Japan Centre Activities

October 11, 2009

Semester in Japan Information Session - 15 Oct (Thurs) 4-5 pm

Filed under: Centre-related Activities, Classes, Students, Year in Japan — mgibeau @ 12:12 pm

Click me for more info

There will be an information session for students interested in participating in the new Semester in Japan exchange program with Kanazawa University.

When: 15 October (Thurs), 4-5 pm

Where: Staff Common Room, BPB 4th floor (follow the smell of coffee)

Who: Anyone interested in going on the 1 semester exchange program to Japan

As the deadline for applications to the program will be 14 November, it is strongly recommended that all interested students attend.  The information session will address issues related to eligibility, the transfer of credits to your degree program, expenses, housing, coursework available in Kanazawa, application procedures and any questions you might have.  Application forms will also be distributed at the info session.  If you are unable to attend you should ask a friend to take notes for you and/or make arrangements with the SIJ coordinator to discuss your application.

For further information contact: yearinjapan@anu.edu.au

September 24, 2009

Japan Centre Students take 1st & 3rd Prizes in Speech Contest

Filed under: Classes, Students — mgibeau @ 5:35 pm
Andy Petredis, First place

Andy Petredis, First place

Continuing last year’s winning streak, Japan Centre students took first and third place in the open division

of the Canberra division of the Japan Foundation’s 40th annual Japanese Language Speech Contest.  Andy Petredis and Maya Siyi Chen (both students in Mark Gibeau’s Written Japanese D class) took first and third places respectively.  Andy will go on to participate in the national competition to be held in Sydney on October 10 & we wish him the best of luck.

Maya Siyi Chen

Maya Siyi Chen, Third place

Altogether nine students from the Japan Centre presented speeches on a range of topics from issues in Japanese education, the Japanese immigration system and discrimination to Japan’s shoe culture, the benefits of being stingy and a virtual tour of Uluru.  A big thanks to postgrad student & Japanese tutor Jun Imaki who volunteered her time to help the WJD students revise & practice their speeches.

Students in the high school and beginning divisions also performed remarkably well and we congratulate all of the participants on their strong performances.

July 18, 2009

2009 Japanese Speech Contest

Filed under: Classes, Students — mgibeau @ 9:38 am

Each year the Japan Foundation sponsors a Japanese language speech contest with a wide range of categories from beginners to background speakers.  The contest is a two-stage affair, with a local competition in Canberra (date TBD) and then a national competition in Sydney for the winners of the local events.  Last year ANU students swept the ACT contest and made a very strong showing in the national event.  So give it a try and take your Japanese out of the classroom and into the real world!  Deadline for applications is 11 Sept, 2009 but don’t wait till the last minute!

Download the application form, guidelines and letter to apply.

May 25, 2009

April 2010 Year In Japan Applications due soon!

Filed under: Centre-related Activities, Students — mgibeau @ 2:08 pm

Students who wish to participate in the Year in Japan program from April 2010 are reminded that their applications must be submitted to either Mark Gibeau (bpb e3.43) or Peter Hendriks (bpb e3.33) by 5 pm Friday, June 5th.  You can download your application here or pick up a paper copy in front of Peter’s office.  Any questions should be directed to Mark Gibeau.

May 18, 2009

Call for papers

Filed under: Alumni, Students — mgibeau @ 9:53 am

The Japan Foundation is seeking submissions for the third volume of its academic journal, New voices.  The journal is published in print and online formats and specifically targets submissions from early career researchers.  For the third volume of the journal they are soliciting papers from people who have completed their Honours or Masters thesis at an Australian University between 2006 and 2008.

If you fall into that category, please look through the journal at  http://www.jpf.org.au/newvoices/index.html  and download the submission guidelines

March 31, 2009

Year In Japan information session

Filed under: Centre-related Activities, Classes, Students, Year in Japan — mgibeau @ 1:06 pm

As the attached indicates (click on the pretty picture), we will be holding an information session for all students interested in participating in the Japan Centre’s Year in Japan program from 2-3 pm in the Staff Common Room (BPB 4th floor) on Thursday April 2nd.  In addition to a short talk by the coordinators of the program several recent participants of the program will be on hand to answer questions and talk about their own experiences.  Anyone interested in participating is strongly urged to attend.

August 25, 2008

Japan Centre Students Sweep ACT Japanese Speech Contest

Filed under: Classes, Students — mgibeau @ 10:45 am

Students from Mark Gibeau’s Surasura Japanese class swept away the competition in the ACT speech contest.

The annual competition was held at the University of Canberra on August 23rd and saw over fifty speeches presented in high school, open beginner, open and background speaker divisions. Japan Centre students Bethany Clark, Madeleine Firth and Chris Higgins beat out a field of nearly thirty contestants in the open division to take First, Second and Third prizes respectively while Karlis Tebescis took First prize in the background speaker division.  A panel of Japanese language teachers and representatives from the Japan Foundation and the Japanese Embassy rated speakers on the basis of the content of their speeches, presentation and language ability.

As a part of the Japan Foundation’s 39th National Japanese Language Speech Contest the two first place winners will go on to the national competition to be held in Sydney in October. We wish them the best of luck and our congratulations go out to all of the ANU students who participated in the contest & a special thanks to Jun Imaki for all her help in correcting and critiquing the speeches.

