Elementary Level Resources—China
GEOGRAPHY—Maps & Mapping
Lesson Idea Journey to China!
Have students make passports that will be stamped as they enter China. Then, on a large world map, students can plot their journey to China.
Basic Points of Interest on the Geography of East Asia [East Asia in Geographic Perspective, Asia for Educators]
Short overview. Part of a larger unit on East Asia's Geography.
Maps & Images East Asia in Geographic Perspective [Asia for Educators]
Teachers seeking maps and other visual materials on landscape and culture are encouraged to consult this teaching module on East Asia's geography.
Maps Outline Maps of China (can be used as overlays) [Asia for Educators]
What’s in a Name? Chinese Rivers, Cities, and Provinces [Asia for Educators]
A translation exercise with the names of Chinese rivers, cities, and provinces.
Lesson Plan Mapping Perceptions [Asia Society]
For grades 3-5. In this lesson plan students map their own neighborhoods and describe what is and is not included on a map. They then look at historical and contemporary maps (of China, in this case) and compare and contrast the use of scale, orientation, etc. with their own maps to understand how to read and utilize different types of maps.
GEOGRAPHY—Rice Production
Lesson Idea Rice Cultivation
Have students research and discuss the stages of rice cultivation and compare wet-rice and dry-rice techniques. Discuss how climate determines which crops are grown around the world.
GEOGRAPHY—Seeing China
Images Photographs of China for the Classroom [Asia for Educators]
GEOGRAPHY—Food and Geography
Ordering a Chinese Meal [Asia for Educators]
An opportunity for students to explore the relationship between diet and geography.
Food and Geography [Asia for Educators]
Short reading and questions for discussion about different Chinese food regions.
Lesson Idea Chopsticks
Have students practice using chopsticks. Disposable chopsticks wrapped in paper are available from any Chinese restaurant with a takeout order of dishes students can try. Discuss what countries use chopsticks as eating utensils. [Answer: China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam — the countries that form the East Asian cultural sphere. They also share Confucian thought, Buddhism, and the use of Chinese characters at some point in their histories.] Note that in many other countries of South, Southeast, and West Asia the custom is to eat with one hand, often using breads to scoop food.
LANGUAGE—Calligraphy
The Chinese Language [Asia for Educators]
This overview of the Chinese language, both spoken and written, includes an introductory reading for teachers; a pronunciation guide to Mandarin Chinese; and a reading about the history, pronunciation, and writing system of the Chinese language.
Chinese Calligraphy [Asia for Educators]
This introduction includes a reading discussing the various styles, techniques, and materials of Chinese calligraphy; two calligraphy exercises for the classroom; and discussion questions.
LANGUAGE—Place Names
Appreciating Chinese Place Names [Asia for Educators]
An explanation of Chinese place names.
LANGUAGE—Numbers
Chinese Calligraphy, the Art of Writing [China Institute]
Students will gain an understanding of the Chinese characters they see all over the city.
CULTURE—Confucianism
See also "Arts of China: Teaching Toolkit" under Art for art-based lessons on Confucianism.
Understanding Filial Piety [China Institute]
This lesson will explore the Chinese value of xiao, or filial piety, through a discussion of selections from the Analects and Mencius and an activity based on The Twenty-four Paragons of Filial Devotion.
Around the Globe: China Grades [PBS LearningMedia]
The Around the Globe: China collection allows students to take a virtual trip to China to learn more about China's society and culture, as well as the art of China through the centuries. Explore significant events in Chinese history, the history of U.S.-China relations, and the experiences of Chinese Americans through videos, images, documents, and lesson plans. Play some games and learn about China's history and culture with video clips from The Story of China.
CULTURE—Festivals
The Lunar New Year: Rituals and Legends [Asia for Educators]
This overview of the Lunar New Year in Chinese culture discusses the lunar calendar and various customs related to food, family, ancestors, and popular gods.
Lesson Idea Lunar New Year
Have students research and present the significance of the Kitchen God, Ancestors, red envelopes, oranges, firecrackers, and cleaning the classroom as they relate to the Lunar New Year. Students can also research and compare other important Chinese festivals, including the Lantern Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Hungry Ghost Festival, and Mid-Autumn or Moon Festival, as well as Chinese festival foods.
Lesson Plan Animals of the Chinese Zodiac [EDSITEment, National Endowment for the Humanities]
For grades K-3. In this lesson plan, students will learn about the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac. In the process, they will learn about Chinese culture, as well as improve reading, writing, and researching skills.
