An amazing experience, if not stressful Past Review
By A student (Texas A&M University - College Station) - abroad from 05/15/2016 to 08/30/2016 with
Temple University International Programs: Tokyo - Temple University Japan Campus
I learned the outlook of young Japanese adults and about the issues relevant to their society
Personal Information
How much international exposure did you have prior to this program? | 1 month - 6 months |
Review Your Program
* Overall educational experience
Academic rigor, intensity, resources, etc. |
Excellent professors, extremely heavy workload |
* Host Country Program Administration
On-site administration of your program |
TUJ staff are awesome, particularly OSS |
* Housing:
How satisfied were you with your living arrangements? |
Self Housing |
* Food: |
Japanese food, what is there to complain about? |
* Social & Cultural Integration:
How integrated did you feel with the local culture? |
There were many opportunities to interact with Japanese students and others learning Japanese. |
* Health Care:
How well were health issues addressed during the program? |
HTH insurance provided |
* Safety: |
Japan is safe as long as your passport isn't expired |
If you could do it all over again would you choose the same program? |
Yes
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Finances
* Money: How easily were you able to live on a student's budget?
(1 = not very easy/$200+ on food & personal expenses/week, 2.5 = $100/week, 5 = very easily/minimal cost) |
Tokyo is expensive. If you are trying to actually experience Japan, you need to bring cash. Lots of it. |
Not including program expenses, about how much money did you spend on food and other expenses each week? | ~$200 |
Do you have any general money-saving tips for future study abroad participants? | Learn to love Conbini food, learn to cook with basic Japanese ingredients to save money on food. Get your SUICA or PASSMO immediately. |
Language
* Did your program have a foreign language component? | Yes |
How much did the program encourage you to use the language?
0 = No encouragement, 5 = frequent encouragement to use the language |
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How would you rate your language skills at the beginning of the program? | Beginner |
How would you rate your language skills at the end of the program? | Intermediate |
What was the highest level language course you had completed prior to departure? | Intermediate 2 |
How many hours per day did you use the language? | |
Do you have any tips/advice on the best ways to practice the language for future study abroad participants? | Get out there and meet Japanese people. It's awkward at first, but you have to push yourself to try and use Japanese. Tinder may be a dating app in the US, but in Japan it's a good way to meet people of the opposite gender to have conversations and practice with. |
Other Program Information
* Where did you live?
Select all that apply |
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* Who did you live with?
Select all that apply |
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* Who did you take classes with?
Select all that apply |
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About how many local friends did you make that you will likely keep in touch with? | 10+ |
A Look Back
* What did you like most about the program? |
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* What could be improved? |
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* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? | That the main campus Registrar's office will screw up your GI Bill paperwork in every which way possible and make your life difficult, while also managing to take a week to reply to an email. |
Reasons For Studying Abroad
To help future students find programs attended by like-minded individuals, please choose the profile that most closely represents you. |
The Academic or LinguistYou went abroad with specific academic goals in mind; the program credentials and rigor of your coursework abroad were very important to you. You had a great time abroad, but never lost sight of your studies and (if applicable) were diligent with your foreign language study. Good for you! |
Individual Course Reviews
Course Name/Rating: |
Kanji II |
Course Department: | Japanese |
Instructor: | Matsuhashi |
Instruction Language: | English/Japanese |
Comments: | The class is extremely rigorous. We were finishing a chapter every other day, meaning between 10 and 18 Kanji every two days. If you are taking this at the same time as another Japanese course, you will be spending a lot of time doing homework. It requires a lot of studying, and even some students who were already familiar with much of the material barely managed a B. It is also paced rather quickly so it is difficult to retain what you learned last week. However, you do learn to "feel" Kanji a lot quicker, and the specific kanji covered are generally very useful. Matsuhashi Sensei is also wonderful. |
Credit Transfer Issues: |
Course Name/Rating: |
America Superpower |
Course Department: | Asian Studies |
Instructor: | Kingston |
Instruction Language: | English |
Comments: | This was an extremely informative course. Dr. Kingston is very well versed, and his discussion style class really gets those who are interested involved in the conversation. I learned more from his course than I have in all my other political science courses in College. |
Credit Transfer Issues: |