28, 2012

Asia Institute Seminar

 

 The Great Green Wall and the Fight against Desertification in China

Report to the Rio +20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development

 

Thursday, June 28, 2012

6:30-7:30 PM

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Asia Institute Seminar with Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, University of Illinois

“The future of Voice Recognition”

KOREA IT TIMES

 

Asia Institute Seminar with Mark Hasegawa-Johnson
 
Tuesday, May 29th, 2012
 

Professor Mark Hasegawa-Johnson received his Ph.D. from MIT in 1996 and serves as associate professor in the University of Illinois department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and a full-time faculty member in the Artificial Intelligence group at the Beckman Institute. His field of interest is speech production and recognition by humans and computers, including landmark-based speech recognition, integration of prosody in speech recognition and understanding, audiovisual speech recognition, computational auditory scene analysis, and biomedical imaging of the muscular and neurological correlates of speech production and perception. Professor Johnson is visiting Korea to meet with experts in academics and industry to discuss his research.

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Asia Institute Seminar with Professor Noam Chomsky (video)


Asia Institute Seminar

with

Professor Noam Chomsky

Department of Linguistics

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

“WHAT CAN YOUTH DO TO CHANGE THE WORLD?”

The Asia Institute held this Webinar with Professor Noam Chomsky of MIT on December 3, 2011 as a webinar between Seoul, Korea and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Professor Chomsky discussed how youth can effectively work to change the world and improve policies at both the local and international levels. He stressed the need for youth around the world to work together and to come up with their own solutions, saying repeatedly that the answer must come from students, not from him. When told that he was the leading progressive intellectual in the United States, he promptly replied, “I resign!”

There have been several Korean media interviews with Professor Chomsky over the years, but this seminar was the first time that Korean students, including those not fluent in English, were able to ask Professor Chomsky questions directly. This dialog between experts and young people is emblematic of the Asia Institute approach to contemporary issues. Professor Chomsky later remarked, “I much appreciated the opportunity.”

Video on Youtube: 

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3