Field of Study and Research Program Plan for the Embassy-Recommended MEXT Scholarship
MEXT updated the format of the Field of Study and Research Program Plan for the Embassy-Recommended MEXT Scholarship in April 2019. The University-Recommended MEXT Scholarship still uses the old form and I have a separate article about that format here. Both versions contain the same content, it’s just organized differently and there are different limitations in place regarding the form itself.
Why the Field of Study and Research Program Plan Matters
The Field of Study and Research Program Plan is the single-most important part of your MEXT Scholarship application at the graduate level. Whether you’re applying for a research student status, Master’s Degree, or PhD, this is the single most important element that you have any control over. So, it’s understandable that most applicants get more anxious about this form and what it should include than anything else in the application process.
Downloading the Form
First things first: If you don’t have the original form yet, the links below are direct to the files on MEXT’s website, so you can download it without having to puzzle through their Japanese website:
Purpose of the Field of Study and Research Program Plan
In Japan, the Field of Study and Research Program Plan (研究計画書 kenkyukeikakusho) is part of any graduate school application. It is not unique to the MEXT scholarship. There is a set format and elements that Japanese universities are looking for.
As a foreigner, you wouldn’t necessarily be expected to know all of the elements of the Field of Study and Research Program Plan, but if you do hit them (and I’m going to show you how, below), you’re going to stand out in a good way. This article comes from over eight months of research into Japanese professors’ websites, university websites, and talking with faculty members at the university where I work. It is the same model you will find in my book, How to Write a Scholarship-Winning Field of Study and Research Program Plan, although the book obviously goes into more detail and also helps you develop your research question and subject.
You can find my sources at the bottom of the article, but they’re all in Japanese.
Disclaimer: This is all only my own research and conclusions. It has not been formally vetted by any MEXT officials, Embassy staff, or grad school admissions committees. I did have an applicant in 2018 tell me that his local consulate had recommended a previous edition of this article to him, though!
Field of Study and Research Program Plan: Formatting Notes
As of the 2020 application, the format for the Embassy-recommended MEXT Scholarship application has changed dramatically. This article covers that new format. I do not know yet if the format will also change for the University-recommended MEXT Scholarship application for 2020, but you can find information about the old format in the previous version of this article.
Length: You are limited to no more than 2 pages for the entire form! This is the most significant change from past versions and means you are going to have to be concise and focused.
Font Size: The default font size in the Field of Study and Research Program Plan that you download from the MEXT website is 10 pt Times New Roman, which is small, but given your space limitations, I recommend keeping it at that size. If you have extra space to play with, you can increase it to TNR 12 pt.
Do not bother changing the font size of the instructions – up or down.
Titles and Formatting: As you will see below, I recommend adding a few subtitles within sections to make the text easier to read. I suggest making each of the titles bold and setting them apart on a line of their own. Leave one blank line above each title, if you can manage it. You can also center then.
While you may be tempted to forgo titles and blank lines because of the length limitations, I would suggest keeping them in. White space and organization make your Field of Study and Research Program Plan easier to read. Nobody likes a big old wall of text.
Tables, Graphs, and Diagrams: If they add to the document and are necessary to answer the questions below, you can include them, but I have almost never seen a case where they added any value. The one exception to this is adding your research timeline as a table, with individual steps listed, which I recommend including as an attachment (more below).
Attachments: I recommend two attachments: The research timeline above and a list of references. I’ll get into each section in more detail below. If your particular academic field demands large diagrams or other references that you want to include as attachments, that could be possible, but consider seriously whether they are necessary or not.
Completing the Field of Study and Research Program Plan
1. Past and Present Field of Study
Your past and present field of study refers to your academic majors in any past university degrees, not professional working experience. You can only refer to a field of study from work experience if you worked as a professional researcher and are using that experience to meet the eligibility criteria for your degree program.
Here is what the section should cover.
Research Background
Recommended Heading: None. Since you only have one sub-section in this question, there is no need to add titles.
Recommended Length: 2-3 sentences
Recommended Content: Describe what you have researched in the past that led to your interest in the topic you will pursue in Japan. Since MEXT requires that you study a topic that you majored in in the past, this is your opportunity to show the connection.
Make sure that you describe your interest in terms of what it will contribute to the field. This is not a personal statement. “I am interested in microfinance because my family was poor” is not a good explanation. “Based on my past research into microfinance in developing countries, I became interested in a systematic examination of the impact of microfinance-supported entrepreneurial ventures in former agricultural areas of developed countries has impacted population movements and rural revitalization is necessary to apply effective practices both in Japan and abroad” is better.
To strengthen the statement above, you could add a closing statement about why your research could benefit Japan and your home country and why Japan is the best place to pursue it.
Do not add extra lines to this section beyond what is given in the form. The most important part of your Field of Study and Research Program Plan is still to come in the next section, so you want to save your space for that.
2-1. Research Theme in Japan
In this section, you will cover the title of your intended research (or at least a narrow description of the field), as well as your research theme sentence.
Research Title
Recommended Heading: None. Simply center the text at the top of this section and make if bold.
Recommended Length: Title and Subtitle, like it would be on a completed thesis.
Recommended Content: This is your sales copy. It needs to grab attention so your reviewers read further.
The main title is your overall theme and the subtitle is how exactly you plan to study it. For example:
The Contribution of ‘Outsider’ Expertise to Rural Revitalization Projects: An Exploration of the Yuzu Industry in Nomi City, Ishikawa Prefecture
(JAIST)
You are not locked into using this title. Like almost everything else in your Field of Study and Research Program Plan, it will probably change once you begin your research under your advisor. But it’s still important to have a solid idea at this stage.
Research Theme
Recommended Heading: None. Leave one blank line under the title.
Recommended Length: One-two sentences
Recommended Content: This should take a format like “I intend to research [RESEARCH QUESTION] by examining [SPECIFIC EXAMPLE] from [APPROACH] perspective in order to [OUTCOME].” It does not need to be exact, but it does need to cover those elements.
It is important to include the intended outcome of your research. Research itself is not the goal – you should have something you intend to accomplish through it. Returning to JAIST’s example from the previous section:
This study will elucidate how specialist knowledge held by outsiders to rural revitalization projects can contribute to those projects, by examining the example of Yuzu farmers in Nomi City, Ishikawa Prefecture’s contributions to local efforts by way of surveys and interviews, in order to advance the effectiveness of rural revitalization projects across Japan.
(JAIST)
Yes, the original Japanese is also a horrible run-on sentence.
Unlike the title, you should format this section in paragraph format, left or full justification (not centered) and not bold.
This article is only about how to format your form for submission and assumes that you have already developed your research question, example, and methods fully. If you have not done that yet, I recommend my book, How to Write a Scholarship-Winning Field of Study and Research Program Plan, which goes into detail on the process of choosing your field of study, developing and refining your questions, and also discusses formatting in much more detail.
2-2. Research Plan
In this section, you will go into more detail on the academic background of your research and how it fits into the field, as well as exactly how you plan to pursue it. This is the core of your plan and should take up the most space – all of the space that you are given on the first page as well as an entire second sheet of paper, or close to it.
Here are the subsections to include. Unlike previous questions, I recommend that you do include the titles for each sub-section. This section is long and having titles on their own lines, preferably centered, will break it up and make it easier for your reviewers to read.
Research Goals
Recommended Heading: Research Goals
Recommended Length: One to two paragraphs
Recommended Content: This is where you describe the academic value of your research and is perhaps the most important section of the entire form.
Your first paragraph should cover the research question you intend to answer and how – an expansion of your detailed research theme. The second paragraph should outline the possible academic and practical benefits of your research.
Remember that not everyone is an expert in your field, so try to keep the jargon to a minimum. You want your research to have value outside of your narrow field, so you have to be able to describe that to non-experts. At the very least, I recommend opening each paragraph with a strong topic sentence that is jargon-free and understandable to any reader. You can then go into technical detail in the body of the paragraphs.
