Seminars
What is a seminar?
“Seminar” comes from a German word that means practical classes in a university. At TUFS, seminars are courses where students deepen their interests and knowledge and acquire a new perspective under their chosen academic supervisor, together with other students taking the same seminar. A seminar is not only a class conducted by the academic supervisor but also a group that includes both the supervisor and the students.
In the third year, students select a seminar. During the second year, they are expected to narrow down the direction of their specialized study. In the latter half of the second year, they choose their academic supervisor from the faculty members of the School of Language and Culture Studies.
In the third year, students must take a “seminar on a specialized subject” conducted by their academic supervisor. Above all, this specialized seminar will be the main seminar for the student. In the seminars, students give presentations on a specified topic and discuss it with the supervisor and fellow students.
In the fourth year, students write about or work on their graduation research project on their respective research topic. Together with the specialized seminars, the graduation research seminars in which they receive guidance on the graduation project are the most important places of learning.
In addition, seminars are often important places for communication with academic supervisors and fellow students outside of classes at the university. Members of seminars sometimes have lunch, go out, or attend study camps together.
Competencies that are acquired in a seminar
- Deeper specialized interests and knowledge, and acquiring advanced skills in thinking, analysis, and expression.
It goes without saying that it is important for students to study their subject of interest in depth, but it is probably even more important that they acquire the ability to determine how to analyze the subject, organize their thoughts, and then compose and express them.
The third-year seminar on a specialized field, where students give presentations and engage in discussions, and the graduation research seminar in the fourth year, where students work on their graduation research project, are precisely the places where students can acquire the competencies that are most needed when they go out into the world.
Students can also join seminars conducted by faculty members other than their academic supervisor as “sub-seminars” in order to further broaden their interests and knowledge. In this way, they can learn from multiple faculty members.
- Boosting teamwork and discussion skills
The number of students in each seminar is limited, making it possible for learning and discussion to take place in a relatively small group.
This makes seminars, even in the context of university life as a whole, a particularly comfortable and stimulating environment both for learning and making friends.
- Improving execution and presentation skills as well as self-initiative in diverse learning
While sharing the same academic supervisor, students enrolled in a seminar have a wide range of interests. There are plenty of opportunities to cooperate with fellow students in giving presentations or achieving a shared goal.
Of course, students are not only expected to work in cooperation but also to utilize their own ideas and actively pursue the tasks they are responsible for. In other words, seminars are places of both collaboration and proactive engagement.
Seminars
There are over 50 faculty members in the School of Language and Culture Studies. Students choose an academic supervisor who matches the direction of their studies. They will learn from their supervisor’s specialized field of study to deepen their knowledge and ideas about their subject of interest while gaining hands-on experience to acquire approaches and methods of research and ways of thinking.
Although students will take one or more seminars from the third year, it is vital for them to find the direction of their studies step by step and become clearly aware of their direction of study during the first and second years in the seminars.
Regional Studies
Students can learn multi-faceted and cross-discipline knowledge on the regions to which their major language belongs and acquire professional knowledge about the region.
- List of Regional Studies Faculty Members and Their Areas of Expertise
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Northwest Europe and North America
- OTANI, Naoki: English linguistics (semantics and pragmatics); cognitive linguistics; construction grammar theory; and various topics related to English grammar and semantics
- KATO, Yuji: Anglo-American culture (literature, art, music, and film); critical theory; comparative cultural theory; music criticism (especially American music); Japanese literature (especially contemporary literature)
- SAITO, Hiroko: English linguistics (especially phonetics and phonology); sociolinguistics related to phonetics and phonology; language education such as phonetics learning and teaching; phonetics of world English; phonetic transcription in dictionaries and other media
Central Europe
- NISHIOKA, Akane: German literature; German culture; comparative literature
- FUJINAWA, Yasuhiro: German linguistics; contrastive linguistics between German and other languages; cultural studies centered on German linguistics; DaF (=Deutsch als Fremdsprache)
- YAMAGUCHI, Hiroyuki: culture, literature, and thought in German-speaking countries; representational culture theory (music, art, film, perception, etc.); translation theory and practice; media theory; Christian and Jewish thought and culture
- MORITA, Koji: Polish linguistics; teaching Polish as a foreign language; comparative studies of Polish and other languages; cultural studies centered on Polish linguistics; and various topics related to Polish
- KANAZASHI, Kumiko: Slavonic linguistics; Slavonic literature studies; Czech studies
Southwest Europe
- AKIHIRO, Hisae: French linguistics (morphology, lexicology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, discourse analysis); French education; Japanese-French contrastive linguistics; and various topics related to language, culture, and society of French-speaking countries and regions
- ARAHARA, Kunihiro: literature and culture in French-Speaking countries and regions (art, film, music, manga, theatrical arts such as musicals, fashion, and cuisine); critical theory: French-Japanese comparative cultural studies
- KOKUBO, Marie: Italian literature and culture
Iberia and Latin America
- TAKEDA, Chika: culture and literature in Portuguese-speaking countries and regions
- MIZUNUMA, Osamu: Portuguese linguistics and various topics related to Portuguese-speaking countries and regions
