May 25

Mike Maher-King (Fukui), founder of Smile Kids Japan, recently spoke at TEDxTokyo:  Entering the Unknown on Saturday, May 21 at Miraikan Tokyo.

Here are the English and Japanese videos of Mike’s talk which is titled Against All Oddsin which he talks about Smile Kids Japan, how he came to start it, how the JET experience and community factored in and SKJ’s involvement in earthquake relief efforts.




May 24

Job: Associate TV News Producer (NY)

UPDATE 06/30/11:  JOB HAS BEEN FILLED. (They hired a CIR just off the JET Program thanks to JETwit!)

via Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS). Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London as is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields. She is also the former vocalist for the Japanese hardcore punk band DEGRADE.

*Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.

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Job Position: Associate TV News Producer (NY)

Job Details:

The New York News Bureau of Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) is seeking an energetic, professional individual to fill an Associate TV News Producer position.

Read More


May 24

Job: 2 Graduate Admissions Counselor Positions (Tokyo)

via Jet alum Ariel Shearman (Ishikawa-ken, 1994-97). Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London as is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields. She is also the former vocalist for the Japanese hardcore punk band DEGRADE.

*Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.

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Job Position: 2 Graduate Admissions Counselor Positions (Tokyo)

Job Details:

Reve Counseling, one of the leading educational consultancies in Japan, is looking to fill 2 Graduate Admissions Counselor positions this summer.

Read More


May 24

Life After the B.O.E. is a comic series about the JET experience by David Namisato (Aomori-ken, 2002-2004), a professional illustrator currently living in Toronto.
Visit David’s website at www.namisato.org.

Middle of Nowhere

Hi everyone,

I want to let you all know that after a 5-year run, Life After the B.O.E. will be ending at the end of July.

The penultimate comic will be posted on June 16th, 2011.

The final comic will be posted on July 25th, 2011.


May 23

Earthquake Relief: Seattle Japan Relief Weekly Highlights for May 23-29th

Via Pacific Northwest JETAA:

Check out Seattle Japan Relief Weekly Highlights for May 23-29th!

We are looking for volunteers to help out with a June 11th classical concert at UW to fundraise for Japan relief efforts! Interested in being an usher or registration volunteer? Please contact seattlejapanrelief [at] hyogobcc.org.

Domo ne,

Erin Erickson
CIR, Akita 2001-2004
Volunteer, Seattle Japan Relief.org


May 23

JETAA Chicago Author Panel: Experiences Teaching English in Japan

Via JETAA Chicago May Webletter:

On Friday, June 10, 6:30-8pm, JETAA Chicago and the Japan America Society of Chicago will be hosting a panel featuring Lars Martinson and David Fernandez, two JET alumni authors.

Mr. Martinson, cartoonist and author of Tonoharu, and Mr. Fernandez, author of Rising Sunsets, will share their experiences teaching English in Japan, relive funny cultural stories, and mention how these experiences shaped the writing of their books Tonoharu and Rising Sunsets.

Please join us at Barnes & Thornburg LLP, 1 N Wacker Suite 4400, Chicago, IL 60606.

Tickets are $5 for JASC & JETAA members, $10 for general admission.

Space is limited so RSVP soon to Erika Kono at kono@jaschicago.org.


May 23

JQ Magazine: JQ&A with JETAA Country Representative Megan Miller Yoo

“I can’t ever say this enough, but working with the JETAANY executive committee has been an amazing experience. We have such a great team of dedicated volunteers who really want to see the organization succeed and will go to great lengths to make sure that happens.” (Katharine Andriotis)

 

By Renay Loper (Iwate-ken, 2006-07) for JQ magazine.  Renay is a freelance writer and international education professional currently seeking FT opportunities. Visit her blog at Atlas in Her Hand.

Philadelphia native and current Long Island City, NY resident (by way of Hyogo-ken and Washington, D.C.), Megan Miller-Yoo (Hyogo-ken ALT, 2000-02) is the outgoing president of JETAANY (2008-11) and new JETAA USA Country Representative (CR). During her time as an ALT, Megan demonstrated her commitment to the JET Program via her creation of the Volunteer Special Interest Group (VSIG) for AJET.