Lesson Plan Lions, Dragons, and Nian: Animals of the Chinese New Year [EDSITEment, National Endowment for the Humanities]
For grades K-3. In this lesson, students will study the differences between Eastern and Western dragons and discover why Eastern dragons are associated with the Chinese New Year. They will also learn about dragon dancers and lion dancers in the New Year’s parade and discover that firecrackers are set off to drive off evil spirits.
Lesson Plans Chinese Dragon: A Powerful Metaphor in Chinese Cultural History [Primary Source]
This curriculum unit includes several lessons, classroom activities, a slide show, as well as web and bibliographic links. It uses the motif of the dragon in Chinese folklore to discuss aspects of Chinese literature, mythology, and political history. This unit was designed by a librarian to be used by classroom teachers in cooperation with library-media specialists.
Chinese New Year: Lai-See Envelopes [Allen Art Museum]
Lai-See envelopes are typically given to children on Chinese New Year. Some contain money for candy or gifts and are always a special treat on this festive occasion! Students will learn about this holiday and make their own envelopes and Chinese coins!
Chinese New Year: Paper Lanterns [Allen Art Museum]
Students will learn about Chinese New Year, the Chinese zodiac, and some of the traditions of the holiday. Students will make their own paper lanterns in celebration of the Lantern Festival, the closing of the 15-day celebration.
Nian the Beast: A Lunar New Year Story [Asian Art Museum, San Francisco]
Watch a Lunar New Year story about a beast named Nian.
New Year Investigations: Tablescapes [Asian Art Museum, San Francisco]
Students compare and contrast the different ways in which people commemorate the passing of a year by interviewing their families, creating a tablescape, and sharing their traditions with their classmates.
CULTURE—Choosing Names
Chinese Names [Asia for Educators]
A short study of Chinese naming conventions.
Exercise What’s in a Name? Chinese Rivers, Cities, and Provinces [Asia for Educators]
A translation exercise with the names of Chinese rivers, cities, and provinces.
CULTURE—Homes and Gardens
Yin Yu Tang: A Chinese Home [Peabody Essex Museum]
The Yin Yu Tang House is an exquisite example of traditional architecture from the Province of Anhui. The house was purchased in 1997 by the Peabody Essex Museum, dismantled by skilled Chinese craftsmen, and shipped piece by piece to its new home in Salem, Massachusetts. It was lived in continually by eight generations of the Huang family until 1980. The Yin Yu Tang House allows students to see an actual Chinese home, a unique primary source. On this website students will explore the house until they know its rooms, its furnishings, the family, and their daily lives. Creating a Family Tree of the Huang Family and a parallel timeline of the tumultuous events going on beyond walls of the Yin Yu Tang offers students a rich opprtunity to examine history through a primary source and a rich personal family history.
Houses and Gardens [Asia in Art, Asia for Educators]
A curated list of online museum resources on Asian houses and gardens.
Understanding Filial Piety [China Institute]
This lesson will explore the Chinese value of xiao, or filial piety, through a discussion of selections from the Analects and Mencius and an activity based on The Twenty-four Paragons of Filial Devotion.
Around the Globe: China Grades [PBS LearningMedia]
The Around the Globe: China collection allows students to take a virtual trip to China to learn more about China's society and culture, as well as the art of China through the centuries. Explore significant events in Chinese history, the history of U.S.-China relations, and the experiences of Chinese Americans through videos, images, documents, and lesson plans. Play some games and learn about China's history and culture with video clips from The Story of China.
CULTURE—Clothing: Design and Symbolism
Imperial Silks (of the Qing Dynasty) [Minneapolis Institute of Arts]
An overview, plus 14 related examples of court attire from the Manchu period, all with descriptions.
Rank and Style: Power Dressing in Imperial China [Pacific Asia Museum]
Includes a glossary of textile terms and symbols, a chronology, discussion questions, and a reading list.
Chinese Lucky Numbers [ChinaTravel Facts]
Numbers in China range between auspicious and ominous mainly depending on the similarity between its pronunciation and that of another word which carries a positive or negative connotation.
CULTURE—Games
Asian Games: The Art of Contest [Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution]
A fun interactive website about games invented in Asia. Four types of games are presented: 1) Tossing & Turning; 2) War & Territory; 3) Power & Dexterity; 4) Memory & Matching.
