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Virtual study abroad course emulates in-person experience in Japan – CALS News - wisc.edu

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In a span of 20 minutes, a dozen students from the University of Wisconsin–Madison visited a Japanese pastry shop, a high-tech sushi restaurant, and got ice cream — twice. But they all left a little hungrier.

They were the virtual guests of their counterparts at Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine (OUAVM), taking a food tour of the Japanese city. It was one of several immersive video field trips, and just a taste of the numerous welcoming, engaging learning experiences that were to come for the UW–Madison students. For 10 days, the virtual study abroad program “UW Food Systems and the Environment in Northern Japan” was in session.

“The [food tour] was one of the highlights for me,” says Maggie Li, a neurobiology major pursuing a certificate in global health. “The pastries looked so puffy and pretty, and I really enjoyed seeing the sushi conveyor belt.”

An aerial drone view of the lands surrounding the farm of Yuichi Sato, in the town of Shimizu west of Obihiro, Japan, in a recorded interview and virtual tour of the farm during the summer of 2021.

The short summer program transcends time zones without the jet lag. It introduces UW–Madison students to the agricultural and food systems of Hokkaido — the top agricultural producing region in Japan — comparing and contrasting with Wisconsin’s systems as they go. The program features live lectures and discussion led by OUAVM faculty, one-on-one conversations with Japanese undergraduate students, and virtual field trips to an active volcano, a sake brewery, and both crop and dairy farms.

The virtual version of the study abroad program — developed in response to the coronavirus pandemic and offered for the first time in the summer of 2021 — was carefully designed to feel like the in-person experience as much as possible. The virtual program will be offered again in summer 2022.

“One of my goals for this program was to bring UW students as close as possible to the country, its culture and its people,” says course instructor Aurelie Rakotondrafara, an associate professor of plant pathology. “And there are lessons here for every UW student: Every time we eat, we participate in agriculture.”  

In a soil pit, assistant professor Rintaro Kinoshita of Obihiro University is seen in a recorded virtual field trip to the Japanese agricultural school’s experimental farm, giving a lecture on the region’s soil structure in the summer of 2021.

The program was established in 2018 by Jiwan Palta, now a professor emeritus of horticulture, inspired by the numerous links between Madison and Obihiro. The two municipalities are sister cities, and their universities have an official research collaboration to improve potato quality and production. Obihiro, on the island of Hokkaido, shares a common latitude with Wisconsin of 43 degrees north, so the two areas experience similar climates and seasonal changes. There are notable differences, too — such as Hokkaido’s volcanic ash soils.

Hokkaido’s farmers produce some of the same products as Wisconsin’s farmers — potatoes, soybeans and dairy, for example — and they experience some of the same challenges such as soil conservation.

Yuichi Sato, a farmer in the town of Shimizu west of Obihiro, Japan, is seen in a recorded interview and virtual tour of his farm during the summer of 2021.

“[My farm’s] volcanic ash soil is very easy to till but has… poor drainage. For soil management, I am trying to avoid excessive tillage because the soils are very fragile,” crop farmer Yuichi Sato explained during a virtual field trip to his farm, where he grows a five-year rotation of potato-wheat-wheat-sugar beet-beans.

Students in the program learned about the different approaches the two countries take, based on cultural, geographic, and agricultural factors.

“I liked being able to converse with the professors regarding dairy farming in Japan and how different and similar it is to farming here in Wisconsin,” says Rachel Schumann, a Farm and Industry Short Course student studying agricultural business, whose family owns Blue Prairie Holstein in Blue Mounds, Wisconsin. “As a member of a dairy farming family, it was interesting to hear how low the fertility rate is on Japanese farms, and how small their farms are compared to those in Wisconsin. Big dairy farms in Japan are 80 to 100 cows, whereas my family has a 1,000 cow dairy here.”

The course also introduced students to Japanese culture. Ahead of their first meeting with OUAVM faculty and students, UW students learned Japanese etiquette. They could also earn extra credit through “A Little Bit of Culture” lessons, where they learned about the traditional Japanese tea ceremony, gift wrapping, manga (graphic novels) and more.

In their course evaluations, students reported strongly enjoying the live interactions with professors, farmers and fellow undergraduates. And on the other side of the globe, the course provided meaningful experiences for the Japanese students who volunteered to help produce the field trip videos and participate in classroom discussions. Some had their own study abroad plans derailed by the coronavirus pandemic.

On the final day of the virtual study abroad course “UW Food Systems and the Environment in Northern Japan,” in the summer of 2021, students and faculty from UW–Madison and Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine shape their fingers like a W as they pose for a group picture over Zoom.

“I enjoyed it a lot! We had the opportunity to interact with UW students, discussing Japanese culture and [having] chit chat sessions, asking questions to each other,” says Ai Yamazaki, a senior studying animal production at OUAVM. “It was a great chance to learn new [English] vocabulary related to agriculture and get to know students from the States.”

The warm feelings were mutual.

“Although being in Japan would have been more immersive, being able to interact with the students of Obihiro was fun,” says Schumann. “They were so interested in us American students, just like we were interested in them.”

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