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  • Hello everyone! It's Kemushi-chan Loretta!

  • I forgot

  • Before we start this video, I wanted to say thank you

  • to everyone who checked out my work vlog that

  • was posted while I was actually filming the video that you're about to watch.

  • I know! x 5

  • A lot of you guys are like, "Shut up already and give us the answer."

  • "Why are you in Japan?"

  • "What's your job? What are you even doing over there?"

  • I know

  • If you are one of the wonderful new faces who decided to swing by

  • thank youyou probably haven't noticed that I already made

  • a job update video before,

  • and you probably haven't seen my Instagram stories where I've mentioned

  • what it is that I do. Anyways,

  • I'm bringing my local legal expert

  • my lawyer

  • who's going to sit down and explain my job and my Visa situation and how that all worked out.

  • All of that in a new video, but today specifically

  • I wanted to talk about one of the steps I forgot to mention.

  • So, sending you back in time to the video that I filmed before

  • where you're going to see more of this shadow.

  • 3, 2, 1. Go!

  • One of the most common questions I get is

  • how did I actually come to Japan?

  • How did I actually start school here?

  • (How did I) go through the application?

  • Essays?

  • All the hurdles. I just didn't even talk about it.

  • I was just like, "Yeah, I'm here guys. Suck it."

  • But that's not good enough.

  • If you guys have been watching me on Instagram, especially Instagram stories,

  • you probably know that I recently got to do this really cool experience in

  • a place called Matsudo.

  • It's technically in Shiba,

  • but it's really, like, a suburb near Akihabara

  • and Ueno and all your favorite places.

  • I stayed in a really cool Airbnb, I got to try on samurai armor,

  • Tokyo. This was supposed to be Edo.

  • and visited this guy who had this, like, massive beard.

  • It was called Tiny Kitchen, but it was like this guy and his beard

  • just serving you food you never even thought would taste good.

  • And it did!

  • So when I was in Matsudo, I was walking under the train tracks,

  • and noticed there was this concept art.

  • It was a foreign resident who was staying in Matsudo during an artist in residency program

  • doing art for the city.

  • And the thing is, I've known about the Paradise Air program for

  • about six, seven years or so?

  • I once made this website that got hacked and burned and destroyed, but

  • I just researched all the scholarships that I wanted

  • and put them into a database and put them online so people could

  • search for scholarships and match them to their life situation.

  • One of the types of scholarships that was really popular

  • on that website was the artist in residency programs.

  • People didn't realize that you don't have to do a formal "study abroad"

  • to study abroad.

  • I walked down this tunnel and was like, "Oh my god! Wait, this is that Matsudo?"

  • Seeing Paradise Air reminded me again.

  • There are so many opportunities to live in a little neighborhood

  • and do whatever it is that you want abroad in Japan

  • doesn't even have to be Japan.

  • Literally just do what you do

  • for little to sometimes usually virtually no money.

  • And it bothered me.

  • So many people don't know what these opportunities are

  • and when they do know, it's too late.

  • Maybe you're too old for a formal study abroad program.

  • You didn't go to the right type of college, or you didn't go to college, or

  • you didn't realize that your portfolio meant something,

  • or whatever it may be. So,

  • today I wanted to just really quickly chatwe got our laptops out

  • we're just chatting.

  • Open your laptops.

  • I just wanted to share kind of a tip of how I actually found these opportunities

  • that made my life better.

  • These are tips on how to get yourself some new ideas

  • whether you're an adult, working adult, current student, university student, high school student, etc.

  • We're learning how to fish today.

  • If you are a student, you are affiliated to a school that has a lot more resources

  • and research behind them than you do.

  • Your career center, shoot them an email.

  • A department head, if there's an Asian Studies or Japanese Studies, or something like that.

  • Go talk to these people first, and ask them if there's something for you.

  • While you're at it, don't forget to also go check out the library.