When discussing the benefits, it would be beneficial to mention specifically how they apply to Japan, your home country, and/or bringing the two closer together.
Existing Research
Recommended Heading: Existing Research
Recommended Length: Two-four sentences
Recommended Content: In this section, you want to give a very brief introduction to the state of your field to show how your research fits into and contributes to it.
Your first sentence should describe the state of the field, particularly the most relevant studies to your own research. For example, if your field is still developing, you would state where current research stands and how you will add to it. If your research is targeting a gap in your field, then you would describe the state around that gap.
Your second sentence should explain how your research will extend knowledge in the field (e.g. by using a new method or approach, examining a different data set, contribute to resolving a conflict or gap, etc.)
Research Methodology
Recommended Heading: Research Methodology
Recommended Length: 1-2 paragraphs
Recommended Content: Describe your research methodology (quantitative, qualitative, hybrid), specific methods, and why you chose them. In the second, optional paragraph, describe the limitations of your research and how you will account for them.
At the end of the Existing Research section, you explained why your research would add to the field. In this section, you will explain how. You should describe why the methods you chose are the most appropriate to accomplish the research goals you set and contribute to the field.
Optional: Hypothesis
Recommended Heading: Hypothesis
Recommended Length: 2-3 sentences
Recommended Content: Present the hypothesis that you intend to test through your research.
This section will not be possible for all applicants, but if it is applicable, I recommend including it.
A hypothesis is your proposed answer to your research question that you will test. It is not a certain, final answer and in most cases, should not be correct. Professor Tajima from Keio University wrote in a blog article that if your hypothesis turns out to be accurate, then your research could be considered a 99% failure. (Keio) After all, if you already know the answer before you have even started your graduate program, then there really wasn’t any point in your research.
Specific Research Plan
Recommended Heading: Research Plan
Recommended Length: One full and one partial paragraph
Recommended Content: Description of the research steps that you intend to pursue, from literature review through publication and dissemination of your research, with references to your research timeline that you will include as attachment.
In the past, I recommended including your full research timeline in this section, but that was before MEXT limited the overall form length to two pages. Now, I recommend moving the timeline to an attachment, but you should still include a brief description here with references to more details in the timeline.
The first, full paragraph should describe your research steps in order, as well as the intended timeline for completion. For example, you could say that in your first semester, you intend to complete your literature review, experiment design, and experiment approval. Then you would go on to describe your field research plans and analysis of data. Conclude the paragraph with your goals for how you will disseminate your research, such as publication, conference presentations, and sharing through informal networks, blogging, etc. If you have specific journals or conferences in your field that you want to target, that is great!
There is no need to describe the steps involved in writing and editing your thesis in detail. That is self-explanatory.
The second, partial paragraph should describe how you intend to interact with the community during the course of your studies, such as cultural exchanges with schools and becoming involved with community groups related to your research topic or other interests.
That’s It – Sort Of
The sections mentioned above should complete the two-page form and should stand on their own to present your entire research.
Obviously, your first draft is going to need work. I recommend revising it yourself then getting it reviewed by an academic expert in your field as well as a language expert.
I do offer paid reviewing services where I go through the formatting and presentation to assess if you have presented your proposal well, incorporating all of the elements above. I cannot, however, offer an academic review, so I am probably not an expert in your field!
For more information on my reviewing services, check out the coaching link at the top of this page.
Attachments
I recommend adding two attachments to your FSRPP: Your specific research timeline mentioned above and your list of sources. Each should be its own page and they should be in that order.
Attachments should not be critical to understanding your research plan. They are a place to put space-consuming references that can be understood via a quick scan. They have value in showing your preparedness, but the value is not commensurate with the space that they consume.
Research Timeline
Recommended Heading: Research Timeline
Recommended Length: Table/timeline long enough to cover the content below
Recommended Content: Detailed explanations of the steps you will go through in your research program (2 years for Masters, 3 for PhD).
The level of detail that you go into here depends on your field of study. For example, if you are doing social sciences research and your field research includes two phases of questionnaires and interviews, you can explain that rather quickly.
However, if you are in a STEM field and your research includes a long series of experimental processes or data analysis steps, then you would want to list each of those.
This is also a good place to mention specific coursework you want to take (and why), especially if you have your goal narrowed down to a single university or there are similar courses at each of your target universities.
You should have already described your primary research activities in the form proper, such as what kind of data you will collect and how, but here is where you slot it in to the schedule.
One Keio professor mentioned in his blog that he expects his advisees to do field research twice during their degree. For example, students would do a survey study first then return later for interviews to go into more detail, or do field studies in two places for comparison purposes.
Selected References
Recommended Heading: Selected Sources
Recommended Length: No more than 1/2 page or so
Recommended Content: Bibliographical references for all sources you mentioned in the text of your Field of Study and Research Program Plan (particularly in the existing research section) plus key sources you used in your literature reviews when creating your plan.
List your references in alphabetical order, using the format most common to your field of study.
My Sources
I put this article together based on several Japanese faculty blogs, university websites, and prep school pages. You can find those sources below:How to Research and Craft a Research Plan
http://www7a.biglobe.ne.jp/nifongo/keikaku/index.html
KALS Graduate School Application Prep School application advice article
http://www.kals.jp/graduate-sch/pln/
Keio University Professor’s Blog
http://cce-cmkt-tpro.sfc.keio.ac.jp/tajima_lab/inframe/sonota/01.htm
JAIST (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology) Application Advice Page
http://www.jaist.ac.jp/~as-asami/exam_research_plan/exam_research_plan.html
Study Channel Research Plan Writing Guide
http://www.study-channel.com/2015/07/research-plan.html
Five Steps to Writing a Lousy Research Plan (University of Tokyo Professor’s Blog)
http://www.nakahara-lab.net/2013/05/post_2004.html
Questions?
Before asking any questions in the comments, below, I recommend reading through the Field of Study and Research Program Plan FAQ. You can ask your questions in the comments here, on the FAQ page, or by email and I will answer them by updating the FAQ and letting you know when the answers are available.
I’d also recommend signing up for my mailing list, below, to get notified whenever I have updates to any of the FAQs or new articles about the MEXT scholarship!
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Hey Travis,
I’d like first to thank you for your tremendous efforts to help us.
I have two questions on my mind :
1. concerning the timeline in the research proposal, I’m applying for a Master’s degree, so I’ve planned my RP during a one year (which gonna be the second year of my Master) and not two years (because I thought the first year of my Master would be dedicated for courses and the second for the research)…is that correct ?
2. I could only find two universities teaching my exact major and a very close one. I’m confused what exactly to write in the “field of study in Japan”, My question is, can I write the first choice (which is my major exactly) or should I write them both and seperate them with a slash maybe ?
again thanks a million for your kind support !
Hi Amina,
Thank you for your kind feedback!
1. In general, you would be starting work on your research in your first year, unless your program specifically states that you will not be assigned to an advisor until the second year, or something like that. Most FSRPPs do cover the duration of the whole degree, so if you write a plan that covers only one year, you’ll need to explain in the interview that it is because (all of) your chosen degree programs have a structure of one year of classes followed by one year of research. Obviously, make sure that’s true, first!
2. You do not need to be too worried about getting the major exact on that form. It’s great if you can, but as long as what you write clearly falls within the major, that is good enough. If the exact major at your first university is close enough to the major at the “very close one”, that should be fine to just write that.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis,
Simple question: are scanned original ink signature and seal on original transcript Japanese admin critic-proof ?
Or would it be needed a fresh ink signature and seal on the scanned originals ?
Thank you for your work, really helpful.
Best,
Shan
Hi Shan,
Thank you for your kind feedback.
A scanned ink signature or seal is no longer original, it is a copy by definition, so that would not be acceptable. Only the document with the original ink signature on it can be considered an original.
