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Posts tagged
japan —
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They're still in Japan. Ninja and Special K take in a Kyoto light show. They also wander into an open air taiko drumming performance in
Osaka.
Another Breathtaking Sight - The Golden Pavillion
Despite getting a flu shot before the new year, I am sick and feeling very sorry for myself. I suspect Joe G of
somehow sending me his cold over the cyberwaves, but still direct you to his podcast which can be found at http://boredbeyondbelief.wordpress.com/.
This week we're back in Kyoto Japan again with some more soundscene audio from various spots in Kyoto. Some public
school children interrupt the sound of my own voice to conduct a cultural exchange with Special K and me.
Special Mattcha Chocolate Pastry
Ninja and Special K wanted to give you the highlights of their trip to Japan, but only got as far as the desserts in
Omotesando Hills and the sukiyaki at Yoshinoya .
All they could talk about was the food. Ninja shares a soundscape from Omotesando shopping centres.
Better than ... !?
Special K's New Travel Bolt Cutters
Special K takes charge and gets industrial bolt cutters from the hotel in Kyoto to cut the lock off Ninja's suitcase.
Everyone in the lobby claps. Then they get real quiet and head off to major meditation spots in Kyoto to find
satori. Ninja is hypnotized by a Buddhist monk who reads translated Japanese public health pamphlets to her and is only
released from his powerful mind grip when she agrees that his English is flawless.
Working Temple in Kyoto
Ryoanji Temple Rock Garden
Octopus and Squid at Tsukiji
Amid water, ice, and seafood guts, Ninja and Special K get up at a freakishly early hour to catch the action at the largest
fish market in the world. Tsukiji Market is found in the heart of Tokyo, Japan. Special K pulls up her socks and rolls up
her pants while dodging the seafood transport scooters to experience the most fun you can have at 5:30 in the morning.
Seafood Transport Scooter that Ran Down Special K
Coming Soon to a Sushi Restaurant Near You
Links: Tsukiji (Wikipedia), An
Auction at Tskukiji
The Penninsula Hotel Tokyo
Ninja does a soundscape of her and Special K's first day in Japan. Ninja feels like she has finally come home.
Places in Tokyo mentioned: Hibya Park, The Imperial Palace, The Penninsula Hotel.
Rolls at the Penninsula
The Imperial Palace Gardens
"Interfaces of Bilingual Education, Japanese Socioculture and Podcasting Technologies," a presentation at the International Conference on Diversity and Community in Applied Linguistics: Interface, Interpretation, Interdisciplinarity, at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia, on 21 September 2006. View the presentation in another browser window as a slide show (only works with MS IE, but even if PowerPoint is not installed), or download the presentation to listen while viewing the slides. Live Internet was used during the presentation, so the listener may refer to the following sites besides Japancasting in other browser windows: Podcasting, Coursecasting, and Web 2.0 Technologies for Research at the Podcasting in EFL Wiki - TESOL Electronic Village Online (EVO) and the online library Bilingualism and Japanology Intersection.
A 13-minute speech on July 6, 2006 to school observers visiting here in Osaka under the auspices of North Central College in Illinois. Starts with assumptions underlying democracy that differ from the U.S., resulting in some surprising manifestations in education. Philosophies of multiculturalism vs. assimilation are discussed. My sons have been going through Japanese public schools, and I try to show the system from their viewpoint and that of my Japanese wife. Doing homework, for example, is a struggle against human nature. My wife tells them what they need to do to reach their goals, but, with so many gadgets to enjoy, they have to get into what anthropologists call a mood of willing.
After a regular presentation on “Japanese People and Society” (check out the earlier podcast) for the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), participants from India, Vietnam and Guatemala had questions on the role of women and religion in Japan, past and present. The 28-minute discussion was recorded with an MP3 format digital voice recorder (smaller than an iPod Shuffle).
This is an interview with Donna Fujimoto, a colleague at Osaka Jogakuin College, who has been researching Japanese-Americans in Japan. The Japancasting host is also a University of Hawaii graduate, for whom encounters with Japanese-Americans were a factor in becoming interested in specializing in Japan.
