Uchicago beijing summer program




















The Center in Beijing provides a number of resources to aid UChicago students seeking internship opportunities in China, including the links below.

Another core Beijing summer internship initiative is the Jeff Metcalf Science Research Internship, in which students are placed at biological sciences or other research labs; past interns have worked with top international professors in fields ranging from genetics to paleontology these internships culminate in an annual student symposium.

Students can also conduct independent research at the Center, as well as work with mentors and professors onsite. For those engaged in internships with outside organizations, including Chinese companies, NGOs, and research labs, the Center functions as a home base.

Throughout the summer, the Center hosts academic conferences, alumni receptions and speaker events, many of which student interns are welcome to attend. So robots came up in the law and econ class. By teaching the class like a UChicago course to local high school students, Professor Leitzel explained the importance of this experience, both for himself and his students. Well, students would take other classes.

You feel less fungible in this Beijing circumstance as a teacher. The feedback I got from the parents was very generous.

It was something they would have had trouble getting elsewhere. Immediately after the Arts and Sciences program, the Pre-Orientation program hosted 17 incoming UChicago 1st year students, giving them a taste of what classes in Hyde Park will be like, as well as exposing them to culture and life in Beijing.

The readings were sometimes difficult, but in-class discussion was very lively and rewarding. I think the students were quite good at stitching together the ideas in what they read with the architecture and history of places we visited. To supplement their courses, the program took students to visit several locations in the city, such as the Dongyue and Baiyun Guan temples, the Urban Planning and Beijing Capitol Museums, among other trips.

Several hundred years ago, Pingyao was a financial center with a lot of wealthy families, and much of the old architecture is still there.

We all learned a lot on that trip. As the final student program in , the East Asian Civilizations program welcomed 17 UChicago undergraduate students to spend the autumn quarter in Beijing to complete their Civilizations core requirement. Students not only learned about late imperial Chinese history and issues of social inequality in modern Beijing, but also experienced the different historical artistic representations of Tokyo as an urban center. In addition, students took Chinese language courses, according to their respective levels, taught by local Renmin University lecturers.

To help students practice their Mandarin, the program paired them with language partners, who were current Renmin University students. They also made a special trip to the Ministry of Commerce where they were able to ask questions about the bureau. Students also participated in a number of Metcalf Science Internships based in Beijing.

These tests took a look at how people categorize and make decisions based on Mandarin, their native language and English, their foreign language. Chicago in Beijing Students relaxing during an excursion News Summer at the Center started off in mid-June with the arrival of 20 UChicago college students, who came to participate in the eight-week intensive Chicago in Beijing Summer Chinese Language Program.

The group was led by UChicago senior lecturers Youqin Wang and Fangpei Cai, who have been teaching and developing the program for ten years. The lecturers were supported by four local graduate students, who major in teaching Chinese as a second language. In addition to their intensive study of the Chinese language, students went on excursions each weekend to local cultural sites, gaining exposure to Chinese culture.

About a week after the start of the Chinese Language Program, more students arrived at the Center to work as Metcalf interns. Spurred by their different professional interests, they are found in different industries and academic fields. Some work as interns at financial companies while others focus on traditional Chinese medicine, film production, promotion of cultural exchange, sustainability and environmental governance, paleontology lab work and still others work in a hospital or contemporary art gallery.



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