Since returning to the U.S., Megan has been involved in the Washington D.C., Philadelphia, and New York chapters of JETAA. Megan also served on the Board of Directors for JETAANY. She recently graduated from NYU with her MBA, currently works as an engineering underwriter, AVP with Swiss Re and lives in Long Island City with her husband.

Megan recently spoke with us to share more about her time as JETAANY president, and her new role of CR.

Where did you spend your JET years?

I was an ALT in Hyogo-ken from 2000-02.  I worked in the suburbs of Akashi (home of the world’s longest suspension bridge and famous for its tako), which is along the coast between Kobe and Himeji.

You recently finished your third term as JETAANY’s president. How did you get involved with JETAANY?

I moved to New York in November 2005, on the day of the New York City Marathon, which made navigating my U-Haul truck through the city pretty awful. After a year in the city I still did not have a strong network, so I researched JETAANY and showed up at a quarterly meeting being held at Two Boots pizza in early 2007. I was hooked right away and with impending officer elections, Kat Barnas convinced me that very night to take over her spot as vice president. I served as VP from 2007-08 and then moved into the president role for the next three years.

During your tenure, what brought you the most joy?

I can’t ever say this enough, but working with the JETAANY executive committee has been an amazing experience. We have such a great team of dedicated volunteers who really want to see the organization succeed and will go to great lengths to make sure that happens. When you consider that we all have full-time jobs but everyone finds time to make JETAANY events the same caliber as something you’d pay to have done, you start to understand the impact that Japan had on us and how eager we are to give back.

What do you hope your JETAANY legacy will be?

During my tenure I strove to ensure that we delivered high caliber events and benefits to our member base. From the upgraded format of the e-mail announcements and website to the diversity and quality of events, I encouraged everyone involved in the organization to really give it their all and do the best job they could. I believe that people have started to realize what JET alums are capable of and what the value of our network is to Japan, to our home countries, and also to us as members of the network. We are a group of diverse, talented professionals who can really make an impact wherever we choose to focus our efforts, and my goal was to showcase that in everything we did.

How did you go about becoming a CR?  What made you make the switch? Read More


May 23

Justin’s Japan: Interview with Inuyama City Councilman/JET Alum Anthony Bianchi

“The JET Program has great benefits for the country. One of the greatest, but overlooked is the former participants themselves. They all have a great knowledge, understanding and affection for Japan. All have gone on to various careers and are a great but underutilized network.”

By JQ magazine editor Justin Tedaldi (CIR Kobe-shi, 2001-02) for Examiner.com. Visit his page here to subscribe for free alerts on newly published stories.

Anthony Bianchi’s life in Japan took root in the 1980s when the Bensonhurst, Brooklyn native landed a job with the Inuyama City board of education in Aichi Prefecture on the JET Program exchange initiative. He continued to work in Inuyama after JET, and in 2003 gained citizenship, becoming the first-ever North American to hold an elected position in Japan.

In 2006, Bianchi ran for mayor of Inuyama, receiving enough votes to finish third out of eight candidates. He was re-elected to city council in 2007 and started his third term in April. Following a benefit concert for Japan at his alma mater Xaverian High School on March 31, I caught up with the politico in this exclusive interview.

What’s changed for you since you last spoke with JETAA NY in 2008?

I was just reelected for a third term. There are now only four council members with more years on the council than I. That changes the dynamics a bit. How much so we will find out over the next few years. Other than that, local front burner issues have changed, but the job stays pretty much the same. That being said, of course the earthquake and tsunami have changed the country. As a council member in a municipality that was not directly affected, we have to keep in mind what we can do to contribute to the recovery while maintaining necessary levels of service for the people of the city.

How has the election of the Democratic Party of Japan in 2009 changed the way you and your colleagues work in Inuyama?

