Stanford e-Wakayama Students Celebrate Their Growth and Development During Closing Ceremony

Instructor Makiko Hirata shares her reflections on Stanford e-Wakayama following the recent conclusion of its second session.
2023–24 Stanford e-Wakayama students holding pouches that Makiko Hirata presented them 2023–24 Stanford e-Wakayama students holding pouches that Makiko Hirata presented them, along with Mr. Masanori Toda (left) and Mr. Shirou Shimomura (right) from the Wakayama Prefectural Board of Education; photo courtesy Wakayama Board of Education.

Stanford e-Wakayama is a distance-learning course sponsored by the Wakayama Prefectural Board of Education and the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE) at Stanford University. Selected students from throughout the prefecture learn from experts in the United States about various academic fields through a global lens. Stanford e-Wakayama instructor Dr. Makiko Hirata recently wrote these reflections about her trip to Wakayama Prefecture to attend the closing ceremony, which was held on March 16, 2024.

In one of Stanford e-Wakayama’s impromptu post-virtual classroom reflections, a student, Kansuke Imamura, posed the question, “Which is more effective, an online or in-person education?,” to his e-Wakayama classmates. “It would be so much nicer to be having this discussion with you all in person,” one student commented affectionately. “But if it weren’t online, we would not have e-Wakayama!,” another student promptly responded. 

Having been impressed with the curiosity and imagination of the inaugural e-Wakayama class in 2022–23, I trusted the students to develop their own thoughts on the issue. Kansuke spent the latter half of the six-month course researching how we learn differently in the two modes of education. He shared his findings with the class in his final presentation, concluding that both had their advantages and disadvantages. 

While the importance of face-to-face communication is undeniable, online education has helped address some of our global educational inequalities, which exist not only in developing nations, but in the world’s biggest economies like the United States, China, and Japan. For example, in his book published this year, Dr. Yujin Yaguchi, Professor and Vice President of Global Education at the University of Tokyo, revealed how 42.7 percent of the freshmen admitted in 2022 to the University of Tokyo (the most competitive and prestigious university in Japan) had graduated from just 20 high schools. Among these 20 elite high schools (out of 4,856 high schools in Japan), 14 were private schools, 10 were all-boys schools, and 19 were in cities with a population of 500,000  or more.[1] The same book called our attention to how female students make up less than 30 percent of all undergraduates in the top-ranking national universities in Japan, even though they are 45.6 percent of all undergraduates nationwide. At the University of Tokyo specifically, the gender gap is even wider, with female students occupying only 20.1 percent of the undergraduate student body.[2] And, as one can easily imagine, female representation among the faculty at these educational institutions is even smaller. 

SPICE offers its online courses and educational resources free of charge to most students in Japan because of the support SPICE receives from the Yanai Tadashi Foundation, private donors, prefectural and municipal governments, and schools. It has been expanding its regional programs especially to address these educational disparities. Stanford e-Wakayama was launched in 2022 as a part of this effort. Eleven of SPICE’s 13 instructors teaching courses to students in and from Japan are women, promoting female representation and diversity. 

The growth and development that the students achieve through these courses are remarkable. Two student alumni noted the following:

Participating in Stanford e-Wakayama, I was exposed to many fields of study and research I did not know and my world was greatly expanded. I was also made aware of limitations that I had unknowingly placed within myself. …I realized the importance of challenging myself.” – Tappo Takeuchi, Stanford e-Wakayama 2023–24 participant.

 

I think my values have changed after talking with many people in Stanford e-Wakayama. Everyone I met through the course was really kind and gave me many encouraging words. I would like to be in that position in the future and help many people. – Niina Ohashi, Stanford e-Wakayama 2023–24 participant


And it IS possible to have the best of both worlds, teaching these virtual classes across the Pacific Ocean, and getting to meet the students in person at the end! After six months of online instruction, I was kindly nudged to attend Stanford e-Wakayama’s closing ceremony in person by SPICE’s director, Dr. Gary Mukai. I prepared colorful pouches filled with American candies to sweeten their milestone. Each student had prepared a 90-second speech reflecting on their six-month journey of discoveries and delivered it at the ceremony. After each speech, I shook their hands, and handed them the pouch. 

At the end of the official ceremony, I announced that I would be happy to meet with anyone who wanted it. To my surprise, every one of my students stood in a line to wait for their turn to meet with me. Attending officials from the Wakayama Prefectural Board of Education, and accompanying teachers and parents, watched and smiled as we met, and took photos to commemorate our celebration. I am looking forward to meeting another class of Stanford e-Wakayama students at the 2024–25 opening ceremony in September.


[1] Yaguchi, Yujin, なぜ東大は男だらけなのか [Why is Tokyo University so full of men?], 集英社新書, 2024, p. 34. 

[2] Ibid, pp. 9–11. 


Stanford e-Wakayama is one of several online courses offered by SPICE.

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