Three NWU Students Accepted into JET Program

发表
  • 费利西亚灯塔, JET Scholar
    费利西亚灯塔, a biochemistry and molecular biology major from Lincoln, has been accepted to the Japanese Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program. She will spend a year in Japan as an assistant language teacher.
  • Kate Richerson, JET Scholar
    Kate Richerson, a senior political science major from Lincoln, has been accepted to the JET Program. She returns to Japan after spending part of her junior year studying at Aoyama Gakuin University in Tokyo.
  • 格兰特杰克曼, JET Scholar
    格兰特杰克曼, a senior business administration major, spent a semester abroad at Kwansei Gakuin University in Osaka and took an NWU Japanese course in Japan last summer. Now he's returning thanks to the JET Program. He will be an assistant language teacher.
  • 费利西亚灯塔, JET Scholar
    费利西亚灯塔, a biochemistry and molecular biology major from Lincoln, has been accepted to the Japanese Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program. She will spend a year in Japan as an assistant language teacher.
  • Kate Richerson, JET Scholar
    Kate Richerson, a senior political science major from Lincoln, has been accepted to the JET Program. She returns to Japan after spending part of her junior year studying at Aoyama Gakuin University in Tokyo.
  • 格兰特杰克曼, JET Scholar
    格兰特杰克曼, a senior business administration major, spent a semester abroad at Kwansei Gakuin University in Osaka and took an NWU Japanese course in Japan last summer. Now he's returning thanks to the JET Program. He will be an assistant language teacher.

Three Nebraska Wesleyan University students will spend the next year in Japan. 

费利西亚灯塔, Kate Richerson and 格兰特杰克曼, 林肯的全部, have each been accepted to the Japanese Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program. 现在是第31个年头, the JET Program promotes a grassroots international exchange between Japan and other nations. Those accepted into the prestigious program teach English in Japanese schools or work in Japanese communities on international exchange activities. 

灯塔, a biochemistry and molecular biology major, first learned about the Japanese culture through her high school’s pen pal program. She eventually traveled to Japan to visit her pen pals and never forgot her love for the country.

“I have the opportunity to live in an entirely different culture and experience it with more understanding,法尔斯说。. “I get to see the real Japan and not the traveler’s version.”

Richerson grew up learning about Japan from her parents who were stationed there with the Navy. The political science major studied abroad at Aoyama Gakuin University in Tokyo for much of her junior year at Nebraska Wesleyan, and is ready to return.

“I’m really excited to immerse myself back into Japanese culture,” said Richerson. “I hope that JET will give me real, applicable knowledge and understanding of a different part of the world, making me a better public servant in my future aspirations.”

Jackman recalls learning about Japanese capsule hotels as a third-grader. He also participated in a pen pal program with a Japanese junior-senior high school and his interest in the country never seized. 在NWU, he spent a semester studying Kwansei Gakuin University near Osaka and returned to Japan last summer through an NWU Japanese course. 

“I think it’s funny that something as simple as a hotel room is what ultimately led me to the decision to move to Japan,杰克曼说。, a business administration major.

“Japan has served as an incredible source of inspiration and motivation for me the past few years so being able to return is a dream come true,他补充道. “Traveling the world is a dream that not everyone gets to realize in their lifetime, so I am thankful to be one of the lucky ones.”

All three students will graduate from Nebraska Wesleyan in May. Jackman plans to live in Japan for at least two years. Following her year in Japan, 灯塔 plans to pursue a Ph.D in chemistry while Richerson plans to pursue law or graduate school.