By Jeff Murphy,
August 24, 2023
From left, Phil Hull, director of international student services at the University
of Central Missouri; Jun Kumamoto, president of Hiroshima College of Foreign Languages
(HCFL); Roger Best, UCM president; Gakuji Tatsumi, HCFL dean of academic and student
affairs; and Phil Bridgmon, UCM provost and vice president for academic affairs, participate
in a memorandum of understanding signing event between UCM and HCFL.
WARRENSBURG, MO – A memorandum of understanding opening the door for an expanded partnership
with Hiroshima College of Foreign Languages (HCFL) in Japan was recently signed by
administrative and academic leaders at the University of Central Missouri and HCFL.
Updating a relationship UCM has had with the Hiroshima institution since 2005, the
brief signing ceremony took place on Aug. 7 in the Elliott Student Union. The agreement
creating a framework for institutional cooperation was signed by Roger Best, UCM president,
and Phil Bridgmon, provost and vice president for academic affairs, with HCFL leaders,
Jun Kumamoto, president, and Gakuji Tatsumi, dean of academic and student affairs.
Phil Hull, director of international student services at UCM, also attended the event.
He noted for nearly two decades, HCFL students have been coming to UCM primarily as
participants in the university’s English Language Institute (ELI). The ELI is housed
in the Elliott Student Union. It offers an Intensive English Program, professional
language training and short-term cultural programming to help English language learners
develop skills needed to succeed in higher education and in their careers.
The MOU enables partnering institutions to create opportunities that meet respective
academic and educational needs through:
● Undergraduate and graduate degree-seeking programs
● Short- and long-term faculty and student exchanges
● Collaborative research and discovery, learning and teaching
● Programs offered or developed by UCM’s English Language Institute, and
● Other mutually agreed upon educational or research programs.
While many students from HCFL who enroll at UCM will continue to focus on opportunities
to increase their fluency in the English language, the recent agreement with HCFL
is a step toward making the transition to a four-year degree program much easier.
Hull said the university plans to explore with HCFL leaders ways to ensure a smooth
transfer of college credits between institutions.
“Over the years, there have been conversations about doing a more robust articulation
of courses because students at HCFL may take English classes but they also take courses
that are primarily general education courses,” Hull said. “I am going to be working
with Mr. Tatsumi on course articulation so that when students come to UCM they can
have courses that they have already taken at home count toward their bachelor’s degree.”
Another benefit of this agreement is that UCM offers a renewable Global Partners Scholarship
to HCFL students. A student who enrolls at UCM from Japanese partnering institution
to pursue a degree or utilize opportunities available through the English Language
Institute has the opportunity to do so while paying the in-state resident tuition
rate. This provides a significant savings on their college education. Several criteria
must be met, however, before being eligible to receive this award. As stipulated
in the MOU, this includes requirements such as submitting timely documentation of
UCM’s international student online application, demonstrated English proficiency,
and other criteria.
Hull said the university also looks forward to future opportunities such as joint
research projects between faculty members and students, and the development of future
programs that are mutually beneficial.
This partnership with HCFL is one example of UCM’s ongoing efforts to connect the
institution with other colleges, universities and students overseas who want to collaborate
on educational opportunities in the United States and abroad. Hull said such initiatives
re-awaken efforts that were stalled in recent years due to events such as COVID.
“One of the things I discovered in my travels this summer to places such as Malaysia
and India, where I visited with partners, there’s an eagerness to get back to a certain
degree of normalcy, and go forward with an even greater spirit of partnership,” Hull
said.