- KAWAKAMI, Shigenobu: Spanish linguistics; Romantic linguistics; languages and cultures in Spanish-speaking countries and regions
- KUNO, Ryoichi: literature and culture in Spanish-speaking countries and regions (General arts such as film and music); cultural history; translation Practices (Spanish to Japanese)
Russia
- HIKITA, Go: Russian linguistics; linguistics
- MAEDA Izumi: literature and culture in Russian-speaking countries and regions and the former Soviet Union
Central Asia
- SHIMADA, Shizuo: society, culture, and history of Central Asia
- YAMADA, Yohei: various topics related to Mongolian linguistics and culture
East Asia
- KATO, Haruko: usage and vocabulary of modern Chinese; contrastive studies between China and Japan based on these elements
- HASHIMOTO, Yuichi: Contemporary Chinese literature; Northeast China; literature and sociolinguistics; classical Chinese literature (Liezi and T’ang poetry); language, circumstances, ideas, and theories of modern colonial society; Kanji and the public sphere; film and music
- MIYAKE, Takayuki: Chinese linguistics and various topics related to Chinese
- IKARASHI, Koichi: Korean linguistics; Korean education; grammar during the modernization period; Japanese-Korean comparative grammatology; text theory (linguistics)
- CHO, Eui-sung: Korean linguistics (primarily contemporary Korean grammar, Korean dialectics, North Korean language, Korean history); Korean education; comparative studies (Mainly Korean-Japanese)
- NAM, Yunjin: Korean linguistics; Korean-Japanese contrastive linguistics; Korean language education theory
Southeast Asia
- FURIHATA, Masashi: Indonesian; various languages in Indonesia; language-related topics such as the linguistic environment in Indonesia
- NOMOTO, Hiroki: syntax and semantics (all languages); languages in Southeast Asia (including English and Chinese variants); language resource development
- YAMAMOTO, Kyosuke: phonetics (especially acoustics); phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and contacts between them (all languages); Austronesian languages such as Filipino and Papuan; descriptive linguistics
- Kosit, Tiptiempong: Thai culture and literature; Thai studies (politics, economics, history, Buddhism, LGBT); modern and contemporary comparative literature (Thai, Japanese, English)
- SUZUKI, Reiko: Laotian language and research on various Thai languages spoken in Laos and Thailand
- NOHIRA, Munehiro: Vietnamese literature, ideas, and culture; comparative literature; oriental thought
- UEDA, Hiromi: Cambodian linguistics; research related to Cambodian
- OKADA, Tomoko: Cambodian culture and literature; Southeast Asian film studies
- OKANO, Kenji: Burmese; Tibeto-Burman languages; research of various languages spoken in Myanmar
South Asia
- MAMIYA, Kensaku: various phenomena related to languages spoken in the South Asia region; all phenomena related to Pakistan
- MIZUNO, Yoshifumi: Indian thought, literature, and culture
- SHEIKH, Tariq: Comparative Literature, Cultural Studies, History of India-Japan Interactions
Middle East
- MIYOKAWA, Hiroko: modern history of the Middle East; fields related to religion and ethnic minority issues
- YAGI, Kumiko: religious studies; fields related to Islamic thought and culture around the world
- SASAKI, Ayano: literature and culture in Persian-speaking countries and regions
- YOSHIE, Satoko: literature and culture in Iranian-speaking countries and regions
- SUGAHARA, Mutsumi: Turkish linguistics; language-related issues and policies in Turkey; contemporary Turkic languages; ancient and medieval Turkic languages (except Osmanli) and literature
Trans-Regional Studies
In Trans-Regional Studies, students select one field from linguistics, linguistics and language processing, language education studies, interpreting and translation, literature and cultural theory, and human science. Through the specialized study of a specific field, students can explore knowledge beyond their major region and acquire the ability to gain a broad understanding of human activities centered on language and culture.
- List of the Faculty Members in the Trans-Regional Studies and Their Areas of Expertise
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Linguistics and Language Processing
- UCHIHARA, Hiroto: linguistics; phonology; morphology; field linguistics
- KAZAMA, Shinjiro: general linguistics and individual linguistic studies regardless of language (Not only the 27 language majors but also any minor languages. The theme can be phonetics, grammar, or letters. Sociolinguistics and contrastive linguistics (Japanese- English, etc.) are also possible. language education studies are not included
- SANO, Hiroshi: data science-oriented computational linguistics, Japanese syntax studies
- NAKAGAWA, Hiroshi: phonetics; phonology; field linguistics
- BORLONGAN, Ariane Maclinga: sociolinguistics broadly, and its related topics, i.e. the relationship of society and language and social factors relating to language use; and then, particularly, migration linguistics, the interdisciplinary and multidimensional study of language; and finally, world English, specifically, history and development of English around the world (My seminar is in English only)
- MINOURA, Nobukatsu: linguistics; sign languages; Athabaskan linguistics
- MOCHIZUKI, Keiko: contrastive linguistics between Japanese and a foreign language; foreign language education studies (English, Chinese, Japanese); second language acquisition studies and teaching method development based on learner corpus (English, Japanese, and Chinese)
- MOCHIZUKI, Hajime: natural language processing; computational linguistics; information processing apps
Language Education Studies
- TONO, Yukio: language education using CEFR and corpus; second language acquisition studies; learning dictionary studies
- NEGISHI, Masashi: English language education; linguistic test studies; English teaching materials theory; English teaching methodology
- YOSHITOMI, Asako: second language acquisition studies; language education studies; other applied linguistics for English and other languages (sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, bilingualism, etc.)
Interpreting and Translation Studies
- NAITO, Minoru: community interpreting studies; multilingual and multicultural society theory; interpreting and translation studies
- NISHIHATA, Kaori: interpreting and translation studies
Literature and Cultural Theory
- SHAO, Dan: world literature; literary theory; women’s literature and culture studies; feminist translation studies, gender studies, film studies
- MARUYAMA, Takao: religious studies (general, Christian, Judaism, Thought, and contemporary society); thanatology
Human Science