Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,208,035 members, 8,001,186 topics. Date: Wednesday, 13 November 2024 at 05:55 AM

Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan - Travel (35) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Travel / Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan (152309 Views)

Peace Mass Bus Travelling To Abuja Involved In Fatal Accident,Many Dead(photos) / Travelling To Canada Part 11 / Travelling To Canada Part 9 (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) ... (32) (33) (34) (35) (36) (37) (38) ... (43) (Reply) (Go Down)

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chibiokoye: 7:49pm On May 09, 2022
Gerrard59:


MEXT is the only realistic scholarship to apply as a Nigerian living in Nigeria.
Hey man. Should I use my WAEC certificate as my high school diploma for MEXT scholarship?
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 2:26am On May 10, 2022
chibiokoye:

Hey man. Should I use my WAEC certificate as my high school diploma for MEXT scholarship?

I think this question is for the undergraduate aspect. Yes, you can.

1 Like

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chaiks: 9:10pm On May 10, 2022
Guys please are there conditions that a nominated candidate can be rejected for mext? The wait is killing. Seems end of June is like December.lil.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chaiks: 9:17pm On May 10, 2022
Thanks Gerrard for this update. I personally don't fancy doing a PhD in a country like Japan. It will be far more profitable in Canada or Australia because of the chances of getting PR. I have read online and you pointed it in the thread also, Japan is a homogeneous society. They hardly give citizenship to foreigners.if one can get mext scholarship for masters by his grace, na to save from stipend and relocate to Australia for phd or even vocational education after studies in Japan.
Gerrard59:


No wonder. If so, then I will advise you shelve the idea of doing PhD in Japan. There are few scholarships for those who are outside Japan to fund their graduate studies - most of which are for masters and largely aimed at Asian students esp those from South East Asia. No where in the developed world do students fund their PhD research, no one does it. It's either scholarship from the school/private organisation, loan from the government or funded by the department.

Yes, you should ask him for funding as you are applying for a PhD program. Alternatively, you should check for funded PhD programmes at RIKEN and JSPS. Those places are where research jobs (PhD, postdoc and assistant professorships) are posted. In there, you can directly apply for PhD positions as they are funded in part by the government or the professor has research grants. But say you want to fund yourself? Nah. It's not possible. In fact, it's ill-advised.

The 6M naira is for a master program. A PhD program will require at least 10 - 12M naira to present to immigration authorities. To explain the impossibility, check those who japa'd to the UK for further studies (self funding), which of them are doing a PhD? The other option (best in my opinion) is to use the funds you have now in preparing for PhD applications to schools in the United States. You have greater chances of getting sponsored to the US while in Nigeria than applying to Japanese universities for your PhD. I'm being very realistic here.

You might want to ask, so how do foreign students get sponsored for their PhDs apart from MEXT and JSPS?

Answer: they get funded by private organisations (scholarships) or the professor while finishing their MSc in Japan or their undergraduate universities have exchange relationships with Japanese universities. There are many scholarships available while in Japan but very few while outside the country. Alternatively, if you are still young and/or want to relish the Japanese experience, you apply for another masters. It's not overlooked but that is where you will be required to provide an account statement with at least 6M naira.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 11:15pm On May 10, 2022
chaiks:
Thanks Gerrard for this update. I personally don't fancy doing a PhD in a country like Japan. It will be far more profitable in Canada or Australia because of the chances of getting PR. I have read online and you pointed it in the thread also, Japan is a homogeneous society. They hardly give citizenship to foreigners.if one can get mext scholarship for masters by his grace, na to save from stipend and relocate to Australia for phd or even vocational education after studies in Japan.

chaiks:
Thanks Gerrard for this update. It will be far more profitable in Canada or Australia because of the chances of getting PR. I have read online and you pointed it in the thread also, , na to save from stipend and relocate to Australia for phd or even vocational education after studies in Japan.

I personally don't fancy doing a PhD in a country like Japan

Well, this is fine. I have discussed this with a Nigerian who also said the same thing. He did his master's (sponsored by MEXT) in a Japanese university and is currently in the US rounding up his PhD. He wanted to experience the US' model where PhD students tutor undergraduates as he was aiming to enter academia. In Japan, such a model does not exist (at least in STEM fields) as the PhD is research-based all through. Even the MSc programs (STEM fields) are research-based rather than taught (as it is in the UK and other countries).

