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Japan - Kumamoto Prefectural University
Program Profile
Country: Japan
Location: Kumamoto City, Kumamoto Prefecture
Language: Japanese, English
Level(s): Undergraduate and graduate
Subjects: Letters, Environmental and Symbiotic Sciences, Cultural Studies, Administration
Length: Academic year
Cost: MSU tuition, room and board
Deadline: March 1 for fall semester
Program Overview
Kumamoto Prefectural University is located in Kumamoto, a city surrounded by nature, history, and rich culture. The school offers courses in the humanities, the social sciences and the natural sciences, and aims to provide students with academic skills which will give them access to a wide range of knowledge. The university hopes to make a contribution to multi-dimensional global culture, first by helping students to deepen their understanding of Japanese, Asian and Western cultures, and further, by promoting international exchanges of both students and teachers.
Academic Program
The university offers courses in: Japanese Language and Literature, English Language and Literature, Ecology and Environmental Resources, Human Habitat, Food and Health Science, Public and Business Administration, Foreign Language, Humanities and Arts, and Informational Science.
Language of Instruction
All levels of Japanese; some courses in English are offered. Students are strongly encouraged to take the Japanese Language class offered at MSU before applying to Kumamoto Prefectural University. Two years of college-level Japanese (or equivalent) are required to take classes at Kumamoto Prefectural University.
Eligibility
Students who have completed two full academic years of university level work at MSU with a 3.0 GPA by the time they begin studies at Kumamoto Prefectural University are eligible.
Academic Credit
Credit will be awarded at MSU for all courses taken and passed at Kumamoto Prefectural University. The student's academic advisor at MSU, in consultation with the Office of International Programs, will determine how these credits will apply to degree course requirements. However, successful study at Kumamoto satisfies MSU's Multicultural/Global core curriculum requirement. Students are urged to work closely with the their advisor and the Office of International Programs prior to departure to plan a course of studies which will maintain steady progress toward their degree.
Location
Japan is an island country composed of the four main islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Shikoku, and Kyushu, along with some surrounding smaller islands. It has a temperate monsoon weather that clearly shows seasonal changes. The beautiful scenery of the changing seasons is very impressive.
Kumamoto is a city of history and culture surrounded by vast nature, composed of beautiful plains that spread almost endlessly beside strong-looking mountains. On the first visit to Kumamoto, the dynamics of nature enraptures people. Mt. Aso is an active volcano with an outer caldera 50 miles in circumference, and its eternal action of burning is the symbol of Kumamoto, or the "Country of Fire.".
Kumamoto has been flourishing as the castle town of Lord Kiyomasa Kato and the Hosokawa clan. Kumamoto Castle, which still remains in Kumamoto City, is a distinguished castle whose construction took Lord Kiyomasa Kato seven years to build starting in 1600. As it was built to apply toward practical warfare, the inside of the castle, which is 5.9 miles in circumference, has a solid structure complete with wells, secret underground passages, and stone walls designed to prevent an enemy invasion..
Marks of history remain all over Kumamoto. For example, Kumamoto Prefecture contains the largest number of ornamental ancient tombs in all of Japan. There are more than 280 of these tombs recognized in the country, and more than 120 of them are in Kumamoto. In Kikusui, several ancient tombs such as the guasi-national ruin of Eta- funayama Tomb still remain. The Tumulus Tomb Festival, one of the three fire festivals in the prefecture, is held here. All of these elements, and more, make Kumamoto an important city of history and culture in Japan.
Cost and Included Benefits
Students receiving exchange placements at Kumamoto will pay tuition at MSU in the same amount as if studying in Bozeman. Students who are not awarded an exchange placement at Kumamoto will need to pay the "study abroad" fee to attend Kumamoto Prefectural University. (Visit the International Opportunities Resource Center for more information about this fee.) Remember to plan for extra expenses such as internal travel and personal spending money as well as for unexpected changes in the exchange rate.
Financial Aid
Financial aid may be available for study abroad at Kumamoto Prefectural University. Additional costs for study at Kumamoto (e.g. travel to and from the study site) may be used in calculating student's financial aid package. Students are responsible to apply to the Office of Financial Aid.
Application
Applications are available in the Office of International Programs at 400 Culbertson Hall.
Deadline
Applications are due in the Office of International Programs on March 1 (some exceptions may apply) to study at Kumamoto Prefectural University the following fall.
Additional Information
For additional information contact:
Hilary Papendick
Study Abroad Advisor
Office of International Programs
400 Culbertson Hall
Phone: 994-7151
Fax (406) 994-1619
E-mail: hilaryp@montana.edu
Dr. Marilyn Bolles
Modern Languages
325 Reid Hall
Email: mbolles@montana.edu
Dr. Brett Walker
History Department
2163 Wilson Hall
E-mail: bwalker@montana.edu
To speak with an MSU faculty member who has visited Japan contact:
Greg Olson
Health & Human Development
994-6340
Cliff Montagne
Plant, Soil & Environ. Science
994-5079
Or visit Kumamoto Prefectural University's web-page at: http://www.pukumamoto.ac.jp/index-e.html
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