HISTORY—General
Lesson Plans China Source: Resources for Teachers [Primary Source & Harvard University Asia Center]
Primary Source and Harvard University have created a series of slideshows with lesson plans on Chinese dynasties. Many of them are suitable for upper-elementary level students. The link above will bring up a Harvard University Pin System login page. To access these resources, please select “XID Login” under login type, then enter “primary_source” under Login ID and “beijing” under PIN/Password.
HISTORY—Confucius & Confucianism
Classroom Exercise Confucianism: Understanding and Applying the Analects of Confucius [Education About Asia]
Download PDF on page.
What Did Confucius Say? [Asia for Educators]
A short background reading about Confucius the person and his writings, with links to selections from the Confucian Analects.
Understanding Filial Piety [China Institute]
This lesson will explore the Chinese value of xiao, or filial piety, through a discussion of selections from the Analects and Mencius and an activity based on The Twenty-four Paragons of Filial Devotion.
Around the Globe: China Grades [PBS LearningMedia]
The Around the Globe: China collection allows students to take a virtual trip to China to learn more about China's society and culture, as well as the art of China through the centuries. Explore significant events in Chinese history, the history of U.S.-China relations, and the experiences of Chinese Americans through videos, images, documents, and lesson plans. Play some games and learn about China's history and culture with video clips from The Story of China.
HISTORY—The Han Dynasty (206 BCE-220 CE)
Tomb Treasures: Explore a Tomb from China's Han Dynasty [Asian Art Museum, San Francisco]
Explore a virtual tomb Tomb Treasures exhibition and assembled using photography and reference material provided by the Nanjing Museum, the Tomb Treasures 3D Experience begins with an aerial view of a reconstructed Han Dynasty royal mausoleum; the burial mound is lifted to reveal Tombs 1 and 2 prior to presenting an interactive 3D of Tomb 1. Explore 12 different areas of the tomb, where different objects were discovered.
How to Identify a Buddha [Asian Art Museum, San Francisco]
The earliest surviving representations of the Buddha date from hundreds of years after his death, so they are not portraits in the usual sense. Buddha images vary greatly from place to place and period to period, but they almost always show these conventional features...
HISTORY—The Liao (907-1125) and The Song (960-1279)
The Song Dynasty in China: Life in Urban China Seen through a 12th-century Scroll [Asia for Educators]
Teaching module with maps and images covering economics, technology, urban life, society, and international affairs during China's Song dynasty. An advanced unit more appropriate for upper-elementary students.
HISTORY—Marco Polo (1254-1324) in China
In the Footsteps of Marco Polo: A Journey through the Met to the Land of the Great Khan [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
Follows the 24,000-mile journey of Marco Polo (1254-1324) from Italy through the Middle East and Central Asia to China and the court of Khubilai Khan. With maps and images of art objects.
Suggested questions for discussion: 1) Marco Polo came from Venice, the most sophisticated city in Europe at the time. What did he find in China that impressed him? 2) How was Marco Polo able to travel through such a vast region under Mongol control?
Lesson Plan Marco Polo Takes A Trip [EDSITEment, National Endowment for the Humanities]
For grades K-3. During the Middle Ages, most people in Europe spent their entire lives in the village where they were born. But in the 13th century, a young Italian named Marco Polo traveled all the way to China! In this lesson, students will learn about the remarkable travels of Marco Polo.
Lesson Plans On the Road with Marco Polo [EDSITEment, National Endowment for the Humanities]
For grades 3-5. Lesson 1 of 8 (see "Related on EDSITEment" and links below for other lessons). Students will become Marco Polo adventurers, following his route to and from China in order to learn about the geography, local products, culture, and fascinating sites of those regions. Students will record their “journey” by creating journal entries, postcards, posters, and maps related to the sites they explore. 1) A Boy in 13th-century Venice; 2) From Venice to Hormuz; 3) From Hormuz to Kashgar; 4) Crossing the Deserts of China; 5) Marco Polo in China; 6) Sea Voyage to India; 7) From Hormuz to Venice; 8) Homecoming.
Lesson Plan Silk Road/Trading Good & Currency [EDSITEment, National Endowment for the Humanities]
Students will explore concepts such as bartering, trade, and consumerism as they study the Silk Road. Students will also learn about the evolution of Chinese currency as it relates to the trade along the Silk Road. Students will relate learning experiences to modern day consumerism and create a replica of a Chinese coin that might have been used for trade along the Silk Road.
