Goals of the Institution
Nagasaki Wesleyan University specializes in social work and social welfare education. The institution seeks to promote a broader concept and deeper understanding of social-welfare, global communication and community relationships, based on a foundation of human service. To promote this goal, all students are expected to engage in a Community Service Learning (CSL) activity as a graduation requirement. The educational goal at Nagasaki Wesleyan University is to cultivate a multicultural symbiotic society—a society which all people can live happily together. To achieve “multicultural symbiosis” the university has three departments to serve this goal. Nagasaki Wesleyan University is composed of the Department of Foreign Languages, the Department of Economics and Policy, and the Department of Social Welfare.International Outlook
The university has a distinctive international outlook. When still a junior college in the early 1980s, several teachers at the school contacted colleges and universities in the United States, the Philippines, Thailand and other countries in an effort to establish sister-school ties and promote student and faculty exchanges. A network of such ties was established, and over the years from roughly 1983 to 1999, several hundred Japanese students from Wesleyan studied abroad for a full year, while hundreds of other students transferred to foreign institutions to complete a baccalaureate degree. This transfer program was dropped when Wesleyan became a four-year institution, but still many students go abroad for exchange study, while hundreds of foreigners come to Nagasaki Wesleyan to study Japanese language and culture. Nagasaki Wesleyan University has a distinctive international outlook. A network of ties have been established with institutes around the world including the United States, Canada, the Philippines, Thailand, India, China, Malaysia, South Korea, and Brazil. Such sister-school ties promote student and faculty exchanges. Nagasaki Wesleyan University is an active participant in the Asian University Union (AU+) and has sister institute relationships with oversea partner universities. Nagasaki Wesleyan University is partners with institutes including Berjaya University College of Hospitality in Malaysia, Shandong Foreign Languages Vocational College in China, Induk University in South Korea, Kun Shan University in Taiwan, and the Don Bosco School of Management in India.Current and Future Prospects
Like many universities in Japan and elsewhere, changing demographics and a recession economy have had a negative impact on educational institutes. The number of 18-year-olds is declining every year means that there is tremendous competition among institutions to attract these traditional students. Wesleyan has therefore adopted the practice of heavily recruiting students from overseas with an emphasis on student recruitment from China and Korea. The university offers intensive language study programs in Japanese, English, Chinese as well as Korean. In addition, the institution now actively courts non-traditional students within Japan, especially retirees and homemakers from families where the children are themselves in college or otherwise out of the home.References
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