  • I get a lot of beginner questions asking where to start with Japanese.

  • Don't spend any money to start.

  • Definitely learn hiragana, katakana, and then

  • swing down to your school library or your local library

  • and see if they have any Japanese books.

  • If they don't, order them.

  • Take advantage of thatthe shadows are at it again.

  • When to start looking for scholarships.

  • For short-term programs, anything from a few months all the way up to a year,

  • you want to start looking somewhere about half a year to a year in advance.

  • If you're looking at long-term programs

  • next year, you want to start thinking about and moving on it now.

  • It's too late for this year's summer.

  • When you're trying to find programs to take you abroad for cheap and or free,

  • you want to start looking half a year to a year in advance.

  • What to look for. I'm using the word "scholarships" broadly,

  • but words like, obviously, "scholarships"

  • but we also have "funds", "fellowships", "research", "grants", etc.

  • These are the types of words you want to use in a Google search.

  • It's not always going to be called a scholarship,

  • it may be a grant.

  • Language school programs and scholarships to go to language school for free.

  • Listen up!

  • There are a few occasional funds, grants, scholarships,

  • and contests to help fund formal language school programs.

  • Language schools in general are usually privately funded.

  • That being said, there are still opportunities to do a language school program

  • without having to google the word "language school".

  • For example, things like language intensive programs.

  • If you are Australian, looking for things like the Hamer scholarship.

  • If you are American, the CLS program.

  • There are so many cities across Japan that have a "sister school"

  • or a "sister city" somewhere out in the world.

  • For example the city that I just visited, Matsudo,

  • is sister cities with Whitehorse in Australia.

  • Looking for actual language schools in your country.

  • For example, when I was in New York, I used to go to the Tenri Cultural Institute at least one or two times a week.

  • And they had a sister program here in Japan

  • with their own specific language school program, but it's not going to come up in a normal Google search

  • if you don't go in through kind of the sister city angle.

  • If you are from the EU, you may already be familiar with the Vulcanus program.

  • If you have technical or engineering type skills,

  • this is something where you are basically aiming towards

  • an internship, but there is a language-intensive training program

  • before you're allowed to do that part.

  • So it's a language school program within a larger program,

  • but it wouldn't come up if you searched

  • "language school Japan scholarship".

  • You have to start getting creative.

  • So, the first thing you need to do,

  • is tell everybody.

  • If you're trying to study abroad, if you're trying to just live abroad,

  • if you're trying to just try it for a little bit, whatever it is that you're trying to do,

  • know what it is and tell people that.

  • Tell your favorite teacher, school career center, piano teacher, your department head,

  • favorite teacher, personal circle, your church, your synagogue,

  • your friends. Literally tell any people,

  • especially associations.

  • Googling and all that jazz is great,

  • but your search will go so much faster

  • if there are many more people with their ear to the ground.

  • Some people hear opportunities about Japan, and

  • they'll just think to tell you just because they knew that you were interested.

  • Check your consulate.

  • Another one is the Japan Foundation.

  • You know, the guys who send out your favorite test every year.

  • They have specific scholarships and opportunities in their regions sometimes.

  • You have to let them know that you exist.

  • This worked incredibly well for me because

  • the first two times I came to Japan on a scholarship.

  • The CLS (Critical Language Scholarship) scholarship, and the other one was through the Freeman Foundation.

  • I'd never even googled for (them). I didn't even know they existed.

  • One of my best friends was trying to apply to the Turkish program.

  • That was the first year that CLS even existed, and that gave me that advantage because

  • so few people actually knew about it, and there was such less competition.

  • When you figure out what it is that you want to do,

  • and you tell everybody about it,

  • you annoy them with it, you'll find that that grapevine starts to work for you.

  • People start to give you information that can help you get your goals done faster,

  • and it gets you ahead of the curve.

  • #2—this is a techy tip, kinda hack type of thing

  • is Google Alerts.