If you are concerned about submitting your only original document (such as an academic transcript), then you can make a copy and get it certified as an accurate copy of the original by an official at your school. That certified copy will be considered an “original”.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Getting another copy to be certified by a school official is almost impossible in my country
Hi Bogema,
I’m sorry to hear that it is difficult, but “nearly impossible” means that it is possible, right?
Consider that at least some of the other applicants that you are competing with will get that certified copy. It’s going to make a difference that they put in that effort.
If you cannot get a copy certified by your school, another option is to get it certified by a notary.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello Travis. Thank you so much for your efforts with us. I am very confused about how to choose my MA major study field. I have BA degree in English Language Teaching, on the other hand I am a children’s book illustrator. I car so much about child psychology and social development. I don’t know what to study yet so I cannot write my research plan yet. How can you help me in this?
Hi Bara,
MEXT requires that you apply in a field that you majored in in the past or a related field. There is no strict definition of “related”, so it is up to you to justify it.
Personally, I think you would have a much clearer path to apply in ELT, but to also work in your interest, you could focus on teaching pedagogy for children or Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) within ELT to also promote social development.
To be perfectly blunt, if you do not have something that you are passionate about studying (in order to lead to a future goal that you are passionate about pursuing), then it might not be the right time to apply for graduate school, particularly in a program where you would be competing with highly motivated applicants who typically have a clear focus for their research.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello,
Thank you for sharing your kind suggestions and providing guidance. I have graduated with an engineering degree 7 years ago, after which i have been working in a totally different field till now. I am planning to join a graduate program in the field of either environment engineering or food production through MEXT scholarship, which has no connection to my undergraduate majors. I would be obliged if you can share your views and opinion of how this would be interpreted by the MEXT authorities and Japanese university. Will my application be rejected straightaway or there may be some room for negotiation?
Hi Supratik Sil Roy,
The question of whether or not your major is related is going to come during the primary screening (at the embassy for the Embassy Recommended MEXT Scholarship or at the university for the University Recommended MEXT Scholarship), likely during the document screening phase, before you have the opportunity to speak to the reviewers. If they do reject your application at that stage, they will not tell you why it was rejected or give any feedback, so you would not have the opportunity to negotiate.
My best suggestion to you would be to make the case as strongly as you can in your Field of Study and Research Program Plan that there is a connection. It doesn’t have to be a strong one, but as long as there is something there. Even having the word “engineering” in both fields of study might be enough for the reviewers to think there is some connection there and give your application a shot!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hey,
when saying “You are limited to no more than 2 pages for the entire form” ,
does it mean 1 page added to the downloaded form? or is it 2 pages in addition to the downloaded form ?
thanks in advance, and for ll your efforts.
Hi Salma,
The two pages includes the form. So, the form (with all of the instructions, etc), plus up to one additional page.
You can also have attachments, for example you can attach diagrams or your bibliography in addition to the two sheets, but all of the content of your FSRPP needs to fit within those two pages and stand on its own without the attachments.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello Travis,
I’m applying for a MEXT Scholarship, PhD level. The thing is that I’m already doing a PhD (now on my 2nd year) in my home country, but the access to resources, bibliography and the tutors’ knowledge is very limited. Thus, I decided to look for better options and make a fresh new start, Do you think it’s ok if I mention that on my MEXT application form? I would use all my previous research to enrich my new thesis, and I understand that I would have to leave all my PhD progress behind, since I don’t think I’ll be able to transfer any credits. Would they see it as a positive thing that I’m actually looking for a better opportunity/future? Or would I look like someone who doesn’t commit with what he has already started? By the way, my research topic revolves around Archeological Heritage Sites Management in Peru.
Hi Luis,
You would need to indicate on your MEXT application form that you are currently enrolled in a PhD program in your academic background. If you are continuing on a similar research theme in Japan, you can also mention it the essay questions in the application form as well as in your Field of Study and Research Program Plan, explaining what your research has been so far and why you need to leave your program in Peru and start fresh in Japan to be able to successfully complete it. If you explain it well, it could certainly be an asset that you already have research complete in Peru. It’s all in how you present it!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thank you!
I have a similar situation. In the application it was stated that applicants who have already commenced studies on a program but are yet to complete it prior to their application should include results of such programs up till the time of their application.
I’m already in my 3rd and final session in my PhD program here in Nigeria. But the situation here is that my school does not issue any form of results whatsoever until the final completion of the program. For this reason I don’t know if to include my already ongoing PhD program in my application as they may request for results so far.
Pls I need your inputs
Hi Joshua,
I’m sorry for the delay in my reply. I’ve been overwhelmed with questions here and could not keep up.
You should absolutely list your PhD program in your academic background in the application. In that case, you would need to include a Certificate of Expected Graduation for the program, but if there are no results available yet, you can just explain that and it should not be a problem. For example, if your PhD is a research-only degree, then in place of the Certificate of Grades, you could include a single sheet of paper with a note that your PhD is based entirely on your dissertation and no interim results are available in the program.
You would also need to include your transcript, etc., from your earlier degrees.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis,
Great article. Really value-adding and helpful. Kudos to you!
Just like to ask, will it help my cause to mention that my past research was awarded an award back in undergraduate? Or do you think items like that don’t help my cause, since it’s just a competition among all research works in my department and is actually a very subjective/informal one.
Thanks for your endless patience in answering trivial questions like these.
Stay safe!
Hi Cedric,
I don’t think it’s going to make a huge difference, but it certainly won’t hurt to mention it briefly. A good place to get that information in would be the letter of recommendation, if your recommender was familiar with that award.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Transenz,
I just finished reading your available books on MEXT and would fully recommend anyone here to buy them as they give you a thorough guide to the process. I’ve finished my research plan and having a look at the UK MEXT requirements you need two reference letters. I have two referees lined up to provide these letter but is there anything specific in terms of structure or content that I should ask them to include to make me stand out.
Regards,
Willliam
Hi William,
Thank you very much for your feedback! I am thrilled to hear that you found the books to be useful in preparing your application.
For your letters of recommendation, are there any specifications as to who they should be from? In the past, I have seen that when two letters were requested, one had to be an academic advisor, Dean, or someone higher. The second (usually optional in the examples I’ve seen, since it doesn’t apply to everyone) would be from an employer. Do you have any guidelines like that?
In general, the letters must include a statement that the person highly recommends you and a description of how they know you/what context they have interacted with you. I would also recommend that you look at the sample format that MEXT provides on their website to see what kinds of questions they ask. You do not need to use that format (or follow it’s instructions about sealing the letter) – it is optional and based on a format that used to be mandatory several years ago.
Finally, in the books and articles here, I have mentioned having an application strategy and theme, which includes some reason why you are uniquely suited to succeed in your particular research and goals. Any comments in the letter that support that theme would also be beneficial!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello sir,
Thanks for helping in developing my research plan. I really appreciate your help.
I am at completing my research plan, I have to ask you one more question about research methodology.
In the research methodology, I have described specific research method and after that, I listed the experiment names, at last, I have written limitations of the study. After that, it is alright to write a specific journal name and details or not?
In the end, I have attached the research timeline of my study. This is the right way to write all things I listed above.
Please kindly give me a reply.
Thank you
Hi Kaushal Vora,
Your approach from the methodology section onward sounds fine. There is no one “right way” to write this plan, as long as it contains all of the elements. Sometimes, you are going to have to make variations on the pattern I’ve suggested here, and that’s fine!
I think it is fine to list a specific journal (I assume you are describing somewhere where you hope to publish your findings). If it is a particularly difficult journal to get into, you can qualify your statement by saying “a journal such as X”
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
I have written a research study something different you suggested, I have added some of my thought about how I have to write, but as you suggested I have considered all contents about a research study.
so thank you for helping me.
Hello,
Thank you for giving me an answer.
I have one more question about the research study. For your perspective what if we write a research proposal and attach it in our application. If we write a research proposal it is alright to write all things you suggest in the research study?
