Japanese

威廉希尔官网

Involving High School Students in AIU Law Studies

Since 2022, Prof. Tetsuya Toyoda has been inviting high school students to take part in his international law and other law courses by way of online workshops. These workshops expose high school students to important legal topics to help them see the importance of discussing them in English while also giving AIU students an opportunity to solidify their understanding of the subject matter through communication.

Prof. Toyoda has already conducted seven online workshops with high school students:

  • 1. “Law in International Society” on December 7, 2022
  • 2. “International Organizations Today” on July 14, 2023
  • 3. “Japanese Constitutionalism in Global Contexts” on December 7 and 12, 2023
  • 4. “International Law in Crisis” on Monday, December 11, 2023
  • 5. “International Institutions and Sustainable Development” on November 29, 2024
  • 6. “Japanese Constitutionalism Now in Question” on December 9, 2025
  • 7. “International Law in a Turbulent World” on February 26, 2025

For information about upcoming workshops and information about how to participate, please see the bottom of this page.

Background: the importance of communication skills in law education today

The Internet and the rapid development of generative AI have shifted the focus of higher education from the accumulation of knowledge to the development of communication skills. For example, in the last century, law students struggled to memorize key articles of the Constitution or other legal texts. Today, these articles are readily available on the Internet. After mastering the specialized vocabulary, today’s law students should spend most of their energy using the legal texts in oral and written arguments rather than simply memorizing them. The priority for law students in their undergraduate years has become the acquisition of academic and professional communication skills.

Why extend the academic conversation to high school students?

In the constitutional law course at AIU, students pursue four steps in their learning:

  • 1. Understanding the ideal and reality of constitutionalism through the experience of the Meiji Constitution, 
  • 2. Understanding the values and challenges of the Showa Constitution in an international comparative perspective,
  • 3. Conducting research on the current constitutional issues based on relevant legal texts and scholarly writings, and
  • 4. Sharing their learning with a wider audience, e.g. high school students!

The involvement of high school students has become part of AIU students’ learning of constitutional law. It gives them the opportunity to practice their academic and professional communication by conveying concepts from the course to a less-experienced audience in a way they can understand.

Sub-committee system of discussion

Each of these workshops adopts the sub-committee system of discussion. Participants are divided into small groups (“sub-committees”) and assigned to work on a more specific topic within the overall topic of the workshop. After group discussions, each group submits a written report to the plenary meeting and all members take part in the discussion there.

Join the workshops

The following future workshops are scheduled:

  • 1. “Democracy or Constitutionalism?” on July 22, 2025 at 19:30-21:00
  • 2. “Environmental Sustainability and International Organizations” on December 12, 2025 at 16:15-18:00

Calls for participation will be posted on the AIU website. For questions, please contact Prof. Toyoda.