Japan is a homogeneous society. They hardly give citizenship to foreigners

Well, the bold is true. It is largely homogenous even though a small percentage are Chinese, Koreans, Vietnamese etc. The thing about the homogeneity is that: the government categorises newly naturalised citizens as ethnic Japanese. So, a Malian, like this man, (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/13/world/asia/japan-african-university-president-sacko.html) who becomes a naturalised citizen is seen in the records as an ethnic Japanese.

However, your second statement is not true as Japan remains the only developed country across the globe that issues citizenship to applicants without these applicants being permanent residents (https://www.moj.go.jp/EN/MINJI/minji78.html#:~:text=The%20general%20conditions%20for%20naturalization) . This is done in five consecutive years, all things being equal (https://m.imgur.com/gallery/tQVKL3h). Many people become citizens yearly, and moreover, there are over 5000 Nigerians residing in the country, most of whom are naturalised citizens https://japantoday.com/category/features/lifestyle/the-other-side-of-tokyos-nigerian-community.

Also, there is the HSP (High skilled professional http://www.immi-moj.go.jp/newimmiact_3/en/index.html) visa (Japan's equivalent to Canada Express Entry and introduced in 2012 vs Canada's 2015) that enables applicants to become permanent residents within a shorter period of time rather than that of less than 3 years through marriage or 10 years through continuous residency. You could play your cards well and attain PR within a short period of time then citizenship or stay five consecutive years to become a naturalised citizen. Most westerners aka oyibos choose either HSP or 10 years of continuous residency as their native countries' passports are strong enough to dissuade them from acquiring Japanese citizenship. Meanwhile, Vietnamese and Chinese think otherwise.

if one can get mext scholarship for masters by his grace

From our previous discussion, I understand your grades are pretty high. This is because, from a LinkedIn search, most awardees of the postgraduate scholarship by MEXT have a first-class. Follow the instructions very well. Check https://medium.com/@jaynepal/mext-scholarship-my-experience-and-suggestions-ffa6cb671902 and https://www.transenzjapan.com/blog/how-to-maximize-your-chances-of-earning-the-mext-scholarship/

Best wishes!

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chaiks: 11:13am On May 11, 2022
Thanks for your insightful response. It was indeed detailed. I am glad to see/know one can attain citizenship in Japan. It is something worth doing considering how strong their passport is. I have been nominated by my school for mext under the PGP program. So hopefully I pray mext grants it so that I can come to Japan this year. Can one in a non-STEM discipline switch course or get certification in any of the tech courses in Japan after masters?
Gerrard59:






Well, this is fine. I have discussed this with a Nigerian who also said the same thing. He did his master's (sponsored by MEXT) in a Japanese university and is currently in the US rounding up his PhD. He wanted to experience the US' model where PhD students tutor undergraduates as he was aiming to enter academia. In Japan, such a model does not exist (at least in STEM fields) as the PhD is research-based all through. Even the MSc programs (STEM fields) are research-based rather than taught (as it is in the UK and other countries).



Well, the bold is true. It is largely homogenous even though a small percentage are Chinese, Koreans, Vietnamese etc. The thing about the homogeneity is that: the government categorises newly naturalised citizens as ethnic Japanese. So, a Malian, like this man, (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/13/world/asia/japan-african-university-president-sacko.html) who becomes a naturalised citizen is seen in the records as an ethnic Japanese.

However, your second statement is not true as Japan remains the only developed country across the globe that issues citizenship to applicants without these applicants being permanent residents (https://www.moj.go.jp/EN/MINJI/minji78.html#:~:text=The%20general%20conditions%20for%20naturalization) . This is done in five consecutive years, all things being equal (https://m.imgur.com/gallery/tQVKL3h). Many people become citizens yearly, and moreover, there are over 5000 Nigerians residing in the country, most of whom are naturalised citizens https://japantoday.com/category/features/lifestyle/the-other-side-of-tokyos-nigerian-community.

