High-Impact Student Experiences
Student exchange and study abroad programs that incorporate applied global learning opportunities—such as project-based group activities, service learning, student-faculty research, peer mentoring, and internships—can positively affect student confidence and competence in becoming successful change agents across a wide range of settings, both locally and globally.
U.S. and Japanese partner institutions with existing student exchange and study abroad programs should work together to incorporate applied global learning opportunities regardless of the length and level of study of their program. A growing body of research indicates that short-term exchange and study abroad programs, if carefully planned and designed, can achieve high-impact student learning, growth, and development.
Greater Inclusivity of Diverse Institution Types
While the volume of existing student exchange and study abroad partnership agreements between higher education institutions in the United States and Japan is impressive, gaps in sustainability, access, inclusion, and reciprocity are ongoing within both countries. In the United States, the Study’s data show there are significantly few formalized Japanese partnerships happening with U.S. community colleges, minority serving institutions, and women’s colleges. In Japan, there is a considerably low number of national and public universities engaged with student exchange programs with the U.S.
To solve shared global problems, the United States and Japan urgently need to more fully bring to the table a diversity of experiences and perspectives. America’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) have made deeply impactful and widely exosystemic contributions to the economy in the United States, and are particularly poised to create comprehensive and interconnected collaborative learning, resource, and student exchange networks. Moreover, they play a key role in identifying higher education's potential to address education and social equity gaps beyond the institutional partnership.
Given both the rising number of Japanese students studying at U.S. community colleges and, conversely, the desire to increase the number of American students studying in Japan, investments in U.S. community college exchange programs will improve student success and contribute to growing a stronger, more prosperous, and more inclusive middle class for both countries.
Continuing the Realignment of Academic Calendars
Further advancement with aligning academic calendars to make it more possible for both Japanese and American students to study abroad in the summer and then re-enroll in their home institution in the fall. Many major Japanese universities have adjusted their student exchange programs with their U.S. partner, but participation numbers in these programs is still an ongoing concern.
Transfer Articulation Agreements
A greater attention to resource sharing between U.S. and Japan institutions with existing student exchanges to allow for an increased number of reciprocal international transfer articulation agreements. Having more transferability will provide a vehicle for more targeted international student recruitment as well as help students by allowing seamless transfers of course credits from their exchange experience.