  • Setting up a Google Alert is one of the things that can expand that grapevine

  • so you don't have to keep googling all the time.

  • "Japan scholarship"

  • "Graduate degree Japan"

  • "American" "US"

  • "Japan adult linguistics"

  • Whatever my major was, I put in a whole list of different Google Alerts,

  • set it that every day if there was any new hits with something about that,

  • to send it directly to me via email.

  • Then in Gmail, I had a special folder for Japan Google Alerts,

  • and a filter so that every time a Google Alert came in through my email,

  • it would automatically filter and land in that folder,

  • so all I had to every morning, check my emails, check the news,

  • check the weather, check my Google Alerts.

  • Am I going to Japan tomorrow? Maybe.

  • Little hack that kept me kind of above the curve.

  • Doing that makes sure that you don't miss deadlines.

  • There's nothing worse than finding out there's this perfect scholarship,

  • but you missed the deadline by like two weeks.

  • I hate that.

  • Google Alerts, set them up,

  • put them in a folder, or don't.

  • Keep on top of new opportunities so that you don't miss themthis year.

  • So the keywords, the search, what to google.

  • If you search Japan scholarship, or Japanese scholarship,

  • or language school scholarship,

  • you're not really going to find anything.

  • You have to figure out ways to narrow it down

  • by figuring out what is special about you.

  • What is your niche? You got to hone it, and you got to own it.

  • And that's going to help you find more specific scholarships and more opportunities.

  • First of all, if you're a student, start with your school name.

  • For me, I went to William and Mary

  • checking for William and Mary scholarship abroad.

  • Your major. "Math abroad", "Graphic design scholarship abroad".

  • You'll start to find that a lot of scholarships don't say "Japan" in the name

  • but they just say "study abroad" or a certain type of skillset.

  • But sometimes you can apply those scholarships anywhere.

  • The other things that make really great niche search terms are, for example,

  • your ethnicity, your income, your orientation

  • your city, your hobbies, your portfolios, your skillset, your job.

  • "Dance grant Asia"

  • "Art program Japan"

  • "Engineering scholarship abroad"

  • Try to find these different combinations of words that make

  • niche profiles of who you are because there are some that are going to be Japan specific,

  • and some of them aren't.

  • "French citizen"

  • "US citizen"

  • UK, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, India, Brazil, EU.

  • "Country name abroad fellowship"

  • or scholarship.

  • Design scholarships, being a woman opens you up to a lot of scholarships.

  • Women in design, women in teaching.

  • This is how I found some of my favorite scholarships. For example, the FEAthe Fund for Education Abroad.

  • The GRIT Scholarships. These are for nontraditional types of study abroad, so

  • if you are a community college, if you are a first-generation student, if you're a minority.

  • Don't be afraid to leverage what you've got.

  • If you have a portfolio, artist in residence programs are huge!

  • Paradise Air, like I mentioned earlier,

  • ARCUS, there's Ongoing AIR, there's Kamiyama.

  • In addition to scholarships, there are so many opportunities just to be more involved.

  • There are events, local programs, things that you can do even back home.

  • If you look at Japan Foundation, Japan Society,

  • embassies, and consulates.

  • If you google these words, you'll start to find really interesting programs.

  • For example, I'm not from the UK, but I stumbled on this literally this morning.

  • There's a program in the UK where you can bring Japanese teachers to your school.

  • This one's called Teaching Step Out.

  • You can call them to your school to try out doing a formal class

  • or just to do teaching at your local Japanese club or Japan club.

  • That's something that you can actually ask your school to do.

  • There are speech contests, like through one of my favorite providers, the KCC-JEE in Chicago.

  • They run a pretty regular contest where high school students can go abroad,

  • but they also have job opportunities.

  • They have their own, basically, sister city program.

  • They have another branch out in Japan.

  • There's Fullbright Programs.There's even the Ship for World Youth

  • where you don't even go to Japan,

  • you go on a boat that's run in affiliation with the Japanese government.