See also "Arts of China: Teaching Toolkit" under Art for art-based lessons on the Silk Road.
HISTORY—The Ming Voyages (1405-1433)
The Ming Voyages [Asia for Educators]
Unit discussing Admiral Zheng He's voyages during the Ming dynasty, the preparation of his fleet, and the political and social problems in Ming China that brought these expeditions to a close. With discussion questions and activities for students.
The Investigating the “Forbidden” in the Forbidden City [China Institute]
This lesson is intended to teach students about the concept of forbidden spaces through an interactive, hands-on activity based on the history and design of the Forbidden City. Students will use primary sources to discuss how different spaces in the Forbidden City's outer courts and living quarters evoke different feelings. From this class, students will learn elements of Chinese symbology, architecture, and cosmological principles as well as more general concepts of forbidden space.
HISTORY—The Qing Dynasty (1644-1912)
Interactive Unit The Emperor and His Role in Qing Dynasty China [Asia for Educators]
In the following units, students can view life in China in the 1700s by viewing large hand-scrolls painted by artists of the time as documentaries of two emperors’ (Kangxi and Qianlong) inspection tours of the realm. Interactive viewing enlarges the images of people and life (zoom in to and select pins to read captions) along the rivers and in the cities of 17th- and 18th-century China.
- The Grand Canal: the Qianlong Emperor Entering the City of Suzhou on the Grand Canal
- The Emperor’s Role in Overseeing Flood Control
See the Qianlong emperor watching the workers at the site where the Huai River and the Yellow River meet. - The Kangxi Emperor Visits the Silk Commissioner
Includes a look inside the rooms of the Silk Commissioner’s home in Suzhou (see pin on far left). - The Emperor and the Cosmic Order: The Kangxi Emperor’s Visit to Mt. Tai
Select third pin fron the left on the scroll guide; the emperor’s party is just below and to the left. - Merchants, Shops, and City Life in China in the 1700s
Get up-close views of the shops, cafés, and street life of 18th-century Suzhou.
SCIENCE—Inventions
Chinese Inventions: Can You Name Them? [PDF] [Asia for Educators]
Short descriptions of key Chinese inventions or items of Chinese origin from throughout history that contribute to our daily existence, including silk, paper, porcelain, tea, and the compass.
Secrets of Lost Empires: China Bridge [NOVA, PBS]
Companion website to a 2000 PBS program documenting the “effort by a NOVA-assembled crew of scholars and timber framers to design and build a Chinese bridge known only from an ancient painting [the Beijing qingming scroll].” Includes a reading, “China's Age of Invention,” that highlights many Song-dynasty inventions.
SCIENCE—Natural Science: Flora & Fauna
Classroom Activity Idea Silk: Raise Silkworms
Order the worms from an online vendor then have students observe and record the life cycle of the silkworm, learning scientific procedure in the process. Mature cocoons can be boiled and unraveled, revealing the silk. A set of lessons and resources for the classroom are available from Sue Kayton.
Classroom Activity Idea Bamboo: Grow Bamboo in the Classroom
Plants can be ordered from an online vendor (such as the Bamboo Sourcery, which also has extensive information about Bamboo). Have students research the uses of bamboo in China.
Classroom Activity Idea Pandas
Explore the Pandas of the National Zoo through their webcam and read addtional information on Giant Pandas.
Giant Panda Rescue: Primary Resource [National Geographic Kids]
This primary resource helps children to understand the needs, habitat and diet of giant pandas in the wild. Discover the kinds of difficulties that giant pandas encounter and the different means of help they need. What do pandas eat? How do newborn cubs stop their mums from squashing them? How many giant pandas are left in the wild?
Giant Pandas: Teachers Resource and Activity Guide [PDF] [Toronto Zoo]
Pictures, information and activities on the lives of pandas, for multiple grade levels.
Compare and Contrast Information from Multiple Sources - Wolong's Pandas [PBS Learning Media]
Students can compare and contrast information from three sources (including video) to determine the reasons that have contributed to the declining panda population
MATH—The Abacus (“Suanpan”)
Classroom Exercises Math Exercise on the Abacus (“Suanpan”) [PDF] [University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign]
An illustrated guide to using the abacus (“suanpan” in Chinese).
Video The Abacus: How to Use This Ancient Wonder [YouTube]
Video demonstrating both Chinese and Japanese versions of the abacus.
