22 December 2011

Thinking about the Japanese and American classrooms

Please enjoy an essay I wrote for a Japanese junior high school publication.  


It is a pleasure to have the opportunity to be an inside observer of the Japanese school system.  I have been an Assistant Language Teacher (ALT) in Hachinohe since July.  As an ALT I visit two junior high schools and four elementary schools.  Before coming to Japan I worked as an elementary school teacher in Seattle, Washington.  My experience in Japan has brought up occasions to compare and contrast the school systems, students and teachers.  It is evident to me that both have their strengths and weaknesses. In this essay I will discuss my observations regarding student backgrounds, attitudes, teaching and learning styles, and foreign language acquisition.
A major difference that sets Japanese classrooms apart from American classrooms is their almost complete homogeneity; most Japanese classrooms are made up of Japanese students.  As opposed to American classrooms that tend to be largely heterogeneous made up of students from many different cultures.  For example, my classroom last year had Caucasian, Nepali, African American, Japanese, Chinese, Vietnamese, Cambodian and Mexican students. The many backgrounds create a rich classroom community where students may learn from each other’s differences.  With differences there also arises differing expectations of the importance of education and the role of the teacher vs. parent in a child’s education. The American school system is faced with providing a safe, productive school environment while also responding to the challenges of a diverse population. In a Japanese classroom, students come from families with the same educational experience. Students expect to work hard, respect their teachers and participate as an active member in their school community.
If I were to pinpoint the most striking difference between school systems it would be the attitude of the students.  In Japanese schools I observe responsible, independent students working toward community goals.  This communal responsibility can be seen as early as first grade and continues through junior high school.  Japanese students are expected to clean their school, serve school lunch and be an active member of their school community.  Most of the students take their role seriously and responsibly clean, serve and participate with a positive attitude.  I have never seen responsibility and communal values exist as strongly in American schools.  I think individual teachers have achieved this in their own classrooms but it does not exist schoolwide.  It is interesting for me to witness a systematic expectation from a young age that students are part of their community and will act in a way to support everyone by cleaning, serving and participating. I think this communal responsibility stems from the homogenous population within Japanese schools. In American schools, teachers struggle to instill a communal responsibility in their students due to a lack of homogeneity in the population and school system at large.             
In American classrooms cooperative learning to discover the answer is often more prevalent than a stand and deliver rote learning style observed in many Japanese classrooms.  In a language classroom there must be time allotted to teaching the language and students must be committed to memorizing vocabulary and rules of the language.  Although there must also exist a time of creative production of the language for the memorization to do any good.  Students need opportunities to interact with each other and grapple with understanding the language.  I think this can be achieved through all four-language domains (reading, writing, listening and speaking) but producing the language through speaking and writing requires lots of practice.  I think this practice is best achieved through cooperative learning groups where students are given a task and the time to work together to create a story, write a letter or give a presentation, etc.  I would like to see cooperative learning used more in Japanese language classrooms.
I am impressed by Japanese students exposure to English beginning in early elementary school.  Many students begin learning basic phrases in first grade and it is required for fifth and sixth graders to learn English through regular classroom activities.  In elementary schools communication in English is the focus and most of the activities encourage the students to speak the language.  Then Japanese students move onto to junior high school and continue English through high school. I have observed that although students continue their study of English there is not an emphasis on speaking the language but instead on memorizing dialogues, reading and writing.  The interactive, creative part of language is stifled by the timidity of students and the teaching and learning styles of students and teachers.  On the one hand early exposure to a foreign language is a strength of the Japanese school system but it would be advantageous to incorporate more authentic speaking and listening opportunities as students continue their study of English in order to reach the goal of fluency.  In contrast the American school system is lacking opportunities for students to learn a foreign language at a young age.  Foreign language studies don’t begin until junior high school.  It is up to the individual parents to enrich their children with opportunities to learn a foreign language at a young age.  There are very few public schools that offer a foreign language program and the ones that do are popular and competitive to get into.  The Japanese emphasis on learning and communicating in English beginning in elementary school is a strength in their school system.  I am curious about how the current exposure to communicating in English in elementary school will affect student’s English fluency in the future. 
The time I have spent working in Japanese classrooms has impacted my thinking about education and school environments.  I look forward to returning to an American classroom and incorporating some of the communal values and responsibilities I have observed in Japan.  I want to share my travel experiences and Japanese language studies with my students.  It is my hope that I might influence them to study a foreign language (maybe Japanese) and seek out travel experiences. The classroom should be a rich environment for learning and socialization but traveling and living among other cultures can create lifelong learners and responsible world citizens. 

11 December 2011

Here and There


Usually I post the pictures we take with our camera but when we are out and about I always have my I-phone and I like to take pictures of random things that appeal to my eye.  These are some of my favorites that I have recently taken with my phone.  The first few are from Kyoto and the rest are in and around Hachinohe. 