  • It's an exchange program that happens on a boat.

  • But again, if you search "Japanese language program", this wouldn't come up.

  • You can just speak Japanese without even having to be in Japan.

  • So think things like that.

  • The Asian Development Bank program,

  • ADB. It's not just school programs, but they also have jobs and internships.

  • Relatives! If you have a Japanese relative somewhere up in the mix,

  • there's the Dream Come True program.

  • That's coming up too. And of course, one of my favorites,

  • MEXT is coming up in about three months.

  • If you want to go to Japan at any point in the next year or two,

  • it's time to start looking now, and I want to just put that bug in your ear.

  • Three quick points about applications and interviews.

  • During your application and doing your essays,

  • make sure you actually know why you want to go to Japan.

  • A five-year, maybe even a ten-year plan,

  • and it has to be something beyond

  • I've never been there before, or I like anime, or I just want to go.

  • These are not good enough; that's like everyone.

  • What else do you have? Do you have a certain skillset?

  • In the future, do you want to work in a company that uses Japanese?

  • Do you want to design games? Do you want to show people in Japan more about your city?

  • It's not just your grades. When proctors are looking at your application,

  • they're looking are you actually hungry to go abroad, or would it just be nice?

  • Do you actually need the scholarship to get down your career path,

  • or would it just be kind of fun?

  • Is this a return on investment? If they pay for you

  • to go to this program, are you going to be the type of person who will continue to spread the word,

  • who will continue to invite other students?

  • When they put their money into you, will it spread to more people?

  • Whenever I had applications or essays, I wrote truthfullydon't liethat I did not have the financial means

  • at that point to come to Japan.

  • And if I was not able to come to Japan,

  • I would not be able to do the job, the work how I did and still do

  • when to create other scholarship programs for other students.

  • I want to create job opportunities, I want to create connections,

  • I've specifically tried to frame every application to say, "When you invest in me, it's going to come back ten-fold."

  • That's really going to make your application stand out.

  • If you don't know exactly what it is you want to do with Japan or Japanese,

  • this is a good time to think about it.

  • Start getting that in your mind so that when you tell people you want to go abroad,

  • you can tell them why.

  • Get passionate about it, know what it is that you're about,

  • and go out there and do it!

  • If you happen to apply for a scholarship program that has an interview piece,

  • be aware: they may not say it in the actual application or in the actual description,

  • but be prepared, they are probably going to ask you to speak Japaneseif you can.

  • I get this question a lot: "Do I have to be able to speak Japanese to do the MEXT scholarship?" (For example)

  • "Does this hurt my application?" It doesn't hurt your application, but if there are two people in the running,

  • and the other person does speak Japanese and you don't,

  • they're likely going to go for the other person.

  • You should be prepared, and you should be enthusiastic

  • about using Japanese, about getting to Japan, and about doing something concrete with that.

  • I have been ambushed on many occasions

  • where I thought I was just going to talk about my essays and my resumes,

  • and I went in, and they were like, "Alright, shall we do this in Japanese?"

  • And I was like, are you kidding me?

  • So yeah, so that's my chat for today.

  • It is clearly getting dark outside, and the day is over.

  • I'm going to be doing a lot of content about jobs and other things,

  • but it's still pretty early in the year, and there are lot of opportunities coming up that I hope you don't miss

  • just because you weren't looking.

  • So, start telling your friends, get your Google Alerts going,

  • and start thinking about why you want to go there and what makes you special.

  • Literally. Like, actually think about it.

  • If you guys have any scholarships that you really liked or thought were really successful for you,

  • or even just programs or ideas that you thought were really interesting,

  • let me know in a comment below.

  • Everyone else would be really curious to hear about it too.

  • Thank you for watching today. I'll see you guys in the comments.

  • See you next time!

  • Bye~!

Hello everyone! It's Kemushi-chan Loretta!

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