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A lonely world: Japan's latest export: jaded students who have few hopes of finding fruitful careers at home.


NOZOMU SHINOZAKI'S STAY AT West Harbour in Auckland, New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. , was meant to be a respite from Japan. The 22-year-old from Yokohama, with his parents' support, enrolled in the New Zealand chapter of the International Columbus Academy The Columbus Academy is a private college-preparatory school in Gahanna, Ohio that offers education to students from pre-kindergarten to twelfth grade. It was founded in 1911 in Bexley, Ohio and moved to its current campus in 1968. , a non-profit group designed to help troubled Japanese teenagers. School director Kutso Kanamori had said years earlier that the academy was designed to offer students "a chance to experience childhood." But far from home, Shinozaki seems to have been more lost than ever. On February 27, he died from head injuries. Nine Japanese students have been charged with the young man's kidnapping and assault, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 news reports, and all but one entered New Zealand without visas. Kanamori is also in trouble for obstructing police justice.

Shinozaki's death highlights the dark side of Japan's penchant for overseas studying. A record number of Japanese students are heading abroad these days, but many of them are doing so because of a complete lack of hope and opportunity in their homeland.

The New Zealand murder raises some ugly issues. New Zealand's immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. , health and education officials were working to understand how the Japanese students entered the country and how the school existed in the first place, since it was not registered. On March 5, New Zealand politician Winston Peters said the death of the student was a sign that immigration was "out of control." Earlier, Peters said New Zealand is being used as "a dumping ground for Japan's troubled youths."

For decades young Japanese have studied on their parents savings in the US, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the UK. Typically, students would study English or professional disciplines for a few months, then head back to Japan to jobs that would put their precious skills to work. But now, the continuing slump back home has prompted more students to try to find jobs overseas.

The number of Japanese students studying abroad is at its highest yet. Almost 47,000 Japanese students were studying in the US in 2001 and 2002, according to the most recent report by the Institute of International Education, a non-profit group. That's up 20 percent from a decade ago. There are more students from Japan on US campuses than students from any other East Asian group, the group's annual report said.

During the last two years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 number of Japanese coming to the US to study has risen 40 percent, says Chiey Nomura, director of the ARC International This article is about the publicly traded processor company. For the privately held French housewares company of the same name, see ARC International (household).  Educational Consulting Office, a non-profit support group for overseas students in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. . More students want to extend their stays in the US, she says, citing as an example the 30 percent rise in Japanese students applying for internships with companies in the US in the last two years.

Terry Simon, director of the Texas Intensive English Program, a private language school, says Japanese stay the longest out of any student group. Europeans tend to stay at the school three months, whereas the average stay for Japanese students is seven months. "Japanese just don't seem to be in a hurry to leave. They are the only group we have that asks to move down a level in order to stay longer," Simon says.

Part of this exodus is natural, education experts say. Like students from any country, "Japanese students tend to study abroad more when there is economic turmoil back home," says Amy Baker, the editor of Language Travel magazine, a trade publication in London. "It's the perfect time to build skills."

But today's exodus is also sparked by fear. Many students say they worry about not finding a job upon returning home. Anecdotal evidence anecdotal evidence,
n information obtained from personal accounts, examples, and observations. Usually not considered scientifically valid but may indicate areas for further investigation and research.
 and unemployment figures only bolster those worries. Unemployment stood at 5.5 percent in January, but many more people are under-employed, working part-time jobs to make ends meet.

The job market shows some signs of improvement--the Nihon Keizai Shimbun Nihon Keizai Shimbun (日本経済新聞 , Japan's leading business newspaper, found that Japanese companies This is a list of companies from Japan. Note that 株式会社 can be (and frequently is) read both kabushiki kaisha and kabushiki gaisha (with or without a hyphen). See that article for more details.  plan to hire 5 percent more college graduates in fiscal 2004, for example--but the overall picture for young people is bleak.

The problem goes deeper than just finding a job, students say. The gifted ones know they can find something in Japan, but they worry they will have to take jobs that are dull, uninspiring uninspiring
Adjective

not likely to make people interested or excited

Adj. 1. uninspiring - depressing to the spirit; "a villa of uninspiring design"
inspiring - stimulating or exalting to the spirit
 or just plain awful.

