OCTOBER 9, 2012, 12:00 PM
Matt Sienkiewicz, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Communication and International Studies at Boston College and Producer/Director of LIVE: From Bethlehem. Follow him on Twitter @MattSienkiewicz.
Shows such as LinkAsia and Mosaic are a tremendous resource for a global media studies professor. They bring together news clips from across the world and dub them into English with tremendous speed and accuracy, while providing context and creating original content to form a full picture. These programs provide the perfect balance for a teacher or student of international media culture. Importantly, they are curated, with careful editing ensuring that the clips are presented in a coherent and representative fashion.
Yet, at the same time, Mosaic and LinkAsia avoid the impulse to impose overarching narratives, allowing the juxtaposition of news from a diverse body of sources to emphasize the fractured, often contradictory picture that media paints. These programs provide the near-immediacy of a web search while avoiding the chaos that such an approach to media study inevitably entails. It's truly amazing to think that, free of charge, I can show my students a half-hour of professionally translated news from Asia or the Middle East shortly after its original airing.
The network presents global media while striving to preserve a strong sense of locality. By finding and distributing locally-produced programs intended for local audiences, Link TV allows its audience a unique opportunity to get a sense of what media activity is like in a far off place.
Topics:
Regions:
JUNE 15, 2012, 12:00 PM
(LinkAsia: June 15, 2012)
Kara Tsuboi:
Japan is overhauling its post-secondary education system. And the new plan would let advanced students graduate after the 11th grade and go to college up to a year early. NHK explains what the change means for high-performing high schoolers.
--
NHK World NEWSLINE
Airdate: June 8, 2012
Reporter:
Education in Japan is compulsory for nine years: six years in elementary school and three years in junior high school. About 96 percent of junior high school students then go on to three years of high school. The ministry's plan would allow high school students to graduate after only two years before entering university.
Miho Takai, Vice Education Minister:
The percentage of students who can continue in post-secondary education is increasing around the world. Nurturing young talented is indispensable for Japan's development. It's important to create new opportunities for students to receive higher education and also to improve the quality of education.
Reporter:
Many countries allow gifted students to skip grades to enter university. South Korea implemented such a system in 1995. By 2000, four high schools, including one in Busan, had hired university professors. Their job is to focus on gifted students who are expected to lead the country in the future in the field of science and technology. Singapore has two types of high schools. One offers a four-year rapid course, and the other a five-year standard course. Students are enrolled in either type, depending on the results of the achievement tests they write during six years of elementary school. About 20 percent of high school graduates go on to enroll in three elite universities in Singapore. About 15 percent attend prestigious universities abroad. Six Japanese universities have already introduced a system allowing the early admission of high school students who have not yet graduated. One of them, Chiba University, adopted the system in 1998. Hideyuki Okamura studies in the university science department. Okamura made use of the early admission system to enter the university two years ago.
Hideyuki Okamura, Student:
I decided to use the early entrance system, rather than staying in high school for one more year. I thought that at university, I would be able to have deeper exchanges and get to meet a greater variety of people.
Reporter:
Okamura says the early entrance system was attractive, and it allowed him to take high- level classes and attend research laboratories at an early stage. But only 101 high school students, including Okamura, have so far entered the six universities. The reason is students are required to quit high school before graduating if they want to enter university early. Under the new education ministry plan, students who skip grades to enter university will be certified as high school graduates.
Takashi Nakayama, Professor, Chiba University:
Students are reluctant to leave school without a certificate. Their parents and teachers also don't like the idea. This plan offers them hope. A proper academic environment should be provided when students need it.
Topics:
Regions:
Comments (0)