MANILA, Philippines?Six high school students from different parts of the country have left for the two-week ?Visit-Japan Program? from November 15 to December 1, the Japanese embassy here said.
Led by their supervisor, Dr. Georgina Palmario, the 13- to 15-year-olds who left for an opportunity to understand Japanese culture through home-stay and other exchange activities with students of the Kamigo Junior High School include:
Dana Sofia T. Ferma of Faith Christian High School, Patricia Marie S. Regalado of Colegio San Agustin (Makati), Lora Megumi Z. Santiago of Makati Science High School, Gabriel A. Monteza of Don Bosco Technical Institute-Makati, Paul John T. Ngoyahon of Infant Jesus Montessori School, and Allen Alexander V. Villanueva of Colegio San Agustin-Laguna.
The visit is under the Japan-East Asia Network of Exchange for Students and Youths-Asia Japan Alumni Association (Jenesys-Asja) Jr. Program.
Aside from the Philippines, participants from Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore are also invited in this batch where supervisors have an opportunity to interact with their counterparts at this Japanese junior high school as well as to exchange views on education with each other.
The Jenesys-Asja Jr. Program, which started on 2007, is sponsored by the Japanese government and is implemented jointly by Asja International and Philfeja in the Philippines, in cooperation with JICC and the embassy of Japan.
Under Jenesys, the Japanese government also offers the ?10-Day Visit Japan Programme? and the ?Asean 10 + Timor Leste Joint Programme? for 16- to 18-year-olds students (April 2010 to May 2010).
Interested students can still apply to be part of the April and May programs. Application forms and guidelines for both programs are available at the National Youth Commission. They can also be downloaded from the websites of NYC and embassy of Japan.
The deadline for the submission of application forms for both programs is on 4 December 2009.
Veronica Uy