Also, there is the HSP (High skilled professional http://www.immi-moj.go.jp/newimmiact_3/en/index.html) visa (Japan's equivalent to Canada Express Entry and introduced in 2012 vs Canada's 2015) that enables applicants to become permanent residents within a shorter period of time rather than that of less than 3 years through marriage or 10 years through continuous residency. You could play your cards well and attain PR within a short period of time then citizenship or stay five consecutive years to become a naturalised citizen. Most westerners aka oyibos choose either HSP or 10 years of continuous residency as their native countries' passports are strong enough to dissuade them from acquiring Japanese citizenship. Meanwhile, Vietnamese and Chinese think otherwise.



From our previous discussion, I understand your grades are pretty high. This is because, from a LinkedIn search, most awardees of the postgraduate scholarship by MEXT have a first-class. Follow the instructions very well. Check https://medium.com/@jaynepal/mext-scholarship-my-experience-and-suggestions-ffa6cb671902 and https://www.transenzjapan.com/blog/how-to-maximize-your-chances-of-earning-the-mext-scholarship/

Best wishes!
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chaiks: 11:16am On May 11, 2022
Also, do one need to renounce his former citizenship after staying for five years so as to obtain Japanese passport or do they allow dual citizenship?
Gerrard59:






Well, this is fine. I have discussed this with a Nigerian who also said the same thing. He did his master's (sponsored by MEXT) in a Japanese university and is currently in the US rounding up his PhD. He wanted to experience the US' model where PhD students tutor undergraduates as he was aiming to enter academia. In Japan, such a model does not exist (at least in STEM fields) as the PhD is research-based all through. Even the MSc programs (STEM fields) are research-based rather than taught (as it is in the UK and other countries).



Well, the bold is true. It is largely homogenous even though a small percentage are Chinese, Koreans, Vietnamese etc. The thing about the homogeneity is that: the government categorises newly naturalised citizens as ethnic Japanese. So, a Malian, like this man, (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/13/world/asia/japan-african-university-president-sacko.html) who becomes a naturalised citizen is seen in the records as an ethnic Japanese.

However, your second statement is not true as Japan remains the only developed country across the globe that issues citizenship to applicants without these applicants being permanent residents (https://www.moj.go.jp/EN/MINJI/minji78.html#:~:text=The%20general%20conditions%20for%20naturalization) . This is done in five consecutive years, all things being equal (https://m.imgur.com/gallery/tQVKL3h). Many people become citizens yearly, and moreover, there are over 5000 Nigerians residing in the country, most of whom are naturalised citizens https://japantoday.com/category/features/lifestyle/the-other-side-of-tokyos-nigerian-community.

Also, there is the HSP (High skilled professional http://www.immi-moj.go.jp/newimmiact_3/en/index.html) visa (Japan's equivalent to Canada Express Entry and introduced in 2012 vs Canada's 2015) that enables applicants to become permanent residents within a shorter period of time rather than that of less than 3 years through marriage or 10 years through continuous residency. You could play your cards well and attain PR within a short period of time then citizenship or stay five consecutive years to become a naturalised citizen. Most westerners aka oyibos choose either HSP or 10 years of continuous residency as their native countries' passports are strong enough to dissuade them from acquiring Japanese citizenship. Meanwhile, Vietnamese and Chinese think otherwise.



From our previous discussion, I understand your grades are pretty high. This is because, from a LinkedIn search, most awardees of the postgraduate scholarship by MEXT have a first-class. Follow the instructions very well. Check https://medium.com/@jaynepal/mext-scholarship-my-experience-and-suggestions-ffa6cb671902 and https://www.transenzjapan.com/blog/how-to-maximize-your-chances-of-earning-the-mext-scholarship/

Best wishes!

1 Like

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 11:54am On May 11, 2022
chaiks:
Thanks for your insightful response. It was indeed detailed. I am glad to see/know one can attain citizenship in Japan. It is something worth doing considering how strong their passport is. I have been nominated by my school for mext under the PGP program. So hopefully I pray mext grants it so that I can come to Japan this year. Can one in a non-STEM discipline switch course or get certification in any of the tech courses in Japan after masters?