What is a better, write a research proposal or all data write in the research study form or both things we have to do?
Hi Kaushal Vora,
Your Field of Study and Research Program Plan should be your research proposal. That is what the screening committee will consider when they process your application. Everything needs to fit in the form and, at least as of the last Embassy Recommended MEXT Scholarship application process, the total length must be under two pages.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thank you for your kind reply.
Hello sir,
Thank you for guidance. it’s helped me every way.
I have a question related to research methodology. In research methodology, you told that you have to write 1 or 1.5 paragraph, But instead of that, I have decided to write research methodology in a flow chart.
This is right to do this way or we have to write a paragraph?
After the completion of my research study, you can help me with telly?
kindly answer my questions
Thank you
Hi Kaushal Vora,
Thank you for your kind words.
It is hard for me to give a definitive answer without seeing exactly what you are talking about, but I will give it my best guess.
My suggestion is that your research methodology section should describe the methods that you will use and how they are best suited to provide you with the data that you need to answer your research question. I do not see how a flow chart could answer this question.
However, in the research plan, I suggest that you describe the process of how you will proceed with your research, which is the sequence of steps you will conduct. I could see how a flow chart would work there, instead. (I have recommended a timeline table, but a flowchart could also do the job!).
I’m not sure exactly what you mean with helping you with telly. If you mean reviewing your plan, I do offer a paid review service for FSRPPs, and you can find details at the coaching link at the top of the page.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thank you
I mistook Methodology to Specific Research plan that’s why the problem happens.
Hi, Travis.
I tried to download the format mentioned above, but the link sends me to the japanese MEXT page. Is there anything wrong? or am I the guilty? lol
Thanks in advance!
Hi Mozart,
Thank you for pointing that out. It looks like MEXT changed the link for where the form was. I have fixed it now in the article. (The page you were getting was MEXT’s 404 “Not Found” page).
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Trans,
Many thanks for the information you provide on this website, which is really helpful to anyone thinking about a MEXT scholarship.
I am currently in the process of applying for a university-recommended scholarship. Among some of the questions, the university is asking for a confirmation that I will not withdraw from the program when recommended to MEXT. It seems unusual to request such a confirmation since the result is not guaranteed yet. Is this a normal question that is asked by the universities in processing MEXT scholarship applications?
Hi Xiang,
I have been hearing about that request more often lately. Just a few days ago, someone posted on here complaining that the university got upset at them after they signed that agreement and later wanted to back out.
Each university has a limited number of nomination slots that it can use each year. In general, if they select you for nomination, you can reasonably expect to receive the scholarship. The only thing standing in your way would be a MEXT budget cut. That happened last year and quite a few nominees didn’t earn the scholarship. But since then, MEXT has essentially halved the original number of nomination places each university has, so I do not anticipate another cut this year.
From the university’s perspective, they cannot replace a nominee in their list if one drops out. There are no alternates. So, if you drop out after they nominate you, they lose a prestigious scholarship place. Now that the universities have fewer places than ever, that hurts. So, it seems perfectly normal that the university wants to ask you to commit.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi!
I have a question that I have never seen the answer to anywhere and I really hope you can answer it.
Can you apply for a master’s degree if you’re already studying for a master’s degree?
I want to get a master’s in international relations in Japan. I did my undergraduate in philosophy and minored in government (politics, etc.) and I intend to do a masters in philosophy focusing on political philosophy. I will also take a lot of courses in the political science so that my degree will be more related to what I want to study in Japan. But it’s not quite the same thing. Political philosophy is more theoretical but international relations is more practical. I want to study both. Would that be possible? I really appreciate your answer because I searched the internet all over and couldn’t find anything. Thank you
Hi Ana,
Yes, you can apply for a second master’s via the MEXT Scholarship. However, you might face a challenge in justifying why a second master’s is more valuable than a PhD. I have no direct evidence to support this, but anecdotally, I have heard that MEXt would prefer that you move on to more advanced studies. So, be prepared to answer questions, particularly, in your interview, about why a second Master’s is better.
The other think that you would need to consider is that you cannot drop to a “lower” level of study. So, if you have already earned a Master’d degree by the time you start your MEXT Scholarship, you would not be able to start as a Master’s level research student. You would have to start directly with the degree.
Have you found a university in Japan that offers a philosophy degree taught in English with political philosophy as an option? That’s the most important question.
For a graduate degree, you must be registered in a single graduate school and your ability to take courses from other schools will be seriously limited or not available at all. So, the best way for you to answer your own question is to find a program in Japan that teaches what you want to study (in English). If you can find a philosophy program taught in English in Japan that includes political science and political philosophy coursework, then it is possible to study that. (Although, you might have a better chance at finding a Poli Sci program that includes elements of political philosophy). If you cannot find a program that teaches what you want, then it would not be possible.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Dear Travis, thank you so much for your reply.
Even though my background is in political philosophy, I am not intending to study philosophy in Japan at all (and even if I wanted to, I couldn’t because I checked and there are no such programs in English). I want to move from political philosophy to something more practical such as political science and international relations and this is the reason I have for wanting to study a second master’s degree. Even though my degree is related to politics and political theory, I would still need to learn the research methods of political science to be able to do a PhD in that field. Would that be ok?
Also, can I just apply as a non-degree research student and not commit myself to either a master’s or PhD degree from the beginning and just figure this out while I’m in Japan? Or is that not possible for someone who has a master’s degree?
Thank you so much for your help
Hi Ana,
I’m sorry. It sounds like I misread your question. Thank you for the clarification.
Yes, if your background is in political philosophy, then moving on to a degree in political science would meet the requirements of a “related field”. And it also makes sense why you would want another master’s in that case. But for the sake of your application, you should justify the change of fields and lower degree based on the outcomes. During your application process, I suggest that you be able to justify what a Master’s in political science in Japan will do for your future goals (particularly goals that involve you making a positive impact on the world in a particular field) that a PhD in philosophy would not.
About the degree level, since you will have a Master’s degree already, you would not be able to be a research (non-degree) student to the best of my understanding. Your choices would be research student learning to a PhD (which might be possible, depending on how much research method etc. catch-up you need) or direct Master’s degree student.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello,
I had a few questions:
1. I was wondering what is the difference between the 2 sections you suggested, PREVIOUS RESEARCH IN THE FIELD (2-3 sentences) and EXISTING RESEARCH (2-4 sentences)? (total 4-7 sentences)
From what I gathered from your post, in both I should describe research that exists in the field/the current state of the field – isn’t it the same thing?And you mentioned in EXISTING RESEARCH, I should also explain how my research would extend knowledge in the field. Thus I wonder if it would be suitable to combine these sections rather have about 5~6 sentences (3 for describing the state of the field/relevant existing research, and 2~3 for how my research would extend knowledge in the field)? Or, is there an important reason that these are separate sections?
2. Since the new format is 2 pages max, does this include attachments such as a timeline or sources, or are they not counted in the total length?
3. How often does the format change like this? For the 2021 application cycle (applications sent in 2020), will you be making another post like this if it changes yet again?
Thank you very much!
Hi Vera,
1. Thank you very much for catching that. It looks like when I updated the article at some point in the past, I ended up with the same section twice. “Existing Research” was meant to be a replacement for “Previous Research in the Field”, but I did not delete the old paragraph. You only need to cover that material once!
2. No, attachments are not counted in the length, so your timeline, sources, etc. can be in addition to the two pages. However, since they are attachments and references, only, they cannot be essential to understanding the rest of the document. Especially with the timeline, if you include it as an attachment, a reviewer must still be able to understand the general idea of how you plan to approach your research without reading the timeline.
3. I think the last time I saw the format change was over 5 years ago. (When the question about past research was added to the University Recommended FSRPP.) If it does change again, I will write an update as quickly as possible. However, even if the format changes, the essence of the research plan should not change significantly, so it should still be mostly a matter of fitting this same content into new headings, etc.)