Take the case of Kiyomi, an overseas student who asked that only his first name be used. He is from Osaka, has a bachelor's degree in business from a university there and has spent over two years studying English at the Broward Community Center (BCC (Blind Carbon Copy) The field in an e-mail header that names additional recipients for the message. It is similar to carbon copy (cc), but the names do not appear in the recipient's message. Not all e-mail systems support the bcc feature. See fcc. ) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida Fort Lauderdale, known as the "Venice of America" due to its expansive and intricate canal system, is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. The city's population is described as metropolitan, where diverse culture is commonplace. According to 2006 U.S. . Over a cup of coffee at the Starbuck's on Los Olos Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale (lô`dərdāl), residential, commercial, and resort city (1990 pop. 149,377), seat of Broward co., SE Fla., on the Atlantic coast; settled around a fort built (c.1837) in the Seminole War, inc. 1911. , Kiyomi explains how his parents pay his rent, expenses and tuition. Kiyomi doesn't seem proud of this; after all, he's 28. But if this is what it takes to secure his dream of working as a flight attendant, then so be it, he says. Kiyomi says he was supposed to return last April but couldn't bear the thought of it. He says he worries about losing his English abilities and not finding a job in Japan. "When I'm home (in Osaka), my friends complain about their jobs. Everyone fantasizes about quitting--but nobody ever does," he says. He is quiet for a while, then adds, "I don't want to move back to Japan and wind up like that."

For other students it's the fear of reverse culture shock in Japan that motivates them to stay abroad. Japanese office culture, notorious for its strict rules, overtime and hierarchical systems, can he traumatic for a student after whooping whoop  
n.
1.
a. A loud cry of exultation or excitement.

b. A shout uttered by a hunter or warrior.

2. A hooting cry, as of a bird.

3. The paroxysmal gasp characteristic of whooping cough.
 it up somewhere free and breezy in the West. "Employees who haven't traveled might be jealous," says Nomura from ARC. "Managers might force the employee who lived abroad to obey the Japanese system, social conventions and company policies. Many international students find they cannot accept the traditional system in Japanese companies."

Other overseas graduates haven't even bothered trying to return because they are convinced they will be discriminated against for having international, not Japanese, qualifications. Tae Twomey (her married name) studied English in London for seven years and Italian in Italy for several months and graduated with honors from the Department of Phonetics phonetics (fōnĕt`ĭks, fə–), study of the sounds of languages from three basic points of view. Phonetics studies speech sounds according to their production in the vocal organs (articulatory phonetics), their physical properties  and Linguistics at the University of London For most practical purposes, ranging from admission of students to negotiating funding from the government, the 19 constituent colleges are treated as individual universities. Within the university federation they are known as Recognised Bodies . Twomey now lives with her baby and husband in London. After she graduated, Twomey tried working for Japanese companies in London. She applied at Taisho Pharmaceutical Taisho Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. (大正製薬株式会社   and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, she says, but neither would grant her an interview. In contrast, consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 Ernst & Young offered the new graduate a well-paying position.

Stories like this have helped raise the status of foreign companies among young Japanese, especially Japanese women. Ken Anderson has been teaching in Japan for 24 years and is a professor at Joshi Seigakuin Women's Junior College. He says foreign companies are attractive to his students because there is less overtime. "Vacations and benefits are better, too," Anderson says.

With students feeling skittish skit·tish  
adj.
1. Moving quickly and lightly; lively.

2. Restlessly active or nervous; restive.

3. Undependably variable; mercurial or fickle.

4. Shy; bashful.
 about working for traditional Japanese companies and some even questioning the worth of having a degree, the level of disenchantment dis·en·chant  
tr.v. dis·en·chant·ed, dis·en·chant·ing, dis·en·chants
To free from illusion or false belief; undeceive.



[Obsolete French desenchanter, from Old French,
 among Japanese students is at an all-time high. Anderson says university used to be the one chance for Japanese people The Japanese people (日本人 Nihonjin, Nipponjin  to relax and enjoy life before starting to work. Now, that respite has gone away.

To escape or at least circumvent the rat race, many young people, known as freetah, work part-time in department stores This is a list of department stores. In the case of department store groups the location of the flagship store is given. This list does not include large specialist stores, which sometimes resemble department stores.  or other non-professional jobs. Anderson says many of his students this year opted for this kind of work. Others, like Kiyomi, choose to sponge off Verb 1. sponge off - clean with a sponge, by rubbing
sponge down

rub - move over something with pressure; "rub my hands"; "rub oil into her skin"
 their parents. They're called "parasites."

So far, Kiyomi's only office job has been a brief stint working for H.I.S. Travel. Since studying in Florida, he has interviewed with one airline in London and another in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden . He is hopeful despite the industry's troubles.

Japanese schools are doing their bit by sending more students overseas. Some universities, like Seigakuin, are setting up summer programs with sister schools in the UK and the US. "Even a glimpse, a little one, gives them a new perspective and opens their horizons a bit," says Anderson, who recently helped establish the university's UK summer program.

But a student's desire to stay overseas coupled with an inability or unwillingness to work can create family tension, especially as families are trying to save money in these uncertain times. Kiyomi says his parents are furious that he is still in the US on their funds. During our talk, he admits that his parents have finally cut him off. He has to return to Japan. When I ask what he'll miss most about the US, he chokes up with tears. "I don't want to return," he says. "I'll miss the freedom here."

Kiyomi says his parents won't even pick him up at the airport in Osaka. And they've given him a limit on how long he can stay at home. "I have one month," he says. "Then, I have to find a job and a place to stay."