Yes, just as it's done everywhere in the world. Congrats on your nomination. Hopefully you get it. You have toiled for this.

1 Like

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 12:01pm On May 11, 2022
chaiks:
Also, do one need to renounce his former citizenship after staying for five years so as to obtain Japanese passport or do they allow dual citizenship?

Officially, Japan doesn't allow dual nationalities. It has been a thorny issue in recent years especially with the declining birth rate/population, rise of "Hafus" (children from one Japanese parent and a foreign parent) etc. However, there's a "don't ask, don't tell" process. When leaving Japan to Nigeria, you use the Nigerian passport. When entering Japan, you use the Japanese passport. No one ask you, and you tell no one. When applying for naturalisation, you will be given a form to fill that you have renounced your other citizenship(s), however, there's no follow up to ascertain if you did it unlike Singapore. Another thing to consider is that as a Nigerian, in the constitution, it's only the president that can approve your renunciation of Nigerian citizenship. So, technically, you are a dual national. However, stay within the "don't ask, don't tell" process.

3 Likes

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chaiks: 3:22pm On May 11, 2022
Wow. Thanks bro. This is apt. Japan is worth exploring.
Gerrard59:


Officially, Japan doesn't allow dual nationalities. It has been a thorny issue in recent years especially with the declining birth rate/population, rise of "Hafus" (children from one Japanese parent and a foreign parent) etc. However, there's a "don't ask, don't tell" process. When leaving Japan to Nigeria, you use the Nigerian passport. When entering Japan, you use the Japanese passport. No one ask you, and you tell no one. When applying for naturalisation, you will be given a form to fill that you have renounced your other citizenship(s), however, there's no follow up to ascertain if you did it unlike Singapore. Another thing to consider is that as a Nigerian, in the constitution, it's only the president that can approve your renunciation of Nigerian citizenship. So, technically, you are a dual national. However, stay within the "don't ask, don't tell" process.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chaiks: 3:23pm On May 11, 2022
Alright bro. Thanks. Man can do nothing order than pray for the best.
Gerrard59:


Yes, just as it's done everywhere in the world. Congrats on your nomination. Hopefully you get it. You have toiled for this.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by GMD1990: 10:07pm On May 12, 2022
Please I want know if anyone has gotten Japan visa in past 25 days? Have they started issuing visa, very urgent please. Thanks
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by neutronay: 5:17pm On May 13, 2022
Good evening, please I want to apply for MEXT scholarship (COT), I am currently a 400lv student of Unilag so I want to ask if I should state it there that I am a student or it will Hinder my chances.

1 Like

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 12:04pm On May 14, 2022
neutronay:
Good evening, please I want to apply for MEXT scholarship (COT), I am currently a 400lv student of Unilag so I want to ask if I should state it there that I am a student or it will Hinder my chances.

Rather than apply, I strongly advise you to wait until graduation. However, if you insist, you will have to provide documents proving you will graduate before April 2023. Also, you will have to provide your transcripts showing your present CGPA points.

If you can do both, go ahead.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by chibiokoye: 12:38pm On May 14, 2022
Gerrard59:


Rather than apply, I strongly advise you to wait until graduation. However, if you insist, you will have to provide documents proving you will graduate before April 2023. Also, you will have to provide your transcripts showing your present CGPA points.

If you can do both, go ahead.
He wants to apply for the College of Technology category meaning he'll use secondary school transcript
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by neutronay: 1:26pm On May 14, 2022
Gerrard59:


Rather than apply, I strongly advise you to wait until graduation. However, if you insist, you will have to provide documents proving you will graduate before April 2023. Also, you will have to provide your transcripts showing your present CGPA points.

If you can do both, go ahead.

Getting both will take time, I was only thinking it might be added advantage but I think I will just use my secondary school transcript.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by neutronay: 1:37pm On May 14, 2022
chibiokoye:

He wants to apply for the College of Technology category meaning he'll use secondary school transcript

Exactly but there's a place to fill if you are in University and I should have graduated last year November but Strike shifted it to September 2022, Obviously that's not possible anymore so I think I'll just use my secondary School transcript.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by neutronay: 2:49pm On May 14, 2022
Please the high school transcript is it SS1 to SS3 or junior school is required?
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 6:43am On May 15, 2022
chibiokoye:

He wants to apply for the College of Technology category meaning he'll use secondary school transcript

Oh! I see. I have no idea how that category works.