Unfortunately, not very much. They have been mostly unable to implement their manifest. Due to that they have been soundly defeated in local elections. Keep in mind that the recent local elections were the first since the DPJ took power. The significance of that is that most localities still had a pre-DPJ administration makeup. So they have even less local influence now than they had before they took power. Unless there is a dramatic change in the way they govern, they will loss power in the next lower house elections. A tremendous chance to make significant change has been squandered. What the aftermath will be remains to be seen, but I am afraid it will not be good.

How has the election of President Obama changed any impressions or attitudes of the average Japanese citizen?

Of course, the election of Mr. Obama was watched with great interest here and welcomed. For lack of a better description, it was seen as America becoming a more forward thinking, open and kinder society. You must remember that just as Americans are not cognizant of Japanese political national and domestic issues, so are Japanese not cognizant of America’s. That being the case, President Obama’s election was viewed for its social implications by the Japanese. 

What are some of the biggest changes in the JET Program that you’ve observed over the years? Do you work with any JETs?

I sometime talk to those who administrate the program or former participants, but it has been a long time since I was a JET. I really don’t know what things are like on an everyday basis for current participants, and there are no JETs in Inuyama.

In Inuyama I started a program based partly on my JET experience. It is called the Native English Teacher (NET) Program. I started and ran it for seven years before leaving to run for office. The program continues to this day and has six teachers all directly employed by the city. The teachers here must have some ESL qualification. Currently, all teach their own classes based on original materials created by the group.

Although we had some tough going in the first few years, the participants here are pretty much accepted as regular teaching staff at their schools.

Tokyo has mulled budget cuts for the program that may threaten its existence. What are some of the positive effects of JET that you can share with your colleagues in local government to help quantify its value?

I think the program did not get proper considerations during its evaluation by the oversight committee. Although I think JET could use some retooling and needs to redefine its goals, the program has great benefits for the country. One of the greatest, but overlooked is the former participants themselves. They all have a great knowledge, understanding and affection for Japan. All have gone on to various careers and are a great but underutilized network.

For the complete interview, click here.


May 23

Career/Networking reminder: JET Alum LinkedIn groups

Just a reminder that there are a number of LinkedIn groups set up for JETs and JET alumni geared towards professional connecting and career development:

*Don’t see what you’re looking for?  Start your own JET alum LinkedIn group and e-mail jetwit [at] jetwit.com.  We’ll post it on JETwit.

**Also, don’t forget about the JETwit Jobs Google Group as well as the JET Alum LinkedIn groups by prefecture.


May 21

Job: Japanse Snack Company CALBEE (SF)

via Jet Program Coordinator (San Francisco). Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London as is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields. She is also the former vocalist for the Japanese hardcore punk band DEGRADE.

*Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.

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Job Position: Japanse Snack Company CALBEE (SF)

Job Details:

Japanese Snack Company called CALBEE are opening the first retail shop at the food court of Westfield San Francisco shopping Centre on July 1st. For the shop staff they are looking for ex-JET program participants in particular.

Read More


May 21

Job: Dormitory Supervisor for Japanese organization (NY)

via Actus. Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London as is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields. She is also the former vocalist for the Japanese hardcore punk band DEGRADE.

*Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.

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Job Position: Dormitory Supervisor

Job Details:

A well-known Japanese Educational Organization seeks a Dormitory Supervisor starting from September 1st. Main job duty is being responsible for the management and daily operations of campus residence dormitories.

Read More


May 21

Hibari-sensei: Southlake, Texas holds benefit concert for sister city, Tome

Jen Wang (Miyagi, 2008-09) is a lab tech in Dallas and a staff writer for the Japanese music website Purple SKY.  Her love of cosplay and her junior high school students inspired the name for her own Japanese pop culture blog, Hibari-sensei’s Classroom.

In response to the Tohoku earthquake, community initiative Southlake Working As a Team (S.W.A.T.) joined forces with Southlake Sister Cities, the City of Southlake, and the Carroll Independent School District to form Southlake 4 Japan.  The organization dedicated itself to helping Southlake’s sister city, Tome, which suffered damage to its buildings and roads and struggled to accommodate the evacuees from neighboring cities.   Southlake’s relationship with Japan began in 1991, long before Toyoma and neighboring towns merged to form the city of Tome.  Since then, the two cities have engaged in cultural and education exchange programs.