This is an interview with Professor Eiko Kato, a colleague who initiated the distribution of iPods loaded with English listening materials to all incoming students at Osaka Jogakuin College since April 2004. This was about a half year before Duke University, which is often called the first to do this. She is a Harvard PhD and a Mac user for 15 years. She discusses how the idea originated, before iPods became popular in Japan, and how iPods are being used effectively in the second year here. We also discuss podcasting with iTunes as further steps in providing foreign language listening content, class lectures and special events. For related information and links, see other podcasts at this site.
An earlier podcast recorded a presentation on “Japanese People and Society” at the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) branch in Osaka. This time the Q&A session is offered, with questions from South America, Syria, and Asian countries including Pakistan and Vietnam. Again you can listen to their self-introductions as well. Actually it got off to a rocky start when I was asked about the “Emperator”—you heard it first here because it’s not a word! After figuring it out I couldn’t recall the difference between an Emperor and a King. At times Japan had an empire, but “Emperor” is somewhat of an arbitrary translation from the Japanese. After that the session went smoothly (^_*;;
Traveling to the southwestern island of Shikoku where the earlier podcast on reincarnation and the pilgrimage took place, the author taught an intensive course on translation between Japanese and English at Matsuyama Shinonome College. Two professors there join in a discussion about how the Japanese language formed from thousands of years ago to the classical period (7th-11th Centuries). Then we discuss how Japanese people have confronted various foreign languages, translation issues, and why they have such difficulties in acquiring English.
 
42 minutes of a presentation for the government (JICA - Japan International Cooperation Agency) to civil engineering trainees from various developing countries. They introduce themselves at first so listeners can learn the true pronunciation of country names like Iraq. Recorded with an MP3 format digital voice recorder. Another time it would be interesting to record the Q&A session because the time it is taking for democracy to take root in Japan was of acute interest to Iraqi, Egyptian, East Timorese and African participants. The history of the Imperial family, which differs from official accounts, was also presented. The Djiboutian's question about the origins of the Japanese is taken up at the beginning. To read the presentation outline or PowerPoint slides while listening, click here. The photo on the right side above is the author's half-Japanese son with his cousin.
On the occasion of Japancasting entering the Apple iTunes Music Store, let me introduce the great adventure my life has been in places like Boston, the San Francisco Bay Area, Honolulu, and then having an international family in Japan ... things like surfing, playing baseball in two countries, remembering Woodstock and New York ladies while maintaining a family rating. The formal bio-data I won't talk about this time is being a Professor of English as a Foreign Language (EFL) -- teaching topics such as current events, human rights and bilingualism -- at the first school in the world to give iPods to all students ... President of the World Association for Online Education from 1998 to 2007 ... born in Boston, specialized in Asian Studies and then Japan at the University of Hawaii ... online library with a 4-star rating, very useful for research, in 1997, 2001 and 2005 from the Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library... overall home page.
Did you always want to know what xenophobia meant but were afraid to ask because you couldn't pronounce it? In any case, this is an interview with Prof. Yuriko Moto, a colleague at Osaka Jogakuin College who has worked at United Nations University and lectures on international human rights law at Meiji University in Tokyo. We will discuss whether prejudice, discrimination, racism and xenophobia are systemic problems or not in Japan for different types of minorities and foreigners. Some working definitions by which the four issues can be judged are here.
This is a response to the international survey on learning technology by Nick Bowskill in England for the World Association for Online Education (WAOE, pronounced "wow-ee"). The questions are read by a student here in Japan, the seventh one to join these podcasts. To read the questions while listening, or for related information on this project, see WAOE Spoken Libraries.
This is a 26-minute presentation on Japanese education given to American schoolteachers visiting Osaka Jogakuin College. It was recorded with a WMA format digital voice recorded and then converted to MP3 for podcasting. The speech outline is available to read while listening here.
Posts tagged
japan —
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