For all the turmoil, though, students concur with Anderson's sentiment that the broadened perspective overseas living provides is invaluable. Students seem to feel that the challenges and strife are worth it. Yoko Niyoshi, a 24-year-old English language English language, member of the West Germanic group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Spoken by about 470 million people throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations.  student in Christchurch, New Zealand, says her Japanese friends get harassed on the local buses by teenagers who assume the foreigners don't speak English. "They think we can't speak or understand what they say," she says. Even so, she's planning to work in Australia as a Japanese-language teacher. But first, there's some thing she has to take care of back in Japan. It dawned on her when some Japanese officials visited her school. "They spoke keigo," Niyoshi says, referring to the polite Japanese reserved for formal settings. "I had no clue what they were saying and thought: Oh my God, I don't speak my own language." So before she settles into an overseas teaching post, she may just head home for some lessons in her native tongue.

RELATED ARTICLE: a bittersweet bittersweet, name for two unrelated plants, belonging to different families, both fall-fruiting woody vines sometimes cultivated for their decorative scarlet berries.  graduation.

The Class of 2003 Finds Little Hope at Home. By Bruce Rutledge

FOR NOBUKO OBANA, GRADUATION was a chance to wear a kimono kimono

Garment worn by Japanese men and women from the Early Nara period (645–724) to the present. The essential kimono is an ankle-length gown with long, full sleeves and a V-neck.
 and say goodbye to close friends. It was an exciting time as well. She was receiving a Master's of Arts degree from Tsukuba University, one of the country's more prestigious public universities. Yet since the festivities fes·tiv·i·ty  
n. pl. fes·tiv·i·ties
1. A joyous feast, holiday, or celebration; a festival.

2. The pleasure, joy, and gaiety of a festival or celebration.

3.
 ended in late March, she and many of her friends are finding they have nothing to do.

"Honestly, it is way hard for us to get career opportunities in Japan," Obana writes in an e-mail. "Nowadays, having an MA does not mean much. All the companies want to reduce costs, so they do not want to take students like me with higher degrees. I have never heard of any of nay friends or any of our sempai receiving higher salaries than four-year university graduates."

Obana and her friends face a Japan with record unemployment. January's unemployment rate of 5.5 percent tied the all-time high, but unemployment among the 20-something crowd is several points higher. More than 3.5 million people are unemployed, the government says, yet that number masks another reality: Many of today's "employed" are working part-time jobs and bringing home less money and fewer benefits. The non-agricultural sector had 510,000 fewer full-time jobs in January than it did a year earlier. Full-time jobs in the sector have been decreasing for 18 straight months. Meanwhile, the sector had 250,000 more part-time jobs in January--a pattern that has continued for 13 straight months.

"Getting a job is a huge problem for graduates, unfortunately," says Noriko Suzuki, another recent Tsukuba grad who has decided to continue with her studies and get a doctorate degree rather than face the bleak job market. "Particularly for women, the reality is harsh and difficult. Companies do not need smart, intelligent women because companies want them to do office work--I mean, just copying, filing, receiving customers, et cetera ET CETERA. A Latin phrase, which has been adopted into English; it signifies. "and the others, and so of the rest," it is commonly abbreviated, &c.
     2. Formerly the pleader was required to be very particular in making his defence. (q.v.
. It's changing, though."

But it's not changing fast enough for the Class of 2003. Many students say they will look abroad for job opportunities, including Obana and Suzuki. "I would love to work overseas," says Obana, who mentions that her good friend also has the same desire. "People say that the Japanese work scene or society itself is changing in terms of the gender gap, but there are lots of aspects in this society that are still so bureaucratic or male-dominated. I am not saying that all of these problems can be solved overseas, but I still believe that there are more opportunities."

As these Tsukuba graduates finished their university careers and began their new lives, war was breaking out in Iraq. Would the war keep Japan's best and brightest unemployed graduates at home longer? "Personally, I'm against this war and I would feel much more frightened than usual traveling to the US," Obana admits. "However, I do not think I would stop going there, because I know so much about the exciting spheres of American society. And I would love to be living in those circumstances."

Suzuki agrees. "Some of my friends seem to have hopes of getting a job overseas," she says. "The outbreak of war would not change my mind about leaving Japan if I was planning to du so. I would consider nay safety for sure, but I would go anyway."

Japan experiences a net outflow of about 130,000 people a year, according to the Pacific Council, a California-based non-profit organization. Women account for 70 percent of that emigration emigration: see immigration; migration. , and who could blame them? According to a report released by the Pacific Council late last year, "(Japanese) women take home paychecks only about two-thirds the size of those received by men in comparable jobs."

For the Class of 2003, the urge to move overseas is as strong as ever, regardless of the risks.

Debbi Gardiner is a freelance writer living in Florida and a frequent contributor to J@pan Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Japan Inc. Communications
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Gardiner, Debbi
Publication:Japan Inc.
Geographic Code:8NEWZ
Date:May 1, 2003
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