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MIT prof uses own experience to develop CD-ROM for multi-cultural students

Professor Shigeru Miyagawa shows his new StarFestival CD-ROM and book. The program is based on his experience as a child immigrant from Japan, trying to live in two worlds.
Caption:
Professor Shigeru Miyagawa shows his new StarFestival CD-ROM and book. The program is based on his experience as a child immigrant from Japan, trying to live in two worlds.
Credits:
Photo / Donna Coveney

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- MIT Professor Shigeru Miyagawa has built a virtual new world inspired by his boyhood experiences of alienation as a newcomer to the United States and by his adult experiences as a teacher, world traveler and designer of educational technology.

This virtual world is called "StarFestival," an interactive, multimedia CD-ROM program for children in grades K through 12. StarFestival explores the specifics of Professor Miyagawa's personal life and family history in Japan. The educational goal is to help young people explore personal and general issues relevant to immigration and bi-cultural identity.

The Miyagawa family moved to the US when the professor was 10 years old. He recalls vividly his feelings of loneliness, confusion and self doubt as a young teenager in Durham, NC, and Tuscaloosa, Ala. The educational goal of StarFestival is to help young people explore personal and general issues relevant to immigration and bi-cultural identity.

"You see kids struggling with this split: I want to be an American, but I don't want to give up my identity," said Dr. Miyagawa, who is a professor of Japanese language and culture, linguistics and foreign languages and literatures. He believes the message of StarFestival will resonate with American students, no matter where they're from. "I want the kids to come away knowing it's OK to come from two places," he said.

The CD-ROM itself opens the day after the Star Festival, an annual celebration in Hiratsuka, Professor Miyagawa's home town in Japan. The story line, tracing Professor Miyagawa's personal, family and national history in Japan, leads students to discover family photos, maps and even to tour the Miyagawa's home, workplaces and visit a Shinto shrine.

As students progress through the program, Professor Miyagawa's experiences, ranging from "painfully autobiographical" to humorous to poignant, invite deeper understanding of Japanese culture and more general curiosity about a student's own roots.

StarFestival, which is narrated by George Takei (aka Mr. Sulu of "Star Trek"), earned Best of Show honors at the 1997 MacWorld Exposition. The CD-ROM, which has been upgraded to run on PCs and Macs, is accompanied by a detailed curriculum produced by the Boston Children's Museum.

StarFestival brings Professor Miyagawa's two worlds into a classroom where students like himself may be wondering, "Who am I? Am I American or Asian? American or Russian?"

"This is a dream come true," he said. "I wanted to use my own life to communicate to young people certain things about cultural identity.

"I lived the first 35 years of my life struggling with who I am."

USED BY 80 SCHOOLS

Last spring, 80 schools throughout the US implemented pilot educational programs about "Star Festival." The whole program has been adopted by the Boston Public Schools for use in all 210 first grade classrooms for the school year 2000-2001.

Commenting on behalf of the Boston Public Schools, Deborah Washington, senior program coordinator for social studies, said, "New standards in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in history and social studies have made it necessary for (us) to engage students. Everything I would want to happen in a classroom &endash; inquiry, reading, discovery and comprehension &endash; takes place in the StarFestival program."

"StarFestival illustrates the powerful potential for collaborations between humanistic expertise and high technology to revolutionize what takes place in our schools," said Professor Henry Jenkins, the Ann Fetter Friedlaender Professor of Humanities and director of the Comparative Media Studies Program at MIT. "The project is flexible and substantive enough to be used by students at all levels -- from kindergarten to college. We are all very proud of what Shigeru Miyagawa has been able to accomplish here and hope that it sets a standard for future MIT projects in humanistic computing."

"Shigeru Miyagawa's StarFestival project is absolutely relevant to the new cultural and linguistic realities of our schools," said Professor Isabelle de Courtivron, head of foreign languages and literatures and Director of the Center for Bilingual/Bicultural Studies at MIT.

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