Abstract:
Following decades of decline and a sharp pandemic-induced drop, Japanese student enrollment in U.S. education is rebounding. This paper analyzes post-2020 recovery trends shaped by government initiatives, institutional collaborations, and shifting student preferences. Strategic efforts illustrate renewed momentum. U.S. institutions are responding with more flexible, affordable, and culturally responsive models. These developments signal the potential for a more inclusive and sustainable era of U.S.–Japan educational exchange.
Learning objectives:
– By engaging with this poster session, participants will gain a nuanced understanding of how Japanese student enrollment in U.S. education is recovering after years of decline and the sharp drop during the pandemic. They will explore the driving forces behind this rebound, including strategic government initiatives, renewed institutional partnerships, and
changing student motivations.
– The session will highlight how U.S. colleges and universities are adapting their approaches—offering more flexible, affordable, and culturally responsive models to better serve Japanese students. Through this lens, participants will consider how these innovations may signal a shift toward a more inclusive and sustainable model of U.S.–Japan educational exchange.
– Ultimately, attendees will walk away with practical strategies they can apply to strengthen their own institutional efforts in international recruitment, student support, and transnational collaboration.
Target audience:
This session will benefit international recruitment professionals, enrollment strategists, government and policy advisors, and those focused on East Asia, transnational education (TNE), and U.S.–Japan partnerships seeking to understand postpandemic mobility and student-centered engagement strategies.