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello! The Japanese embassy in my country(Nigeria) is pretty far from where I live I live in a different city entirely, I wanted to know if the form can be submitted on one’s behalf if mailed? Please help me out.
Hi Shadrach osazee,
You may be able to submit the application by post, but each embassy has its own submission requirements, so I recommend that you check with them directly.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Just want to say a big Thank you to you for spending time to share this useful information. Before your blog I have no idea how to write a research plan (my last education was coursework). I will submit my application next week and wait for the result by June. Again, thank you so much. Cheers!
Hi Tia,
Thank you very much for your feedback and kind comments! I wish you good luck with your application. Please let me know about your results in June.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello Transenz, thank you so much for your work helping us!
I failed the MEXT application last year at the first phase last year but I am already working on next year’s!
I have MA on International Relations and I would like to go for a PhD. The topic is Japanese foreign policy towards another country. I have some doubts though.
This project does not have a link to my home country Spain…I do not know if that’s a big problem. Second, how can I justify doing it in Japan? I mean, it is about Japanese foreign policy… but perhaps I should stress the fieldwork needs to be done in Japan.
And finally, is it possible to move for a short period of time abroad to conduct the research (fieldwork)?
Thanks a lot! I hope you can help me
Hi Javier Delgado,
I’m sorry to hear that your results last year weren’t ideal, but I admire you for trying again!
Since your research is about Japan’s foreign policy, that should be enough to justify why your research needs to be done in Japan, but you should also be doing your fieldwork in Japan, too.
The application guidelines specifically say that applicants who intend to do extended fieldwork outside Japan are ineligible, so even mentioning fieldwork outside of the country is going raise red flags – and if you say “move” outside Japan, then that is going to sound like long-term research. Is there any way that you can focus the fieldwork on people or institutions withing Japan?
If you must do research outside Japan, then emphasize how short it will be (a week or so?). The maximum amount of time that you can be away from Japan is about a month, and that, of course, would only be possible during the breaks between semesters.
As for how to relate the research to Spain, my suggestion would be to see if you can find where Spain has a similar type of relationship with a different country as the relationship Japan has that you are researching, so that there is some way to apply to research there. Or if there is some way that understanding Japan’s foreign policy in this situation can benefit Spain’s relations with Japan.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis, I am applying for the University Recommended MEXT scholarship and I was wondering if the 2 page limit applies to that too. Also, my grad school research (marine biology) is quite a jump from my undergrad research (genetics), so I don’t have experience with all the methods I will be using. Nevertheless, my potential supervisor has approved my joining his lab. But you said in Book 2 Chapter 6 that I must establish prior experience with the methods. What should I do?
Hi Rupandey,
That’s an excellent question.
The official guidelines have not come out for the university-recommended MEXT scholarship for this year yet. Actually, they usually do not come out until after universities have finished accepting applications. So, at this point, the best I can give you is my best guess, based on past experience.
I suspect that, in the end, MEXT will require a two-page FSRPP from all applicants, just like they did from the Embassy application route. Changes in one application process like this usually continue through to the others. However, some universities might use the old form at the point of the original application and then ask you to resubmit it on the new format if accepted.
Even with the old format, keeping your FSRPP to 2 pages was a good idea, so if you write it that way and include all of the sections that I mentioned in my book, it will be easy to insert those sections into whichever format that university tells you to use.
If your target advisor has already approved you joining his lab, then you do not need to worry so much about establishing your experience with the methods, but I would certainly recommend that you start researching what those methods are in the meantime and getting as familiar with them as possible. For now, keep that section to a minimum and try to focus on your experience with the subject field (i.e. the overlap between marine bio and genetics, as it affects your particular research).
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello TranSenz,
Can I ask about the format of the study/research plan, for UNIVERSITY recommendation.
While most universities in the past, and currently too, use the exact form as the MEXT Embassy form, it’s different for Todai (engineering): theirs is called a statement of study plan.
As per their FAQ, can be divided into five parts: motivation, objectives, methods, expected, schedule. Basically a regular research proposal.
Though it’s not stated, I presume it is based off of this MEXT Embassy form.
Can you advice on filling this: adhere strictly to their FAQ’s 5 parts, or merge information as it would be required on the MEXT form i.e. past and present field of study, theme, plan.
Thank you.
Hi Jack,
I wasn’t aware that Todai used a different form for their application. That’s interesting, since they’ll eventually need to submit the MEXT form to MEXT itself during the nomination process.
My recommendation for filling out the MEXT format does include most of those topics, even if they are not specifically labeled as such. So, my recommendation to you would be to follow Todai’s format, but also think about where each of those sections would fit into the MEXT FSRPP, as well.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thanks for the input.
Could you suggest a place for ‘past and present field of study’?
Do you think this would go better in ‘Motivation’ (because it comes first) or it would be OK add a new ‘Background’ (like in most research proposals).
By the way, the Todai form is actually blank, with only space for applicant name and number. The headings aren’t literally placed in the form.
Thanks again.
Hi Jack,
I would suggest that you’re thinking about this backwards. The point is not “where are you going to fit the past and present field of study” (which is a vague and unhelpful question to begin with). The question is “what parts of the Today categories are you going to put into the Past and Present Field of Study in the end?”
My suggestion in this article is that your “Past and Present Field of Study” should essentially be your “Background”, which is just another way of saying “Motivation.” They’re all really the same thing. Your motivation/background should describe the past research experience that led you to your interest in pursuing this research topic in graduate school, so that neatly answers all three!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
thank you for your help
Hi Travis, been reading your blog the last couple months — sadly, I found it too late for the original application, but by some miracle I’ve still managed to pass that!
I wasn’t exactly happy with my research plan at the time, and I’d really like to go down a considerably different line of study. In fact, while I wrote a plan primarily on one topic, there are about three different fields that I’m interested in — energy management, astrophyics, and sea ice, transferring the necessary skills from a computational physics MSc (which specialised in sea ice). I even wrote about all of this in the research plan, and they somehow still gave it the go-ahead!
Now this research plan was, frankly, quite poorly formatted/structured. I’m ashamed to say that it probably looked a bit thrown-together. It most certainly does not have a timeline, and has little detail on specifics. It’s not something I’m that keen to present to professors as an actual plan!
In summary, then, I have two questions. Firstly, while I assume I can’t (or shouldn’t) change the research plan from what I submitted in the original application, would it be allowed by MEXT for me to submit a suggestion of an updated/more relevant research plan to the university itself while seeking a LOA? Following on from that, from your experience, is it allowed by MEXT to be applying/have letters of acceptance relating to more than one research plan in more than one field?
Thanks so much for taking the time to read my long question!
– Eamon
I’m very sorry — I’ve just found the relevant information in another of your posts. Many thanks, and you may disregard these questions!
– Eamon
Hi Eamon,
I saw in a follow-up post that you said you had found the answer to your question elsewhere, but I can’t recall how I answered a similar question in the past and sometimes things change, so I thought I would answer it anyway, based on what I would say if I were hearing the question for the first time today.
You cannot change the official field of study and research program plan, but it is not MEXT that you need to worry about, it is the universities. At this point, they are the ones making the decision. So, when you send your official documents to apply for the Letter of Provisional Acceptance, you could include a supplementary explanation at that point, tailored to each university. You can’t replace, but you can supplement.
Regarding how MEXT would look at having multiple Letters of Acceptance in different fields, as long as there is a common theme to them, it should not be a problem. Ultimately, you will only be pursuing one research project, and most likely the one that you got the Letter of Provisional Acceptance for at your first-choice university.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thank you very much for your help!
Is it possible to modify the research proposal after submitting it to the embassy and passing the first screening (before sending it to the targeted professor)? not that I change it completely but to add or delete some sentences?
Thanks!
