Bridging the Gap: How Walking, Healing, and Gardening Connect Universities with Migrants

Written by Tzu-Chi Ou. Traditional migration studies in Taiwan often treat migrants as mere statistics, leaving students feeling socially disconnected. To bridge this gap, a professor moved beyond the classroom through three hands-on experiments: student-led walking tours, art therapy to process emotional guilt, and a communal “immigrating garden.” These initiatives transform “the other” into a neighbour, fostering genuine empathy and mutual worth.

More than Education, Not Quite Foreign: The Politics of Taiwan’s Overseas Chinese Students

Written by Chiao-Yuan Jo Ko. Taiwan’s category of ‘overseas Chinese student’ may appear administrative, but it reflects a much longer political history. Tracing the system from the Cold War era to Taiwan’s democratisation, this article explores how education became tied to the ROC’s nation-building project, US geopolitical strategy, and shifting ideas of Chinese identity.

Learning Otherwise: Indigenous Experimental Education and Plural Pathways in Taiwan

Written by Tuyuq Rabay. This article examines Indigenous Experimental Education in Taiwan through an ethnographic vignette of an Atayal school’s pslkotas ritual. It argues that such programmes re-centre indigenous epistemologies through embodied, place-based, and spiritual pedagogy, while also revealing ongoing tensions with state curricula, structural inequalities, and settler-colonial legacies that shape education and identity.

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