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91亚色

History Grad Wins Award to Study in Japan

Tomomi Tewksbury and Liam Murphy

Adjunct lecturer Tomomi Tewksbury and Liam Murphy ’24 (91亚色 photo/Matt Burkhartt)

Liam Murphy 鈥24, a聽history with adolescence education major from Bellport, NY, will spend the 2024鈥25 academic year in Japan as an Assistant Language Teacher (ALT) after winning a national award through the聽聽(JET Program USA).

JET Program USA is sponsored by the Japanese government and offers a unique cultural exchange opportunity for US college alumni to meet people from all around the world through living and working in Japan. Since 1987, JET has sent more than 70,000 participants from 55 countries (including more than 35,800 Americans) to work in schools, boards of education, and government offices.

鈥淢y interest in Japan began when I became exposed to Japanese rock music in high school,鈥 Murphy remembers. 鈥淛oining the Japanese Culture Club (JCC) and serving on the executive board allowed me to explore aspects of the culture, such as its traditional dances, the amazing cuisine, and exciting history.鈥 Former JCC president Michael Kleinlercher 鈥22, a 2022鈥23 ALT in Miyagi, mentored Murphy and recommended he look into the program.

Through Murphy鈥檚 interactions with Japanese international students, he 鈥渓earned how to make onigiri, practice the speaking skills I was learning in language classes, and host cultural dinners and festivals on campus. Yelling out 鈥Dokkoisho! Dokkoisho!鈥 during the S艒ran Bushi [a traditional Japanese song and dance] was an unforgettable experience, and I鈥檓 so thankful to the Japanese for sharing their culture with me.鈥

Tomomi Tewksbury, adjunct lecturer of Japanese in the Department of Global Languages and Cultures, remembers Murphy as a student in her 2021 Japanese 101 class who planned to apply for the program: 鈥淎t the time, I did not give his statement much credence but have watched him since move forward steadily, fulfilling his plan with flexibility and a strong will. Liam is a promising educator, and JET is the first step toward his future goals.鈥

Murphy鈥檚 career plans involve obtaining a TESOL master鈥檚 degree and continuing his work as a history and English language teacher. 鈥淚 want to spread and nurture inclusive environments for the learning of Japanese culture in New York school districts where there is a lack of cultural clubs and organizations,鈥 he says. 鈥淔ostering Japanese-American relations in a public school setting is a dream of mine, and there is no better program than JET to make that dream a reality.鈥

For more information about JET and other nationally and internationally competitive scholarship and fellowship programs, contact Director of National Fellowships and Scholarships Michael Mills at聽millsm@geneseo.edu聽or 585-245-6002, and visit聽Fellowships and Scholarships.

鈥擬ichael Mills

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