Abstract:
Mono vs.
Multiculturalism,
Canada through the eyes of Japanese Students
By Andrew Reimann & Gregory V. G.
O'Dowd
Tokoha Gakuen University, Shizuoka
This paper describes the process and
results of a study conducted at several Japanese universities on how Japanese
students view Canada vis-a-vis Japan's efforts to internationalize
itself.
If you were to ask a Japanese person to
describe their country, they invariably describe it in monocultural
terms; they are overly self-interested and do not regard Japan as having a multicultural society as
foreigners are largely marginalized. Yet
foreigners reside here in increasing numbers and are playing an increasingly more important role in Japan's society and economy. Furthermore, if you were to suggest to a
Japanese person that Japan is already a mulicultural
society, the usual response is an immediate rejection of the idea and the
insistence that Japan is still populated by Japanese. It is largely forgotten, or ignored, that Japan is home to sizable Korean and Chinese
communities as well as numerous other ethnic groupings also growing regardlessly.
Nevertheless, since the early 1980's Japan has been trying to internationalize
itself with varying degrees of success.
Internationalization involves looking outward at other countries and
trying to gain a broader understanding of their cultures, but in Japan's case it invariably means looking at
the USA (an interesting model of multiculuralism but not the only one).
Canada, on the other hand, presents a different
perspective. Canada is typically regarded by social
observers as a cultural "stew" where immigrants are encouraged to
keep their old ways as they learn to become Canadians. The American model, in contrast, is regarded
more of a "melting pot" in which immigrants are encouraged to
assimilate quickly and dump their old ways.
If the policy of pursuing internationalization is meant to develop an open-mindedness to foreign cultures in Japanese citizens,
it should therefore include a broad range of perspectives. Which would be a better model for Japan to follow? The Japanese must make up their own minds but
we as educators can help them to do that by raising their awareness of
alternative models.
The aims of this study were two-fold;
Firstly, to determine what opinions and images
students held about Canada, and
Secondly to raise their
consciousness of Canada as an important model
of multiculturalism.
What follows is a brief explanation of
how the survey instruments used in this study were developed, then an overview
of the data collected and some discussion of the more interesting and pertinent
results. Finally, suggestions are made
as to how these results may be used to raise Canada's profile in Japan and how Canadian content can be made
more relevant to Japanese students who will mold Japan's future.