Japanese students on educational tourism: Current trends and challenges
公開日 2018.04.05
A paper written by Dr. Hayato Nagai (CTR Researcher & Lecturer in the Faculty of Tourism, Wakayama University) and Mr. Sho Kashiwagi (Lecturer at Tokai University & CTR Visiting Senior Fellow) was published as a chapter in a Springer’s new book Asian Youth Travellers: Insights and Implications edited by Dr. Catheryn Khoo-Lattimore and Dr. Elaine Yang.
Title
Chapter 7
Japanese students on educational tourism: Current trends and challenges
Author
Hayato Nagai, Wakayama University, Wakayama, Japan
Sho Kashiwagi, Tokai University, Kumamoto, Japan
Source
Asian Youth Travellers: Insights and Implications
Editors: Catheryn Khoo-Lattimore, Elaine Chiao Ling Yang
Publisher:Springer, Singapore
ISBN:978-981-10-8539-0 (Online), 978-981-10-8538-3 (Print)
https://rd.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-10-8539-0
Chapter 7: Pages 117-134 (First Online: 24 March 2018)
https://rd.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-10-8539-0_7
Abstract
Educational tourism has been adopted by many Japanese schools as part of their curriculum or as extracurricular learning programmes for many years. Although the number of school-aged children in Japan has been decreasing as the country’s overall population has grown older, the number of schools, especially high schools, engaging in overseas school trips has increased in the past two decades. Educational tourism is an important segment of Japan’s domestic tourism in particular, and it also has a large economic impact on global tourism. However, although educational tourism in Western countries has been previously discussed in the English tourism literature, educational tourism in Japan, especially overseas school trips, has received limited attention. Thus, this type of travel is not well represented in the growing body of literature on educational tourism. In order to fill this gap, this chapter first discusses the concept of educational tourism and provides an overview of educational tourism programmes in Japanese schools. The chapter then explores current trends and unique features of these programmes by consulting available secondary data. Finally, challenges related to educational tourism in Japan are discussed to gain a better understanding of this unique segment of the international tourism market.
Key words
Educational tourism; Japanese students; School trips