Harrison Edwards’ band, Vibe Zoo, plays in the Southlake 4 Japan concert.

Southlake Sister Cities had already set up an earthquake relief fund and collected messages for a scrapbook, but more needed to be done to raise awareness within the community.  Carroll Senior High School students Harrison Edwards and Carter Humphrey proposed the idea of a benefit concert.

Edwards felt a connection with Tome as a former student ambassador of the Sister Cities exchange program.  He and Humphrey already had experience organizing such an event, having been the masterminds behind last year’s Rock for Haiti earthquake relief concert.  Southlake 4 Japan was quick to help with providing a venue, publicity, and volunteers.  S.W.A.T. founder and Southlake Baptist Church Lead Pastor Clayton Reed was in charge of the event programming while Edwards and Humphrey sought out bands to fill the line-up.

The concert was held on May 7 in Southlake Town Square.  Attendees were encouraged to donate at least $5, which got them a wristband and a cell phone screen protector.  There was an origami booth with bumper stickers for sale and food supplied by Qdoba Mexican Grill.  Southlake Sister Cities provided information about Tome and collected signatures for a banner being sent to Tome’s mayor.

To read the rest of the post, click here.


May 21

Job: Japanese Instructor Needed (San Diego)

via East Asia Center, UVa. Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London as is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields. She is also the former vocalist for the Japanese hardcore punk band DEGRADE.

*Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.

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Job Position: Japanese instructor needed (San Diego)

Job Details:

The NCPACE Faculty, Central Texas College located in San Diego are looking to hire anyone who has a Masters/Bachelors to teach Japanese or at least 18 semester hours of Japanese courses.
Read More


May 19
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This below article about JET Andras Molnar (Miyagi-ken, Yamamoto-shi) appeared in the Japan Times on Wednesday, May 18, 2011.  First an excerpt from Andrew’s blog (yamamoto-fund.blogspot.com), which is part of his effort to help rebuild Yamamoto:
“My name is Andras Molnar, an English teacher from Yamamoto Town in Japan, a place recently devastated by the earthquake and tsunami. I am trying to raise funds for the reconstruction of the schools in my town, as well as buying school supplies and uniforms for children who lost everything in the tsunami.”

U.S. teacher aids school rebuilding

Kyodo

SENDAI — An American English teacher at a middle school in Miyagi Prefecture has set up funds to solicit donations for rebuilding elementary schools damaged by the tsunami following the March 11 earthquake.

Pennsylvania native Andras Molnar, 25, said that although he is leaving the prefecture’s town of Yamamoto in August when his teaching contract ends, he is “hoping to stay connected” with the town through the fund.

Molnar said he became interested in Japan through “anime” such as “Gundam” and spent a year in the country as a high school student and again while at university. He came to Yamamoto, a coastal town of around 16,000, in August 2009.

He said he got along well with locals through a drum circle and surfing, a hobby of his.

“Everyone is very open, kind and I like them a lot,” he said in Japanese.

After the town was engulfed by the tsunami, he stayed at the junior high school for a week, busily checking the whereabouts of his students and doing what he could at evacuation sites, he said.

He then moved to Tokyo for around one month at the suggestion of his parents and friends.

But after getting email from friends in Yamamoto inquiring about him, he wondered why he was not giving his best when all the people in the town were doing their utmost, he said.

Molnar said it was this that prompted him to return to his apartment in Yamamoto.

“It was really good that I returned,” he said. “I feel encouraged by the children.”

He set up relief funds in Japan and the United States to help rebuild two elementary schools where buildings were devastated by the tsunami, and is soliciting donations through his blog.


May 19

JETAA British Columbia Newsletter – May 2011

The JETAA British Columbia Newsletter May 2011 issue is now available online.  (Really nice look and layout, by the way.)

It also has some very good articles, reactions and perspectives on the Tohoku earthquake/tsunami and subsequent relief efforts and activities by JETs and alumni.

For more info on JETAA BC (which is hosting this year’s JETAA Canada Conference in June), go to their website at  www.jetaabc.ca


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