Neutronay: you do what you believe is right.
neutronay:
Please the high school transcript is it SS1 to SS3 or junior school is required?

Was this not stated in the guidelines or instructions? If no or it was not stated clearly, call the embassy in Nigeria from 9am (Nigerian time) on Monday. Keep calling until you speak to a representative. Don't rely on the "make a voice note" stuff, no one will reply you.

3 Likes

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by neutronay: 1:04pm On May 15, 2022
Gerrard59:


Oh! I see. I have no idea how that category works.

Neutronay: you do what you believe is right.


Was this not stated in the guidelines or instructions? If no or it was not stated clearly, call the embassy in Nigeria from 9am (Nigerian time) on Monday. Keep calling until you speak to a representative. Don't rely on the "make a voice note" stuff, no one will reply you.

Thank you very much, I will call them
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by oo360z: 7:37am On Jun 05, 2022
Hi Guys, It's been my dream to travel to Yokohama in Japan to see the Giant Gundam Battle Robot.

Please who has a travel agent that can make this possible?

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by brijibs: 11:05am On Jun 15, 2022
Good morning, everyone.
Well done to all the gurus sharing helpful tips on how to japa legally to Japan.
Please, can you all shed more light on the Teacher Assistant opportunity in Japan?
Which site can one apply through?
What are the requirements, qualiand financially?
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by blackbriar: 12:07pm On Jun 15, 2022
brijibs:
Good morning, everyone.
Well done to all the gurus sharing helpful tips on how to japa legally to Japan.
Please, can you all shed more light on the Teacher Assistant opportunity in Japan?
Which site can one apply through?
What are the requirements, qualiand financially?

ALT??
Assistant Language Teacher?
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by brijibs: 7:04pm On Jun 15, 2022
blackbriar:


ALT??
Assistant Language Teacher?

Yes, please
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by blackbriar: 5:00am On Jun 17, 2022
brijibs:


Yes, please

Try Borderlink.

Stay away from interac
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by brijibs: 3:05am On Jun 18, 2022
blackbriar:


Try Borderlink.

Stay away from interac


Done. Awaiting feedback.
Thank you so much.

1 Like

Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by ubom123: 5:34pm On Jul 07, 2022
Good day friends

Is there a mext scholarship or scholarship of any kind for a person who intends to go to Japan for masters in business administration?
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by trinityconcept(m): 5:01pm On Aug 01, 2022
Guys has anyone received feedback from the Embassy for the MEXT SCHOLARSHIP?

according to them they said end of July

I have not heard anything from anyone for this year concerning the selection
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by blackbriar: 8:28am On Aug 02, 2022
trinityconcept:
Guys has anyone received feedback from the Embassy for the MEXT SCHOLARSHIP?

according to them they said end of July

I have not heard anything from anyone for this year concerning the selection

It is best to call the Embassy.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 11:59am On Aug 04, 2022
trinityconcept:
Guys has anyone received feedback from the Embassy for the MEXT SCHOLARSHIP?

according to them they said end of July

I have not heard anything from anyone for this year concerning the selection

The embassy only contacts successful candidates. If you have not been contacted, consider it failed. Alternatively, apply to university-recommended MEXT scholarship programs, they have fewer competitors.
Re: Japanese Visa And Travelling To Japan by Gerrard59(m): 12:01pm On Aug 04, 2022
ubom123:
Good day friends

Is there a mext scholarship or scholarship of any kind for a person who intends to go to Japan for masters in business administration?

Yes, but have you written the GMAT? IELTS? Because you need to pursue both admissions into the business school and MEXT scholarship concurrently.

(1) (2) (3) ... (32) (33) (34) (35) (36) (37) (38) ... (43) (Reply)

Aftermath Of Lagos-Ibadan Expressway Tanker Explosion (Graphic Photos) / Nigeria Airways: The Nigerian Picture That Will Bring Tears To Your Eyes / Top 10 Countries In The World To Migrate To

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 76
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.