K-12 Resources
The IAUNRC supports the creation of lesson plans and other materials that bring the IAUNRC's region into the classroom. Following is a selection of materials covering our region, some of which were produced in whole or in part by the IAUNRC. Where possible, the relevant Indiana Educational Standards are indicated. These materials are freely available for non-commercial use.
Spotlight on Inner Asia: The Bizarre Bazaar is one of the first classroom resource guides of its kind. This comprehensive guide to teaching about Inner Asia helps teachers navigate through this new and challenging territory. Though scarcely known in the West, the region has always been a place of multiple and often unimaginable interactions – of peoples, ideas, commodities, and beliefs – The Bizarre Bazaar.
The Central Asia Middle School Education Project, a joint project between Indiana University's School of Public and Environmental Affairs and the IAUNRC is a unit of lesson plans addressing the cultural and ecological “worlds” of Central Asia, specifically the countries of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan.
Environmental issues and economics are addressed in Common Pool Resources and the Aral Sea, a lesson plan designed for middle school students, but adaptable to higher or lower grade levels.
Introducing the Mongols is a PowerPoint based lesson produced by the IAUNRC. It includes a downloadable lesson plan and other resources.
Investigating Central Asia Through Maps, produced by Xpeditions at National Geographic, is one of many lessons in their series focusing on the national geography standards. This lesson is intended for 6th - 8th grade students.
PBS Frontline World offers a lesson plan addressing certain marriage practices in Kyrgyzstan that can be adapted for use in middle and high school classrooms. The lesson plan is supplemented with online streaming video clips.
Destination: Kyrgyzstan, produced by Peace Corps/Paul D. Coverdell World Wise Schools, is an online video resource . A study guide that can be used as the basis for lessons is available here from the US Department of Education.