Hi Basma,
You cannot edit the document itself, but you are not committed to doing that research exactly. You can explain to your adivsor in your communication that you have been thinking about some minor tweaks. And, of course, once you are accepted and start working with that advisor on your actual research, it could all change significantly.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thanks for your effort! I have a question: the embassy asked for an original recommendation letter and 3 copies of it. But in the guideline it says, we need to send the LORs in a sealed envelope.
I am just confused. How can we get 3 copies of it if it is inside a sealed envelope?
Hi Akazad,
The application instructions no longer require that the Letter of Recommendation be sealed. The sample letter of acceptance format that MEXT provides comes from an era when they did have to be sealed, but that has changed. Even though that template instructs the recommender to seal it, you do not need to use that template at all.
If your recommender did seal the letter, then I recommend you contact the embassy where you are applying for their guidance. They may tell you to submit it as-is, or they may tell you to open it and make copies. I have heard both solutions in the past, so please check which is better for your embassy.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Just an after thought, I think if they want the letters to be sealed and submitted along with 3 copies, then the recommender would have to make the 3 copies and seal all letters together in an envelope
Hi Bogema,
Yes, if the embassy is demanding that all three letters be in a sealed envelope, that would be the case. The scholarship guidelines do not say that the letters must be sealed, though. Those instructions only appear on the sample letter, which you aren’t required to use.
If your advisor has given you one letter sealed, then I recommend that you contact the embassy to ask them what they want you to do – whether you should open the letter and make copies yourself or turn in only one sealed letter.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hey Travis, I got shortlisted for the first screening process. Now, I have to bring all the documents required for application to the diplomatic office of my country. In that connection, I had a query, please.
You said to add the timeline and the sources as attachments, and it also says the same thing in the Field of Study and Research plan document. Does that I mean don’t staple those two attachment pages together with the Field of Study and Research plan document?
So the two pages of the Field of Study and Research plan document stays separate from the two attachment pages?
Your help will oblige me much. Thanks and regards.
Hi Altair,
I do not recommend keeping the attachments separate, because then it might not be easily apparent what they are supposed to go to.
Instead, my recommendation would be to title the top of each page with “Attachment 1: Timeline” and “Attachment 2: Selected Sources”.
That way it is clear from the labels and the content that they are additional references and not part of the 2-page plan.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thank you for your advice, Travis. I passed the first screening. Now, I will have to contact the universities. Could you help me with one information? What is this “pledge form” that I need to submit to MEXT and more importantly how do I get hold of it? Do the universities send one themselves, when they send the provisional acceptance certificate or something?
Hi Altair,
As far as I know, the Pledge Form is something that you sign after you arrive in Japan as a scholarship student. You should not need it until then.
It basically describes the rules that you have to follow and also indicates your understanding that violating them can result in your scholarship being revoked.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi, this is an extremely useful article, I was just about to send my documents to the Embassy but now I will be looking through them again, to make sure I touched on every point you mentioned here.
I have a question that is not so much about the context but about the figuration of the documents: in the guidelines they ask you to write neatly or type. And I don’t know where I got it from, but I got this idea that they give preference to hand-written application forms and research plans (?? Like, I seriously don’t know where I got this information from, but in my mind it’s already a true statement). I even asked my Dean to write me a hand-written recommendation letter for that reason.
Anyway, I do have a neat handwriting, and I already completed my application form and research plan. However, after reading through your article, and how you give advise about font size and spacing, I have a stronger urge to re-type all my documents. Would you recommend a typed-in research plan/application form over hand-written? I know I may be looking too deep into this, but I could really use your advice on that.
Hi Tetiana,
Thank you for your kind words!
I think the preference would be for typed documents, for the simple reason that they are a lot easier to read! You won’t be penalized for having them handwritten (as long as everything is legible), because it is an allowable option, but I would recommend typing if it is possible to make the switch (I realize that by the time I got to this comment, it is probably too late).
Japan has a weird preference for hand-writing things like resumes, that drives me crazy, but fortunately, those old-fashioned ideas do not extend to university applications.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi!
I have a question about the time-bound. If I am going to apply as research student but I want to continue with master’s degree an Ph’D, I should achieve my plan within 5 years or only the time as research student?
Hi Liz,
The typical course of action is to spend about one semester as a research student before moving into your first degree. So, if that is your plan, then I would recommend that your Field of Study and Research Program Plan cover your research student semester as well as your Master’s degree (all as part of one research project). You would write about your PhD research plans when you apply to extend your scholarship later.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi, I’m applying for the mext scholarship and I just downloaded the research plan form only to realize it’s only a page despite you mentioning a two page form. Is there something wrong with mine?
Hi Aurora,
Sorry for the confusing explanation.
No, there is nothing wrong with your form. The first page contains all of the questions, but your answer may continue on to a second page.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thanks for all your help. Could you please attach/upload a filled form? I really need it as fast as possible.
Hi Nan,
I’m afraid I do not have a filled example form for the current version of the form. I have included links to several examples based on old forms in the appendix of my book, but this version is too new, and nobody has shared a successful example yet.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis I really appreciate this platform to learn about the MEXT Scholarship. I am an applicant and I am from Nigeria. I am stocked on the Field of Study and Research Plan . I want to major for Masters Degree and into the Humanities specifically Linguistics & Global Communication, Linguistics and Cultural Studies or Media and Mass Communication. The problem I have is what will i use as Research Title that will be beneficial and fusing into my Home country and that of Japan. I was thinking on “I will contribute to Global Communication – Creating a World of connection that will promote effective communication and interaction between students (Age 8-10) in Japan and their friends in other Countries. Doest this make a good Research Title?/if No, please suggest a good one for me thanks.
Hi Ruth,
What you have suggested is not a research title, but more of your personal goal. A research title needs to describe the academic question that you will research and possibly what your target dataset will be. If you wanted to study how mass media contributes to children’s international outlooks and decided to focus on specific television shows, an example would be, “Intercultural Interaction in Children’s Media: Representing the Other in Japanese and Nigerian Children’s Shows.”
That’s just something I came up with off the top of my head, but I hope that helps make it clear what a research title should look like. Your should be based on your exact research subject for your thesis.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis!
Thank you for all your guides! They have helped me enormously.
I have a question regarding the field of study and research plan for the MEXT Research scholarship (embassy recommendation). I read somewhere that if you are invited to the first screening and pass you have to write another field of study and research plan, but this time more detailed (so 6-8 pages) to send to the universities. I cannot find this anywhere else in the guidelines, but maybe this is something that is logical? Could you confirm for me if I have to write another/extended field of study and research plan (or any other extra documents for that matter) or if I only have to submit everything to the university I have already submitted to the embassy? Thank you in advance. Kind regards.
Hi Shar,
Thank you for your kind words!
I’m not sure where you heard that rumor about the second Field of Study and Research Program Plan, but that is not accurate according to what I know of the scholarship. When you contact universities, you are required to send them the same documents that you sent to the embassy during the primary screening.
Perhaps the origin of that rumor is that up until this year, there was no limit on the length of the Field of Study and Research Program Plan, so applicants often wrote longer plans (though I never heard of many being as long as 6-8 pages!) to submit to both the Embassy and University. I don’t think it would ever have been a good idea to write that long, though.
You should only have to submit the same length FSRPP that you sent to the Embassy.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis,
Am very grateful for your effort invested in educating people about MEXT scholarship which has helped me a lot. My question: it is stated that the form should not be more than two pages. Does that include the page where the questions are and also the attachments I would add. I have about 3 pages including the questions. Thank you.
Hi Dennis,
The questions are included, but attachments would not be. So, you need to condense your writing down to fit everything within one extra page added to the form page with the questions.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
hi,
i am applying for master’s by mext scholarship. i have read your article multiple times but i am still finding difficulty to understand what should i write in past and present field of study. like, previous research you’ve done or your major’s field.
another question, research plan guidelines that you have given, can they be used for every subject or there will be different headings.
last question, what is the difference between two headings; previous in the field and existing research. what i understood is that, in previous research we are going to give theories related to our research topic and in existing research heading, we are going to give literature review. Am I right?
