University of Tokyo (U-Tokyo) Professor Emeritus, Dr. Toru Nakanishi and thirteen U-Tokyo students visited Central Philippines State University โ Main Campus last August 25 as part of their study tour.
CPSU President, Dr. Aladino C. Moraca led the campus tour for the U-Tokyo visitors, introducing the existing projects of the university and how the projects are being translated into the community as income-generating opportunities for the underprivileged.
The University of Tokyo also nicknamed as U-Tokyo and Todai was established in 1877 as Japanโs first imperial university and is one of the country's most storied and prestigious higher education establishments.
โUnder our universityโs International Studies, we have study tours in countries like the United States of America, China, the Philippines, and European countries. Our purpose now is to teach the reality of this contemporary world, especially in the Philippine setting. For this reason, I brought this group of students here to your country. We have no special topic in general but for me, I would cite development and poverty in the Philippine society as our topic. So, I visited rural areas like Negros Occidental, Negros Oriental, Nueva Ecija, and Laguna, as well as informal settlements in Metro Manila specifically in Malabon,โ answered Prof. Nakanishi when asked about the objectives of the study tour.
The visiting group witnessed Filipino ingenuity through CPSUโs projects that exhibit resourcefulnessโmaximizing both locally sourced and sustainable raw materials, as well as local craftsmanship as manpower to stimulate economic development through commerce and job generation within the CPSU land reserve.
โWhat I really found most interesting in your university is that you try to connect with the local people and introduce technologies like fertilizers, mechanics, and more, to foster organic agriculture. Although in Negros Island, many farmers tend to switch to agricultural practices using chemicals, you still worked hard on promoting and introducing organic farming. I think itโs very impressive and interesting,โ said Arisa Hara, a U-Tokyo student, as feedback on the CPSU tour experience.
The visitors and CPSUโs Bachelor of Science in Agribusiness students, faculty, and staff were also engaged in conversations about Philippine History and the local way of life as sparked by their visit to the universityโs Heritage Center.