MATH—Tangrams
Classroom Exercises Tangrams [PDF] [University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign]
In old China, the pieces for this game-puzzle were sometimes made of ivory, hand carved and inlaid with gold and jade. It was played by royalty. With a puzzle pattern for students to make and solve.
Tangram Game [PBS Kids]
An interactive website where students can solve tangram puzzles.
Tangram Game [PDF] [PBS Kids]
Printable tangram download with example shapes. Also see their interactive online tangram game where students can solve tangram puzzles.
MATH—Magic Squares
Classroom Exercises Magic Squares [PDF] [University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign]
A “magic square” is a square divided into multiple additional squares or blocks, each block containing one number. It is said to be “magic” when the numbers in a line or row of blocks add up to the same number horizontally, vertically and diagonally. This introductory guide to “magic squares” includes some puzzles for students to solve.
Anything But Square: From Magic Squares to Sudoku [+Plus Magazine]
For upper-elementary students, a more in-depth explanation of the mathematical principles behind the “magic square” and related number puzzles.
LITERATURE—The Story of Monkey
Journey to the West (or The Tale of Monkey) with its immensitely populuar main charachter of the Monkey King, may be the most widely-read, known and dramatized story in China. The plot follows the Monkey King and his three companions as they accompany the Buddhist monk Xuanzang on his travels to India and back. The real Xuanzang (ca. 602-664) traveled west (hence the story's title), to reach India. There he found Buddhist sutras he would to bring back to China, where Buddhism was expanding in popularity as a relatively new, foreign religion.
Teaching Unit Magical Pilgrims on the Silk Roads: The Adventure in the “Cart-Slow Kingdom” from Journey to the West [PDF] [China Institute]
Unit R from the curriculum guide From Silk to Oil: Cross-cultural Connections along the Silk Roads, which provides a comprehensive view of the Silk Roads from the second century BCE to the contemporary period. Unit R begins on page 278 and provides the text of an episode from The Tale of Monkey. Students could enact this and other episodes with costumes and masks (see the Drama & Music section).
LITERATURE—Folktales
Teacher’s Guide Using Chinese Folktales in the Classroom [Education About Asia] Download PDF on page.
LITERATURE—Tang Poetry
Video Unit Tang Poetry [Asia for Educators]
Introduction to the poetry of the Tang dynasty (618-907), with links to poems by noted Tang poets Wang Wei (699-761), Li Bo (701-762), and Du Fu (721-770).
LITERATURE—New Titles
Freeman Book Awards [NCTA]
An annual list of the winning titles (see the elementary category) for the Freeman Book Award for Outstanding Children's Literature on East and Southeast Asia from the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA). Please refer also to Recommended Titles of children's books, by grade level, also on the NCTA site.
ARTS & CRAFTS—Art: Paintings
Painting Formats in East Asian Art [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
An introduction to the five major painting formats in East Asian art: 1) album; 2) fan; 3) handscroll; 4) hanging scroll; 5) screen.
Chinese Handscrolls [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
An overview of the Chinese handscroll format, with images of paintings from the Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties.
Landscape Painting in Chinese Art [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
A brief overview of landscape painting in Chinese art from the Tang dynasty to the present.
Arts of China – Teaching Toolkit [Brooklyn Museum]
Objects in the museums collection (dating from the Neolithic era to today) are featured in 12 lessons for 3rd grade teachers and students to explore Chinese art and culture. 3 sections — Geography and Environment (covering nature and symbolism); Believe Systems (with content on Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism); Global Exchange (with content on the Silk Road) — show how a variety of purposes (funerary, courtly, religious, poetic) combine to define traditional Chinese culture.
LESSON PLANS ArtFun Online Workshops [China Institute]
ArtFun Online Workshops are exciting art-making resources designed for all age groups to be used as an art class supplement or by families. Featuring different subjects, they introduce participants to Chinese culture and contain easy and fun guides that invite you to apply your skills to artistic projects. Currently, we are offering two classes: paper folding and ink painting.
Teaching China with the Smithsonian [Smithsonian Museum]
A collection of materials inspiring students to explore Chinese art, history, and culture. through featured museum objects, videos of art-making traditions, and supporting resources that link art to world history, social studies, and language arts. Designed to highlight key curricular themes, enhance cultural competency, and unveil endless paths for inquiry by focusing on artworks.