Hi Nisma,
In the past and present field of study, you should describe your past major and research with a focus on the most relevant connection to what you want to study in Japan.
Indeed, you may need to change the headings I have suggested or even the contents of the sections in different fields (such as business or visual arts). This is just a suggested template, not a requirement!
I had intended the “Previous Research in the Field” to be an overview of the field with “Existing Research” highlighting the studies most similar to what you plan to research. You could conceivably combine the two sections as well, but I would recommend including both the overview and details.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Transenz!
I’m here asking you again another question, this time related to the fact that the Research topic has to match one’s past major. Well I’m still an undergraduate student (although I’m applying this year, well I’ve just sent my application actually) majoring in Chinese studies (sort of), I study stuff like Chinese, Chinese history, philosophy, politics, law, society etc. in my home country. My Research topic is related to the field of Political Science, and it’s on Chinese democratisation. Do you think the two fields are not related? I tried my best to show the connection on the Research Plan, since it would take a closer look at Chinese internal politics and so on. So even though the major is Political Science (and not Chinese studies per se) the Research itself is still related to China.
Do you think it could be a problem/my application will be rejected because of this?
Hi Marco,
If your research is on Chinese democratization, that would seem to be related very closely to your previous degree in Chinese studies, so I see no potential problem.
It is not the name of the program that matters but the contents of the studies.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thanks for your reply!
You were right and I indeed passed the first screening! But now I have another question: how important is the first screening in the overall selection process? From what I gathered, the Research Plan is the single most important document, does that mean the first screening (being all about documents and not exams/interview) is also the most important? I have trouble understanding how the whole process works in terms of the importance of each step, and I hoped you could shed some light into it.
Hi Marco,
I am very happy to hear that you passed the document screening!
The document screening is not a separate screening, though, it is all part of the “Primary Screening”, which also includes the tests and interviews. Your performance on every part of the Primary Screening is cumulative, so it’s not as if it resets with each stage that you pass. The exams are generally intended to be a qualifying cut-off, rather than something that will contribute significantly to your relative rank among applicants, as far as I know. So, the last key factor for your application will be the interview.
A solid interview can help you pass applicants who might have been ahead of you after the document screening stage (or keep your place, if you’re already at the top). But one of the reasons I say the FSRPP is so important is that it also helps you prepare for the interview by making sure that all of your goals are aligned and you have a clear goal that you want to accomplish. That is something that the interview panel will also be looking for!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello Travis!
You have no idea how helpful your articles have been to my MEXT application!
I have a burning question I’ll like to ask you. Hope you don’t mind?
My undergraduate university has not started issuing certificates to fresh graduates (Class of ’18), I’m hoping if I could use my statement of result in place of my certificate since it’s currently unavailable. Will it be acceptable?
Also, I want to ask if the medical form should be typed or filled with pen?
Hi Toyin,
You do not need a formal diploma, etc. A certificate of graduation can be a letter from an official at your university verifying that you have met all requirements and completed the degree, including the date of completion. If your statement of result meets that description, then you should be able to use it.
For the medical form, either typing or pen is fine, but since you will be bringing it to the doctor to be filled in, unless the doctor has a typewriter in his office, I think filling in by pen is the only choice.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello! Thank you so much for the informative article! I have a question, the form I downloaded (2020) does not include “Research Title”. Should I add it?
Hi Nour,
No, I do not recommend writing “Research Title” – that would be a waste of a line. Just write your title itself, center it and make it bold so that it stands out from the following paragraphs. That should be clear enough!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello dear Travis thanks for you grate help I uploaded your guid your sample but I cannot apply because after 2 april 2020 I’ll be 35 year old anywhere thanks.
Hi Farrukh,
I’m sorry to hear that. I hope you can find another opportunity that suits your situation.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi TranSenz
Your blog has been so helpful,am applying for the emabassy recomedation from Botswana, Africa. May you kindly breakdown the timeline to be included in the graduate research plan ( MBA), It’s confusing me a lot
Hi Mercy Rams,
I have never seen a research timeline specific to an MBA, but in general, you want to look at what the final output requirement is for your degree (thesis, project, etc) and think about the steps that you need to get there. Most common steps include literature review, experiment or research design, research/data collection, analysis, and writing, but this is going to vary based on your degree.
For each step, you would want to think about what you would be doing and how long you think it would take to accomplish.
I also recommend looking at the degree progression information for your first choice university to see what their expectations are and building your timeline based on that.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi, Travis, I don’t get the research plan heading, in the research plan section. do i have to write the summary of my whole research plan and study plant in that research plan heading?
thanks for your hardwork.
regards.
Hi Afandi,
I went into detail in the article about what I recommend including under the Research Plan (in several sub-sections that I recommend you add). Was there some part of that specifically that you found confusing?
Your study plans (i.e. course plans) are not terribly significant, so I would recommend that you focus on your original research.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis, I have a quick question,
I bet you are probably preparing an article about this already, but on the Application form for this 2020 they have added the three questions about ‘motivation for studying in Japan’. Considering that, do you think it is still important to include the aspects about how the research will be good for both the home country and Japan. In particular I’m thinking about the ‘second partial paragraph’ you describe for the ‘specific research plan’.
Hi Bennet,
Unfortunately, I still do not have that article finished.
Yes, I do think that it is still important to touch on the benefits of your research to Japan and your home country in the FSRPP. The reason is that you don’t want to rely on the reviewers’ memory. They are going to be going through dozens or possibly hundreds of applications, and they all start to run together at some point. You want to keep their memories fresh at every opportunity!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis,
I was just wondering who the audience will be for my research plan. I’m studying medicine and I was wondering if I should write my research plan intended for the general public to understand or professionals?
Thanks
Hi Joseph,
It’s tricky – your audience will include both non-experts at the Embassy and your target professor at the university, so you have to write it to be understood by non-experts, but with enough detail that an academic in your field will understand the academic merit. I recommend using a mix of impact statements that explain to a general audience what your research will produce along with technical explanations of the exact procedures that you plan to pursue to reach those ends, for the benefit of academic experts.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello, Travis! Thank you always for your informative articles, I find them extremely helpful. I wanted to ask you about the “≪Guide for Creating a Field of Study and Research Plan Sheet/作成要領≫ ” at the top of the page for the research plan form. Since we are already working with a limited space, is it okay to delete that guide from the form when completing it? Or do they prefer the form exactly as is, with just our answers filled out?
Thank you again.
Hi Sav,
Thank you for your kind words!
Unfortunately, no, I do not think it would be acceptable to delete part of the form instructions to give yourself more space – that could be considered cheating.
You have the same amount of space to work with as every other applicant, so you have to figure out how to be concise in your proposal. (You are certainly not the only person that struggles with this, though! That has been the biggest challenge with many of my coaching and review clients, as well.)
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Travis !
Thank you a lot for this guide, it’s really useful to me. I just had a question that I don’t think you covered. In the information document given by the Embassy concerning eligibility and the application process, it says that candidates for a doctoral level should write another 2-page research project (in English) in addition to the “Field of study and research plan”. What should I write in it ? I guess it should not be a translation/repetition of what I wrote in Japanese in the “Field of study and research plan”, but what do you think ?
Thanks !
Hi Vic,
There is no mention of a document like that in MEXT’s application guidelines, but I know that in many countries, the local embassy adds additional requirements, so it could possibly be a requirement just for your country.
Could you link me to the application guidelines you are looking at so that I can take a look and make some suggestions?
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hello Travis! I have been reading your book on writing the Field of Study and Research Plan and I must say I would recommend to anyone like me who doesn’t have an academic background.
