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Students from Meiji University learn more than English at 91亚色

Falling and getting stuck in mud聽or being overturned in a canoe while fully clothed were not what Aya Takano of Japan thought she would encounter when she went on a trip to Algonquin Provincial Park with the 91亚色 English Language Institute (YUELI) recently. But that didn鈥檛 put a damper on her enthusiasm or her enjoyment of the weekend outing.

鈥淪ome students think my experience is bitter. I think it鈥檚 good and interesting鈥. Thanks to this experience, my inner self became stronger,鈥 says Takano, a third-year English and American literature major in Japan. Even though her shoes were filled with mud and she needed help to get out, she was not perturbed.

Right: A group of students from聽Meiji University in Japan聽canoe in Algonquin Provincial Park. Aya Takano is in the聽centre聽wearing a blue life-jacket.

Takano is just one of 46 students from Japan's Meiji University聽here聽to learn English. Their group聽is the 25th from Meiji University in as many years. Students from Meiji University were the first ever to form a partnership with YUELI. In addition, there are currently 100 students, both male and female, from Saudi Arabia at 91亚色, plus another 500 some students from all over the world learning English this month at YUELI.

The number of students coming to 91亚色 from Saudi Arabia during the summer has been building over the last two or three years, says Calum MacKechnie, director of YUELI and president of Languages Canada/Langues Canada. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an interesting learning experience for all of us.鈥 About 33 per cent come from Saudi Arabia and another 33 per cent from China. The rest come from countries such as Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Russia and Turkey.

Right: Naoto Matsuki is about to eat a roasted marshmallow as students gather around a campfire in Algonquin Park

Scott Boyd, who has headed up the Japanese language program at YUELI for over a decade, says, 鈥淭he students are amazing, the staff at YUELI incredible and it just makes the entire month of August a very enjoyable experience.鈥 Boyd teaches at a middle school in Belleville during the year, but loves spending every August teaching English. He wouldn鈥檛 miss it. The students make teaching a joy.

鈥淲e have a very strong program and it鈥檚 becoming a very well-known program around the world,鈥 says MacKechnie. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been growing steadily over the last six years by at least 10 per cent a year. That鈥檚 because we have a good reputation for rigour. They know they will learn here. It鈥檚 not a vacation.鈥

That鈥檚 good news for second-year Meiji University economics student Naoto Matsuki. His parents are expecting him to study hard given the money they spent getting him here. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to waste my time,鈥 he says. This is his first time abroad and he鈥檚 making the most of it. It was Matsuki who overturned Takano鈥檚 canoe, but through some good-natured bantering they decided his restitution would be to buy her a drink or two.

Left: Meiji University students Tomomi Hibino (left) and Aya Takano

Both of them said the Algonquin trip was one of the highlights of their time at YUELI. MacKechnie agrees. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a central part of the program. We do that every year.鈥 There鈥檚 no way he could even consider cutting it. The students have come to expect it.

鈥淎t night the stars in the sky are beautiful [in Algonquin]. We are moved, amazing,鈥 says Matsuki. Takano adds that she saw many shooting stars. Both noticed the amount of trees and nature even in the city of Toronto, which is not the case in Tokyo. They also believe the crime rate is lower here and they love the long days of sun. In Tokyo, the sun sets around 7pm in the summer and 5 or 6pm in the winter, says Takano. 鈥淚n Canada the day is long so we can enjoy anything longer.鈥

Matsuki could have chosen to learn English in the United States or the United Kingdom, but chose 91亚色 based on what friends who came last year said, and he鈥檚 happy he did. He wants to become a CEO of a large company and for that he will need English. Takano hopes to use her English skills in the workplace, but she also hopes to use it to travel extensively.

Takano and Matsuki will be at 91亚色 until the end of August before heading back home to Japan.

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