These cute fox are for sale at the temple, I guess you can write a wish and pray it comes true.
Temple cats. 
I like to take walks along the river.  I watch ducks and swans but on this night I watched a cat balancing on the tree limbs.
Since we don't have a vehicle here, Todd moved our new couch with a dolly.  We moved it from my office to our apartment, about 1 km. Now we have a western size couch! It was getting difficult for me to sit in the Japanese size furniture which is practically on the ground. It is nothing special but so much more comfortable.



Our Canadian friends, Oliver and Lindsay.  Saturday we went shopping at a mall in Morioka, about an hour south of Hachinohe. It was fun to go to Starbucks and Christmas shop. 

The Hachinohe fish market.  The four of us went to buy fresh fish (yes, you can buy whale.)  You can buy fish, have it filleted then cook it on a grill in a restaurant in the market.  Unfortunately after picking out our fish we realized the restaurant was closed.  We ended up going to Oliver and Lindsay's to grill and eat the fish. Very fresh and tasty!  That night we also watched a total lunar eclipse on the shores of Hachinohe.  It was a clear night, lots of stars in the sky and a snow covered beach.  It was beautiful but freezing!!
Squid for sale at the fish market.  They catch a lot of squid in Hachinohe. I am not a fan.

07 December 2011

Kyoto: Tofuku-ji and Fushimi-inari


























The modern Kyoto.  The first picture is the Kyoto Tower, we could see it from our hotel room. We stayed in the Kyoto station area of the city.  The picture above is the Kyoto station decorated for Christmas.  Yes, they appear to celebrate Christmas in Japan.  It is very commercial with all of the stores decorated and playing Christmas music.  Japanese people give gifts to children and celebrate by eating KFC and cake?! I am not sure where these traditions originated but I assume it is some sort of mimicking of western traditions.                                                                                                              

An example of the people flocking to take a picture of the fall colors! A picture of someone taking a picture is the closest we could get.


As you can see, the fall colors at this temple were particularly vibrant! 







Despite the crowds we were able to relax in the sunshine of the zen gardens at Tofuku-ji temple. After a break, we headed fifteen minutes down the road to Fushimi-inari shrine.  It is famous for the long winding trail of tori gates.  We didn't have enough day light to hike up the mountain side through the gates but we enjoyed a portion of the trail. 

You may be wondering shrine vs. temple, what is the difference?  The temples are Buddhist where they worship Buddha and the shrines are Shinto where they worship many gods or spirits. In Japan most people practice a combination of the two beliefs adopting rituals from both. 
Fushimi-inari is the fox shrine, the fox is believed to be the patron of business (originally the god of rice).





In Japan, it is customary to give "omiyage" when you return from a trip.  Here I am shopping for omiyage to give to my coworkers. Usually omiyage is a small individually wrapped edible sweet. I bought fortune type cookies.
Goodbye Kyoto, we are off on the Shinkansen to Tokyo.  We stopped in Tokyo to enjoy a meal with Todd's friend Justin, our late Thanksgiving.  Then it was back to Hachinohe...until our next adventure!   

04 December 2011

Kyoto: Arashiyama

We spent our second day in Kyoto in the western area of Arashiyama.  We started the day with a delicious Starbucks chai tea latte, our first since September! They don't do chai in Japan.  We took a city bus out to the area, once again wall to wall tourists.  We started at the Tenryu-ji Zen temple, which had spectacular fall colors and gardens. Next we wandered through the bamboo grove and nearby park.  We ended up at the river and watched some brave people take boat rides in the cold.  Then it was onto the monkey park! The park has 120 Japanese snow monkeys. In order to reach the monkeys you have to hike a mountain about 20 minutes.  It was fun to be so up close with the monkeys. After feeding them and taking lots of pictures, we made it down the mountain and grabbed a bus to downtown. Our mission was to find an Irish pub. We were following the Lonely Planet recommendation and directions.  Japan cities aren't the easiest places to find specific locations with a rare street marked with a sign or numbers to show addresses.  But we found the pub and to our surprise they had several Oregon beers in addition to Japanese and Irish on tap.  Todd enjoyed the beer, I enjoyed the hummus (another favorite I hadn't had since July)!!          
A beautiful ginko tree in bright yellow!





We took a snack break to enjoy the temple pond. 























 
The glorious bamboo grove.


One mode of transport available in Kyoto.

"Children beware of the sleeping monkeys ?!" We can't read this sign but there were several signs warning not to stare at or touch the monkeys. Todd was taking a picture, looked too long and upset this monkey.

"Le petit singe," is Todd's nickname for me, he was comparing profiles.



You can feed the monkeys within an enclosed area, they sell peanuts, apples and chestnuts.  It was cute how their little hands grab the peanut right out of our hand.  Then they quickly open the shell, eat the nut, and beg for more.