July 18, 2008

Life after the Centre

Filed under: Alumni, Students — mgibeau @ 4:57 pm

Alum Rebekah Clements writes on how her time at the Japan Centre and beyond.

Rebekah Clements

Rebekah Clements

I came to the Japan Centre in 1999 after deferring my Bachelor of Asian Studies/ Bachelor of Laws for one year in order to work for a company in Japan. When I returned the ANU and took their language placement test, the Japan Centre put me in 3rd year Japanese language classes, which, although a nice ego boost, was pretty panic-inducing at first. After much encouragement by the Centre staff, and much frantic cramming of kanji by me, the advanced placement turned out to be a great thing. Apart from being challenged to aim higher than I might otherwise have done, at the ANU you have to take a full three years (or, depending on your degree, four years) of Japanese classes even if you are placed in third year from the start, and the Centre were happy to provide advanced students with tailor-made readings classes if they outgrew the levels usually on offer. This means very small class sizes, with personalized attention and students having a big say in what texts they study. You also get to meet some great people this way – I’m still in contact with many of my old classmates and teachers.

ANU also has the Distinguished Scholars Program which aims to provide talented students with greater administrative flexibility in their degrees. Through this program I was able to bend the rules a bit and take a wide range of subjects in my non-language major. Also, this program, combined with the Japan Centre’s willingness to provide small readings classes, meant I could take several individualized, one-on-one Japanese readings classes with world-class scholars in which I was the only student. Those are opportunities for which I’ll always be grateful.

In third year, the Japan Centre arranged for me to spend one year on exchange at Waseda University in Tokyo, with a mind-bogglingly generous scholarship thanks to the Heiwa-Nakajima Foundation. The year in Japan was a great opportunity to improve my Japanese, meet people from all over the world, and study Japanese literature at a first-class Japanese university. I almost didn’t want to come home!

After returning to the ANU, I completed my degree, doing honours in Asian Studies, writing my thesis on elements of Buddhist End Times philosophy in classical Japanese literature. During the honours year, and throughout my whole degree, the Japan Centre staff particularly my supervisor Dr Peter Hendriks, were wonderfully supportive. I really recommend honours to anyone considering, even just a little bit, going on to further study. Again the Distinguished Scholars Program came in handy and I received permission to complete the one remaining unit of my law degree at the same time as doing honours in Asian Studies, something which would not have been possible under normal circumstances.

After graduating, the excellent language training at the Japan Centre enabled me to go on to complete an M.A in classical Japanese literature at Waseda University in Tokyo, sponsored by a Japanese Government Scholarship (Monbukagakusho). I completed the M.A in March of 2008 (my advice: grab the chance to wear hakama to your Japanese university graduation ceremony! I wish I had), and in October will begin a PhD in East Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Cambridge sponsored by a Fulton Australia Scholarship courtesy of the Cambridge Commonwealth Trust. While I was studying in Japan, and then when I was applying for PhD positions, the Japan Centre teachers and former teachers were wonderfully supportive, providing advice and many letters of recommendation, without which gaining a PhD position and sponsorship would have been very difficult. Of course, pretty much everything I’ve done scholastically since graduating from the Japan Centre would have been impossible without the grounding I received there. Taihen osewa ni narimashita!

Rebekah Clements
Bachelor of Asian Studies (Japanese) (Hons first class)/Bachelor of Laws.
University Medal in Asian Studies 2004.

June 30, 2008

Letters from Japan

Filed under: Students, Year in Japan — mgibeau @ 4:48 pm


Melinda Heal & Pineapple on a Stick

Melinda Heal, a double degree Visual Arts and Asian Studies student, writes to us from the midpoint of her Year in Japan at Kyoto Seika Arts University about her life in Japan, with photos included for those all you skeptics out there. More of Melinda’s photos can be seen on her flickr page.

“What’s this thing you call Year-in-Japan really like?”, I hear you ask. True, it may be that we come here for academic pursuits but being here is also one big cultural experience.

My name is Melinda and I am currently studying on the Year-in-Japan program in Kyoto. As an ANU double degree student taking Visual Arts and Asian Studies, I have had the amazing opportunity of studying at Kyoto Seika Arts University in the north of Kyoto since April until next February.

Classes have been great and to learn new things in a new environment in Japanese has been so valuable but learning outside the classroom has also been a blast! From learning how to make takoyaki (octopus balls), how to eat zaru-soba (cold noodles), how to behave in a Japanese home, how to use underground bicycle parking…I am constantly amazed and in awe of all that is the Japanese lifestyle and culture.

June 8, 2008

Rewriting the Canon

Filed under: Classes, Students — mgibeau @ 3:21 pm

In semester one of 2008 students in Dr. Carol Hayes‘ Advanced Japanese class were given the task of rewriting or continuing some of the most famous works in modern Japanese literature such as Natsume Sôseki’s I Am a Cat, Kawabata Yasunari’s The Izu Dancer, Tanizaki Junichirô’s Tattoo and several others.  You can see the fruits of their labours here:

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