Dr. Theodore Hsi-en Chen (1902-1991): Chinese American Education Pioneer and Founder of East Asian Studies at USC Main MenuIntroductionDr. Theodore Hsi-en Chen’s Life and Career at USCDr. Theodore Hsi-en Chen's ScholarshipDr. Theodore Hsi-en Chen and the China Society of Southern California (CSSC)Dr. Theodore Hsi-en Chen’s Legacy to the USC and the CommunityEvents and CelebrationArchives and ResourcesAbout the ProjectLi-Ping Chenc0e6a2c0a94a0c1771c94d579885876c547d45b5Tang Li94607ee88639079982d0344d02ff8ecdf7b6dc46
Dr. Chen and his wife standing in front of The Theodore Hsi-en Chen and Wen-hui Chen Room
1media/Scan 8_thumb.jpeg2023-02-02T10:30:02-08:00Li-Ping Chenc0e6a2c0a94a0c1771c94d579885876c547d45b5415881This room was dedicated to Dr. Chen and his wife “in recognition of their life-long contributions in East Asian education and culture and to the development of international education.”plain2023-02-02T10:30:04-08:00Li-Ping Chenc0e6a2c0a94a0c1771c94d579885876c547d45b5
This page has paths:
12023-01-27T17:21:42-08:00Li-Ping Chenc0e6a2c0a94a0c1771c94d579885876c547d45b5Coming to the United StatesLi-Ping Chen9Dr. Chen came to the United States for his graduate studies first at Columbia University and then at the University of Southern California where he obtained a doctoral degree in education in 1939. His wife, Wen-Hui Chen, also obtained a doctoral degree in Sociology from USC in 1952. Both of them taught at USC for many years.structured_gallery2023-02-03T09:24:17-08:00Li-Ping Chenc0e6a2c0a94a0c1771c94d579885876c547d45b5