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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tokyo, September 17, 2003—Temple University, Japan Campus (TUJ) is
pleased to announce the appointment of Patrick Rosenkjar as its
first Assistant Dean for English-language Education, effective September
1. In this new position, Dr. Rosenkjar will oversee the Academic
Preparation Program (APP) and all activities related to improving
the English-language skills of TUJ’s student body.
TUJ has been a leading provider of English-language
education in Japan for more than 20 years. English is the language
of instruction in all programs at TUJ, so thorough English acquisition
is critical to a TUJ student’s success, at school and after
graduation. As such, TUJ decided to appoint a highly qualified individual
to further support the English-language focus of APP and other programs.
Dr. Rosenkjar’s 15-year affiliation with TUJ
provides him intimate knowledge of the university’s programs,
students, and needs. He joined TUJ as an instructor in its Intensive
English-language Program (now APP) in 1988, following his graduation
from San Francisco State University with a master’s degree
in teaching English as a foreign language. Since that time, Dr.
Rosenkjar has obtained a doctorate in education in teaching English
to speakers of other languages (TESOL) from TUJ and gone on to teach
Intellectual Heritage courses in TUJ’s Undergraduate Program
and various TESOL methods courses in the College of Education graduate
TESOL program.
In his new role as Assistant Dean for English-Language
Education, Dr. Rosenkjar is eager to apply his specialty in second-language
acquisition toward further raising TUJ’s reputation for excellence
in English-language acquisition. “Dr. Rosenkjar,” says
TUJ Dean Kirk Patterson, “is the best person for this position.
With his in-depth knowledge of TUJ and its students and of the theory
and practice of English-language acquisition, he is uniquely qualified
to make TUJ a world leader in preparing students to successfully
handle university-level work in English.”
Dr. Rosenkjar has in mind several innovative ideas for realizing
TUJ’s potential. He proposes to provide internships for TUJ’s
TESOL graduate students to teach in APP. He also intends to set
up writing and reading projects that stimulate students to engage
extensively in reading in English for pleasure and thereby to develop
a high level of literacy. And he will encourage TUJ instructors
to adopt a research-oriented teaching method to foster language
acquisition.
“I would like,” says Dr. Rosenkjar, “to
introduce project-based approaches to improve students’ English
ability in reading, writing, and other critical areas. These methods
will encourage student participation, leading students to study
proactively. I believe that is the best way to learn and to achieve
academic and language-acquisition goals.”
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