Saturday, March 15, 2014

How to Get the Japanese Government Scholarship (Monbukagakusho): Securing a Certificate of Admission

After the interview, it might take a month-long waiting time before the embassy notifies you that you qualify for the next stage. If the panel interview is the scary part of the process, the next stage is the tedious part.
japanese government scholarship screening process tips
You have to pick up a set of your applications documents in the embassy which they marked with their seal together with a letter endorsing you as a possible candidate for the Japanese Government Scholarship. Take note that everything from this point on is tentative. Even if you keep on progressing to the next stage, if the embassy has not informed you of the final results, it means it is NOT GUARANTEED. Again, there are a lot of surprises so you’ll never know what you’ll get next – some universities might not accept, you might be placed in another university, additional documents might be requests, and so on.

After you get the copies of your documents, you have to reproduce them and send them to your desired universities in Japan. You are allowed to submit to the embassy a list of three universities according to your preference. You also need to note the name of the professor you are targeting and the department where he belongs to. Also understand that the certificate of admission that you are requesting from the universities only offers tentative admission. MEXT will decide in which university you will be placed, although I have to say that MEXT is quite generous and they will really try to place you in the university which you indicated as your first choice. I was placed in Waseda University, my first choice.


Each university has a strict rule when it comes to MEXT applicants so you should directly get in touch with the university and check their requirements. This process takes a long time so I advice you that you send your documents to the universities as early as you can to give them ample time to process your papers. Remember that Japan is such a bureaucratic country so expect your papers to pass several levels of screening and approval.

If a university accepts you, they will send you in hard copy the actual certificate of admission, which you will have to submit to your local Japanese embassy. At this stage, your role in the application process officially ends. After submitting the three copies of the certificate of admission, the rest is up to MEXT and your local Japanese embassy to arrange. All your application documents, including the certificates of admission will be sent to Japan for further screening by MEXT. This is why, there is still no guarantee of receiving the scholarship at this point.

Tentative results will come out around late December or early January. Receiving the good news is a great Christmas gift or a New Year’s present. Final results will likely come out sometime around February (or maybe early March if it gets a little delayed).  For this fifth and sixth stage, you can do nothing else but to sit back, relax and wait, wait, wait. At this point, indeed, patience is a helpful virtue.

Now that you’re done reading about all the stages of the application process, maybe, it’s about time to start preparing your own application packet. This journey to Japan will not be an easy one, but I can say that it will be a worthwhile one. Don’t be afraid to try and fail, fail and try again. If you believe in your heart that you will fulfill your dream to go to Japan, then make the first step and prepare your documents. May God bless your application and I hope to see you in Japan sometime soon!

がんばってください!

No comments:

Post a Comment