先日、オットがThe Chronicle of higher educationで面白い記事を見つけたといって、メールで知らせてくる。このサイトは、アメリカの大学関係者によく利用され、大学での就職(教員、職員)公募の情報が豊富に掲載されていることで知られている。
12年計画で、文部科学省が留学生の人数を3倍枠に増やそうという改革案が紹介されており、少子化対策の一案ということで説明されている。
アメリカでは、9.11のテロ事件以来、留学生の数は減少し、各大学、大きな収入源となる留学生をどのようにリクルートし、確保するかが課題となっている。そのために、リクルーターを各国に送ったり、サービス向上に務めているが、日本の場合はどうなるのだろう。
このニュースに対して、いろいろなコメントが寄せされているが、反応を見てみたいもの。少し紹介してみると。。。http://chronicle.com/news/article/4899/japan-announces-plan-to-enroll-more-foreign-students
July 29, 2008
Japan Announces Plan to Enroll More Foreign Students
Tokyo — Japanese government officials announced today some details of an ambitious plan to nearly triple the country’s enrollment of foreign students, to 300,000 in 12 years, the Asahi Shimbun newspaper reported.
The plan, disclosed amid a looming enrollment crisis at Japanese universities, will ease visa restrictions, improve accommodations, increase Japanese-language teaching, and help foreign students find work in the country after graduation.
About 30 of Japan’s top universities will be designated as key centers for the “opening up of higher education to foreign students,” according to a joint announcement by the ministries of education, justice, and foreign affairs, and other bureaucracies. Specific details on each measure were not provided.
About 119,000 foreign students are now at Japanese universities, down from a peak of 122,000 in 2005. Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda pledged to raise the figure to 300,000 by 2020 in a January policy speech. But today’s statement, which includes proposals to seek funds in next year’s federal budget, is the first concrete sign that Japan’s slow-moving bureaucracy is gearing up to bring the plan to fruition. —David McNeill
Posted on Tuesday July 29, 2008 | Permalink |
Comments
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A word of caution. Students of Japanese universities are well-known to study very hard during h.s. for their entrance exams, and then do absolutely nothing while in college. I’ve spoken to may j-university professors who themselves claim that they aren’t “allowed” to fail students, and must pass them regardless of their in class performance…or attendance for that matter.
If you are a foreign student who wants to study Japanese, learn about the culture, and get international experience, this will be a great opportunity. If you’d like to learn practical skills, and have a career/profession when you return to your home country (after you realize that you will always be an outsider in Japan (gaijin), and will never fully accepted) then this may not be such a great idea.
It may be fun for a year or two to do an exchange, but be wary if you want to learn practical skills for a real career in a western country.
You’ve been warned…
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arigato