Brushpainting: Nature in Art (Video) [Asian Art Museum, San Francisco]
This video documents the Asian Art Museum's Nature in Art school program.
Understanding Decorative Motifs on Chinese Porcelain [China Institute]
This hands-on activity is designed to be an inexpensive way for students to learn and appreciate the cultural significance of select symbols as they appear on Chinese porcelains.
Lacquerware Boxes [Allen Art Museum]
Primitive lacquering was known in Japan as early as the third century B.C., but did not develop into a significant art form until the introduction of Chinese lacquering techniques in the seventh or eighth century A.D. Based upon the AMAM's own lacquerware document box, students will create their own versions as they study the history and techniques of lacquerware.
Comparative Sculpture [Allen Art Museum]
Throughout history artists in every culture and society have created sculpture of some kind. Sculptures come in many different shapes and sizes, are made using all kinds of materials and a variety of processes and techniques, and satisfy various purposes. Inspired by the book From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler by E.L. Konigsburg, students will compare several types of sculpture and create their own out of air-dry clay.
ARTS & CRAFTS—Crafts: Paper Cutting
Classroom Exercise Paper Cutting [PDF] [University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign]
Classroom Exercise Chinese Cut Outs: Learning About the History of Paper [Asia Society]
Classroom Exercise Fold a Paper Lotus Flower [Asian Art Museum, San Francisco]
ARTS & CRAFTS—General
Asia in Art - Resources [Asia for Educators]
Additional lesson plans and resources on art can be found on Asia in Art which can be explored by a number of categories, including country or region.
DRAMA & MUSIC—Drama: Masks and Puppets
Lesson Plan Peking Opera Masks [Allen Art Museum]
In this lesson students will be introduced to the Chinese Peking Opera and symbolism as it is used in such performances. Students will also explore stereotypes and relate such ideas to personal experiences. As a studio project, students will create their own masks in the style of Peking opera masks (both a 2D and 3D project are available).
Activity Ideas Masks for Performing Stories from Journey to the West [ChinaSprout]
Students can enact stories from Journey to the West (The Tale of Monkey) using masks such as these. See the Literature section for more on Journey to the West (The Story of Monkey).
Lesson Plan Shadow Puppet Plays: How did shadow puppetry share Chinese culture along the Silk Road? [The Kennedy Center]
In this 6-8 lesson, students will gain an understanding of the dynamics of trade in China along the Silk Road and the role of trade in urbanization throughout the Han, Tang, and Song dynasties. Students will create puppets, write, and produce shadow puppet performances about a historical event in Chinese history along the Silk Road.
Lesson Plan The Science of Shadow Puppets [The Kennedy Center]
For upper-elementary (grades 5-8). Through online learning tools and the creation of shadow puppets and plays, students will learn how light interacts with matter. This lesson serves as an introduction to the properties of light and its role in creating shadows. While using puppets created by students and performing shadow plays, students will learn, first-hand, what differentiates opaque, translucent, and transparent materials. They will also learn how light travels and how an object’s shadow is affected by the intensity and position of light in relation to both the object and the surface on which a shadow is cast.
DRAMA & MUSIC—Music
Flutes from Jiahu (ca. 7000–5700 BCE) [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
A brief discussion of the archaeological site of Jiahu, in Henan province, where fragments of 30 flutes were discovered. Six of these flutes represent the earliest examples of playable musical instruments ever found.
The Qin [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
An introduction to the qin, a type of zither that is “the most prestigious of China’s instruments.” Chinese lore holds that the qin dates back to the third millennium BCE.
The Pipa [The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
An introduction to the Chinese pipa, a four-string plucked lute that “descends from West and Central Asian prototypes and appeared in China during the Northern Wei dynasty (386–534).”
Lesson Plan Chinese Instruments [The Kennedy Center]
For grades K-4. After being exposed to and learning about different types of instruments (string, woodwind, and percussion) in traditional western music, students explore Chinese instruments through demonstration, research, and instrument making. Students present their findings formally to the class and participate in a musical performance. Because Chinese music is often used to tell a story, students will create an original story to reflect their musical experience.
Music of China [The Kennedy Center]
An audio series that “explore[s] unique aspects of Chinese music through sounds, performance and interviews.” Featuring three episodes on “the endangered music of the Yunnan peoples; the tradtional sounds of the pipa, bamboo flute, qin and other Chinese instruments; and the creative space between them, where sounds ancient and avant-garde intersect.”