I have a question. My consulate asks only for the Research Plan (no Field of Study) in Portuguese and it should have at most 6 pages and include title, abstract, introduction, objective, methodology, references. Will I need to fill this form later in the process? I was thinking of doing a Research Plan in your format since the start, but I am worried that my competition is going to have a longer research plan. Have you encountered in the past cases like this, where the consulate format is totally different from Mext guidelines?
Thanks!
Hi Vinicius,
Thank you very much for your kind words!
It sounds like your country has a pre-screening process before you get to the actual MEXT forms. I have seen that in several countries in the past, including Brazil. In the case of other applicants from Brazil, I have recommended them to write both. Usually, it makes more sense to write the longer version first, and then condense it down to also fit the MEXT format that I talk about in Chapter 7 and in this article.
I hope that helps!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Dear Travis,
Thank you so much for this amazing post! it’s really helping me alot in writing the research plan.
I was wondering if you could help me with the “What kinds of things do you think you can contribute to Japan and your home country through your experience of studying in Japan?” question found in the application research form. Are there certain points that you think must be tackled while answering this question?
Again, thanks alot!
Hi Mari,
Thank you very much for your kind words!
My next article to update is going to cover the new version of the application form and those three open-ended questions.
My recommendation in the meantime would be to think about what you want to accomplish after graduation, how your research will contribute to your progress in that goal, and what other benefits that research could have to others in your field.
In general, MEXT is looking to produce graduates who will become a bridge between their home country and Japan and help promote Japan within their country. I wrote about this to some degree in my article about How to Maximize Your Changes, and the same philosophy applies to these questions.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi,
Sorry to bother you, but I could not find any information on the following point on official MEXT website.
I will apply soon to the MEXT scholarship and am particularly interested in a very specific master that does’nt have any other equivalent in Japan (and abroad).
Is it possible to write only one program in the placement preference form 2020, or should I pick-up other similar programs, even if I don’t think they are exactly what I am looking for?
Would it be a problem to have two blank spaces after my first choice, or is it perfectly okay?
Thank you for all your work,
Kind regards,
Hi Chloe,
It is possible to list only one program, but understand that it is a risk:
– The embassy is probably going to ask you why you only have one program and you are going to have to persuade them that it is sufficiently unique that you could not possibly conduct your desired research anywhere else. (Be aware that they may assume that you simply were too lazy to research other universities until you explain.)
– If you are already in touch with a professor in that program and have a provisional agreement from that professor to accept you if you pass the primary screening, that’s fine, but otherwise you run the risk of not being able to obtain a Letter of Acceptance there. In that case, you could lose the scholarship (or have to apply somewhere else after all to be able to get a Letter of Acceptance) even if you pass the Primary Screening.
It is not “perfectly okay”, but it can be possible to leave blank spaces if you understand and account for the risks.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
which is very intersting scholarship progrogram
Thank you so much for this amazing guide!!!!!
I have a concern about the “previous research in the field” section:
Should I talk about another research in the field that has connection with the current research “existing research”, or can I talk about my Master’s thesis research which has tight connection with the current research?
and,
when describing the previous research should I talk about the results of the research or just describe it methodologically?
Hi Kheira,
You should describe what makes it different from your proposed research. For example, if you are researching a similar topic but with a different methodology than what has been used before, you would focus on that. In general, though, you should be focused on the results and how your research will produce results that do not yet exist to add to the general level of knowledge in the field.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Kheira,
Thank you for your kind words!
The Previous Research in the Field section should refer to published research by established scholars in the field – essentially, you are describing the state of the academic field as it relates to your research question.
This section does not refer to your previous research in the field and I think it is considered academically undesirable to cite your own previous work, unless you are one of the leaders in the field.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi,
Thank you so much for all the articles you have posted about the MEXT scholarship, it has really helped! I am just now a bit confused with the new 2020 research plan format. To my understanding this now means that an applicant’s entire research plan should be covered using this new form and limited to two pages? There is no need for an extra research proposal plan? I was under the impression (from researching online and reading other’s research proposals) that we had to fill out the field of study and research plan form, as well as have a separate research proposal which would have looked something along the lines of having an abstract, introduction, background, conclusion, ect.
I’m sorry, the whole application process has really confused me even though I have tried to do as much research on it as I can and even called my consulate for questions. So thank you for any clarifications!
Hi Jen Ta,
That’s right. Your entire research plan needs to fit within the two pages you are given for the document.
The form changed this year, so any references you find from past years are going to be based on a different format. In the past, there was no space limit and there were different questions for the “field of study” and “research plan”, but that does not apply anymore.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
thank you so much for keeping us updated everything is so useful ! god bless you
Hi Travis! Thank you for the article!
I’ve been getting started on my field of study plan and I have one question, it says in the form that “if possible, write in Japanese” but is it recommended?
I majored in Japanese so I do have the capacity to write it in full Japanese, however I still have more confidence that I will be able to express myself better in English. So I decided to write in Japanese only if it would be a “bonus point” for me.
So, does an applicant who wrote his application in Japanese have more chances to be selected?
Thank you
Hi Naam,
My recommendation is to write in English if the program you are applying to is taught in English and to write in Japanese if it is taught in Japanese. Ultimately, you will have to express your research in the language your program is taught in, so now is a good time to start!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Thank you for the excellent guide, Travis!
I have some questions about my own proposal concerning this form.
I think I might have done something wrong with the categorization of my form.
In 研究テーマ, I wrote about the current problems and gaps in the projected research and I wrote about why the research is significant, in detail, in 7 paragraphs. It includes the objectives of the proposed research and I used many references in this part.
And in 研究計画, I described the plan of the research, the methodology and the ‘problem statement’. It took 2 long and 2 short paragraphs.
The theme is surely longer than the plan but I did some things with the attachments.
This form is numbered as “3” so I wrote 3 on top, then I numbered my attachments as 3.1, 3.2, 3.3 and 3.4, four in total.
I am planning to do a survey research to certain sample groups, so I added sample questions to the 3.1 and it took two pages. They are simply “possible” questions to be asked to the sample group. Then I added my reserch timetable as 3.2, nothing else. 3.3 is called “Targeted Effects”, in which I hypothesise possible effects of the research, it is a single page too. And 3.4 is references I cited.
To be honest, I attempted to reduce this page to 2 pages and I did so by putting extra information as “attachments”, as there is not a certain limit to the attachments. I also set the font size of my own words to 9 or 9,5.
Do you think that this categorization of mine sounds too wrong? There is too little time left for the deadline and I got worried.
Thank you a lot for your support to everyone.
Hi Aaron,
It’s hard to say without seeing your actual paper, but it sounds like you have probably gone into far more detail than is necessary and should try to cut out unnecessary information. As an example, I don’t think more than a sentence or two is necessary to explain your target effects. And I have never seen a plan that needed more than 2 paragraphs to explain why the research was significant.
While what you have done is not prohibited, my guess is that you could benefit from being more concise. Remember, your reviewers will be going through dozens or hundreds of FSRPPs. The point in limiting the length is to make it easier for them to read through each one. You want to make sure that they can quickly and easily grasp the value and preparedness of your research.
Again, please take all of this with a grain of salt, since I have not seen your actual FSRPP, but that would be my feedback in general.
If you are interested in a full review, I do offer that as part of my coaching services.
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz
Hi Trans! So nice to see you finally uploaded your guide for the 2020 embassy recommendation. I must say, yes! they changed it again for this year haha. Is there a way where I could ask you to review my important documents before I submit it like the research plan and application form? Or course, i understand there is an “expertise compensation” to this and i think we can negotiate with that. Let me know what you think 😉
Hi Pat,
Yes, I’m working on the new forms and processes as quickly as I can. So much changed this year!
I do offer a review service and you can find more information at the “Coaching” link at the top of the page, including a list of the services and prices.
At the moment, I have a short waiting list, so there could be a slight delay, but if you are interested, I would be happy to work with you soon!
Good Luck!
– Travis from TranSenz