
Ryohei Matsuda
Associate Professor in Asian Studies (Japanese Studies)
2 East South Street
Galesburg, IL 61401-4999
309-341-7241
E-mail: rmatsuda@knox.edu
Learning about Japanese language and culture is not only a path to broader cultural understanding, but is also a valuable skill in the job market in an increasingly globally connected world. Studying Japanese at Knox will not only help you gain language and composition skills in a foreign language, but will also introduce you to Japanese cultural life through events on campus, cooking, visiting Japanese businesses, and Japanese literature. And while many students who study Japanese at Knox come from business, economics and computer science programs, students from all backgrounds have been successful in the program.
The Program
As a student in the Japanese program at Knox, you will have the benefit of small classes, courses that include research opportunities, and access to numerous off-campus programs. Knox offers courses in Japanese conversation and composition through the intermediate level, and the opportunity to minor in Japanese or Japanese Studies.
The minor in Japanese focuses on Japanese literature, composition and conversation. Requirements for the minor include taking two 300-level courses, such as:
The minor in Japanese Studies focuses on Japanese popular culture and modern Japan, in addition to conversation and composition. Requirements for the minor include taking two of the following courses, at least one of which must be at the 300-level:
Both minors are specially designed to allow for substituting Japanese courses you may take while on an off-campus study program. The minors allow for substitution of appropriate 200-level or 300-level courses in Japanese language or area studies from Waseda University, Kansai Gaidai University, or an accredited Japanese college or university, including summer schools. In addition, you have the opportunity to conduct an independent study course as part of pursuing either minor in Japanese. You also have the opportunity to minor in both Japanese and Japanese Studies, if you do not count more than one course toward both minors.
Resources
If you study Japanese at Knox, you're likely to meet Doraemon, who is quite literally the teacher's pet.
"Japanese is very different from English and learning it is very hard," says Professor Ryohei "Matt" Matsuda. To make it more fun—and hopefully, a little easier—Matsuda uses a basket full of Japanese toys, including the stuffed blue Doraemon doll, the blue cat from the 22nd century whose cartoon program is watched by millions on Japanese TV. It's one of the many ways Matsuda introduces Japanese culture into the lives of Knox students of Japanese.
Aside from "tools" like the Doraemon doll, there are other resources essential to the Japanese program at Knox:
Marking the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Elisabeth Herrmann of the University of Alberta gives the 2009 Johnson Lecture, "Mapping Germany from a Cultural Perspective Twenty Years after the Fall of the Wall," November 13 at Knox College.
Severed heads, a ghost in the well -- the Knox College Japanese Club marks Halloween by building a "Kimodameshi," which led visitors through scenes drawn from traditional Japanese ghost stories.
Derek LaRosa, a Prairie Fire wide receiver, is getting ready to student teach high school environmental studies and biology.
I'm researching how to bring environmental studies curriculum to elementary schools. I am Derek, Senior, and...
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