logo
Foreign tourists get a glimpse into Japanese high school culture

Foreign tourists get a glimpse into Japanese high school culture

WITH his black uniform jacket slung rakishly over his shoulders and his feet propped up on a Japanese school desk as he held court with his crew, Jason Wu was taking great satisfaction in being a juvenile delinquent.
The 29-year-old New Yorker was participating in a one-day mock school experience at "Kimino High School" for foreign tourists in Japan.
It's designed to appeal to anime fans like Wu and his wife as well as those simply curious about cultural differences in education.
At a repurposed school about 60 km (37 miles) southeast of Tokyo, participants pay about 35,000 yen (US$245) to dress in classic Japanese school uniforms and attend calligraphy and other lessons.
In gym class, they play traditional Japanese sports day group competitions like tug-of-war or throwing bean bags high into a net basket.
Like Japanese school children, they also practice earthquake drills, serve lunch and clean the classroom at the end of the day.
"This is like the only experience that you can do to have some semblance of the Japanese high school life," said Wu, a software engineer.
Amid a tourism boom fuelled by an extremely weak yen, repeat visitors to Japan like Wu, who is on his 10th trip here, are looking for more immersive activities.
The classroom experience, organised by event planning company Undokai, also dovetails with a government plan to coax more visitors outside of destinations like Tokyo and Kyoto suffering from "overtourism" and into rural areas.
Many manga or anime such as supernatural drama "Jujutsu Kaisen" and romantic comedy "Ouran High School Host Club", both of which have aired on Netflix, are set in high schools and for anime fans in particular, getting to experience high school is a peak Japanese experience.
"Lots of animes will feature school life being this ideal part of your childhood," said Wu's wife, Parina Kaewkrajang, 27.
"It's a type of nostalgia that we wanted to experience for ourselves."
Formerly known as Kameyama Middle School, the event's name Kimino is a play on words for "your" high school and the name of the town Kimitsu, known for strawberries and hot springs.
The school closed in 2020 due to a lack of students - an increasingly common occurrence as Japan rapidly ages and the number of children declines.
Nearly 6,500 schools across the country have closed in the past two decades, according to government data.
"If this becomes an example of how to utilise closed schools, or attracts attention as a new way to revitalise the local area, I would definitely like to expand it to other places," said Undokai founder Takaaki Yoneji.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home
Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home

The Star

time30 minutes ago

  • The Star

Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home

XINGYI, China (AFP): Surrounded by the rubble of demolished homes, Chen Tianming's ramshackle tower of faded plyboards and contorted beams juts into the sky in southwestern China, a teetering monument to one man's stubbornness. Authorities razed most of Chen's village in Guizhou province in 2018 to build a lucrative tourist resort in a region known for its spectacular rice paddies and otherworldly mountain landscapes. Chen, 42, refused to leave, and after the project faltered, defied a flurry of demolition notices to build his family's humble stone bungalow higher and higher. He now presides over a bewildering 10-storey, pyramid-shaped warren of rickety staircases, balconies and other add-ons, drawing comparisons in Chinese media to the fantastical creations of legendary Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. "I started building out of practicality, trying to renovate and expand our home," Chen told AFP on a sweltering May afternoon as he climbed ladders and ducked wooden beams in his labyrinthine construction. "But then it became more of an interest and hobby that I enjoyed," he said. Chen's obsessive tinkering and lack of building permits continue to draw ire from the local government. The higher floors where he sleeps sway in the wind, and dozens of ropes and cables tether the house to the ground as if the whole thing might one day float away. "When I'm up here... I get the sense of being a nomad," Chen said, gazing out at apartment blocks, an airport and distant mountains. "People often say it's unsafe and should be demolished... but I'll definitely never let anyone tear it down." Chen Tianming standing near his house labelled China's strangest -- nail house -- households that refuse to move in the face of development plans -- in Xingyi, in southwest Guizhou province. Chen, 42, has spent seven years and over 100,000 yuan ($13,900) defying authorities' demolition notices to turn his family's humble stone bungalow on the outskirts of Xingyi city into a bewildering 10-storey pyramid-shaped home that has drawn comparisons on Chinese social media to the fantastical creations of Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. -- Photo by Pedro PARDO / AFP - 'Nail house' - Local authorities once had big plans to build an 800-acre tourist resort -- including a theatre and artificial lake -- on Chen's native soil. They promised to compensate villagers, but Chen's parents refused, and he vowed to help them protect the home his grandfather had built in the 1980s. Even as neighbours moved out and their houses were bulldozed, Chen stayed put, even sleeping alone in the house for two months "in case (developers) came to knock it down in the night". Six months later, like many ill-considered development projects in highly indebted Guizhou, the resort was cancelled. Virtually alone among the ruined village, Chen was now master of a "nail house" -- a Chinese term for those whose owners dig in and refuse to relocate despite official compensation offers. A quirk of China's rampant development and partial private property laws, nail houses sometimes make headlines for delaying money-spinning construction projects or forcing developers to divert roads or build around shabby older homes. Even as Chen forged ahead, completing the fifth floor in 2019, the sixth in 2022 and the seventh in 2023, he continued to receive threats of demolition. Last August, his home was designated an illegal construction, and he was ordered to destroy everything except the original bungalow within five days. He says he has spent tens of thousands of yuan fighting the notices in court, despite losing several preliminary hearings. But he continues to appeal, and the next hearing has been delayed. "I'm not worried. Now that there's no one developing the land, there's no need for them to knock the place down", he said. Chen Tianming at his house labelled China's strangest -- nail house -- households that refuse to move in the face of development plans -- in Xingyi, in southwest Guizhou province. Chen, 42, has spent seven years and over 100,000 yuan ($13,900) defying authorities' demolition notices to turn his family's humble stone bungalow on the outskirts of Xingyi city into a bewildering 10-storey pyramid-shaped home that has drawn comparisons on Chinese social media to the fantastical creations of Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. -- Photo by Pedro PARDO / AFP - Tourist attraction - In recent years, ironically, Chen's house has begun to lure a steady trickle of tourists itself. On Chinese social media, users describe it as China's strangest nail house, likening it to the madcap buildings in Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli masterpieces "Howl's Moving Castle" and "Spirited Away". As dusk falls, Chen illuminates his home with decorative lanterns, and people gather on the nearby dirt road to admire the scene. "It's beautiful," local resident He Diezhen told AFP as she snapped photos. "If there are no safety issues, it could become an (official) local landmark," she said. Chen said the house makes many visitors remember their whimsical childhood fantasies. "(People) dream of building a house for themselves with their own hands... but most can't make it happen," he told AFP. "I not only thought of it, I made it a reality." - AFP

Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home
Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home

New Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Chinese man defies demolition orders to build madcap rural home

XINGYI, China: Surrounded by the rubble of demolished homes, Chen Tianming's ramshackle tower of faded plyboards and contorted beams juts into the sky in south-western China, a teetering monument to one man's stubbornness. Authorities razed most of Chen's village in Guizhou province in 2018 to build a lucrative tourist resort in a region known for its spectacular rice paddies and otherworldly mountain landscapes. Chen, 42, refused to leave, and after the project faltered, defied a flurry of demolition notices to build his family's humble stone bungalow higher and higher. He now presides over a bewildering 10-storey, pyramid-shaped warren of rickety staircases, balconies and other add-ons, drawing comparisons in Chinese media to the fantastical creations of legendary Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. "I started building out of practicality, trying to renovate and expand our home," Chen told AFP on a sweltering May afternoon as he climbed ladders and ducked wooden beams in his labyrinthine construction. "But then it became more of an interest and hobby that I enjoyed," he said. Chen's obsessive tinkering and lack of building permits continue to draw ire from the local government. The higher floors where he sleeps sway in the wind, and dozens of ropes and cables tether the house to the ground as if the whole thing might one day float away. "When I'm up here... I get the sense of being a nomad," Chen said, gazing out at apartment blocks, an airport and distant mountains. "People often say it's unsafe and should be demolished... but I'll definitely never let anyone tear it down." Local authorities once had big plans to build an 800-acre tourist resort – including a theatre and artificial lake – on Chen's native soil. They promised to compensate villagers, but Chen's parents refused, and he vowed to help them protect the home his grandfather had built in the 1980s. Even as neighbours moved out and their houses were bulldozed, Chen stayed put, even sleeping alone in the house for two months "in case (developers) came to knock it down in the night." Six months later, like many ill-considered development projects in highly indebted Guizhou, the resort was cancelled. Virtually alone among the ruined village, Chen was now master of a "nail house" – a Chinese term for those whose owners dig in and refuse to relocate despite official compensation offers. A quirk of China's rampant development and partial private property laws, nail houses sometimes make headlines for delaying money-spinning construction projects or forcing developers to divert roads or build around shabby older homes. Even as Chen forged ahead, completing the fifth floor in 2019, the sixth in 2022 and the seventh in 2023, he continued to receive threats of demolition. Last August, his home was designated an illegal construction, and he was ordered to destroy everything except the original bungalow within five days. He says he has spent tens of thousands of yuan fighting the notices in court, despite losing several preliminary hearings. But he continues to appeal, and the next hearing has been delayed. "I'm not worried. Now that there's no one developing the land, there's no need for them to knock the place down," he said. In recent years, ironically, Chen's house has begun to lure a steady trickle of tourists itself. On Chinese social media, users describe it as China's strangest nail house, likening it to the madcap buildings in Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli masterpieces Howl's Moving Castle and Spirited Away. As dusk falls, Chen illuminates his home with decorative lanterns, and people gather on the nearby dirt road to admire the scene. "It's beautiful," local resident He Diezhen told AFP as she snapped photos. "If there are no safety issues, it could become an (official) local landmark," she said. Chen said the house makes many visitors remember their whimsical childhood fantasies. "(People) dream of building a house for themselves with their own hands... but most can't make it happen," he told AFP.

Vietnam welcomes over 9.2 million foreign tourists in first five months
Vietnam welcomes over 9.2 million foreign tourists in first five months

The Sun

time6 hours ago

  • The Sun

Vietnam welcomes over 9.2 million foreign tourists in first five months

HANOI: Vietnam welcomed more than 9.2 million international tourists in the first five months of 2025, up 21.3 per cent from the same period last year, with Malaysia among its top 10 source markets. In May alone, the country recorded 1.53 million international arrivals, a 10.5 per cent year-on-year increase, Vietnam News Agency (VNA) reported, citing the Vietnam National Authority of Tourism (VNAT). Tour operators described this as a strong showing despite the end of the usual peak travel season, setting a 10-year record for the month and underscoring Vietnam's appeal as a year-round destination. Tourism revenue from January to May was estimated at VN$38.4 trillion (US$1.47 billion), up 24.7 per cent from the same period in 2024. Air travel accounted for 85.2 per cent of arrivals, followed by land crossings (12.9 per cent) and sea routes (1.9 per cent). Despite its long coastline and port infrastructure, the VNAT noted that maritime tourism remains largely untapped. China remained the top source market with 2.36 million visitors, followed by South Korea with over 1.9 million. Other key markets included Taiwan (533,000), the United States (375,000), Japan (342,000), Cambodia (325,000), India (272,000), Australia (241,000), Malaysia (221,000) and Russia (210,000). The tourism authority added that it would continue promotional efforts to meet its 2025 target of 22 to 23 million international visitors.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store