Youth ambassador program a year-long effort

On paper, a recent trip to Japan by a delegation of local students was only 10 days.

Kentlake High School student Trinity Smith practices her calligraphy during a cultural-exchange trip this month to Japan.

Kentlake High School student Trinity Smith practices her calligraphy during a cultural-exchange trip this month to Japan.

Students, families participate

On paper, a recent trip to Japan by a delegation of local students was only 10 days.

In reality, it was the culmination of a year’s worth of effort.

The youth-ambassador program for the Kent-Auburn-Tamba Sister Cities Committee requires students as well as their families to become vested in an intensive international-relations project.

The result of that level of commitment, say organizers, is a connection with another culture that goes far beyond being a tourist in another country.

It’s about getting acquainted with a country, one person at a time.

“Once someone goes over there and makes that personal connection, it just takes it to a whole new level,” said Duanna Richards, Auburn’s sister cities liaison. “Now it’s more than just a country – it’s a real-life experience.”

The youth-ambassador program is open to students entering the ninth or 10th grade in the Kent and Auburn school districts. And according to Kim Isom, youth-ambassador coordinator for both Auburn and Kent, students chosen to be ambassadors should expect to function in that role from the moment they pass muster with the ambassador-selection committee.

“It’s a minimum 12-month commitment,” she said. “They’re an ambassador from the moment they’re elected.”

So what does that mean?

For the student, it means being willing to learn about Japanese culture (most who go through the program are already taking Japanese courses through their schools), as well as committing to do a research project focusing on an aspect of the culture or the country. Students also must be willing to function as “ambassadors” in their schools (talking to fellow students and to teachers about the program), as well as speaking to service groups about their experiences.

For the students and their families, the commitment also includes covering half the cost of the air fare (by the raising money themselves or paying for it out of pocket) and participating in the program’s annual fundraising auction, which takes place in May.

And there is also the excitement of hosting a Japanese student, as part of the exchange between the countries.

But while they’re expending the effort, Isom noted students are getting something back.

That includes the opportunity to build up hours of community service – which is a high-school graduation requirement – as well as the knowledge they are doing something that goes well beyond the parameters of a typical high-school experience.

“They’re representing their family, their high school, their school district, the city in which they live, the state of Washington and the United States of America,” Isom said. “That’s a pretty significant role.”

In Auburn, the ambassador program functions with the city of Tamba (which is actually a Japanese “super city” comprised of six smaller cities, of which Kasuga has a sister-city relationship with Auburn.)

In Kent, the ambassador program also involves sister cities in Norway and China, in addition to Japan. Kent has a formal sister-city relationship with Kaibara, one of the six cities making up the super city of Tamba.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Train strikes, kills Kent man, 64, in wheelchair on tracks

Feb. 4 incident at East James Street second death by train in three days in Kent

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent Police Blotter: Jan. 12-18

Incidents include attempted robbery, carjackings

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent woman standing on tracks struck and killed by train | Update

Woman identified; reportedly waving at train Feb. 2 in the 1000 block of First Avenue North

Image courtesy King County Sheriff's Office
Super Bowl patrols underway as part of ‘Night of 1,000 Stars’ campaign

Emphasis patrols will be active in King County to encourage safe driving

COURTESY PHOTO, Sound Transit
No light rail service in Kent on Saturday, Feb. 7

Sound Transit to close line between Federal Way and Angle Lake for maintenance; buses will run

t
Kent high school students hit streets to protest ICE

Hundreds oppose actions that resulted in deaths of protesters in Minneapolis and removal of immigrants

United States Courthouse in Seattle. COURTESY PHOTO, USDOJ
Man pleads guilty to home invasion robberies in Kent, elsewhere

Armed, masked men entered homes in 2022 and tied up victims as they ransacked places

t
King County Metro rolls out new fleet of battery-electric buses

Routes in Kent, Auburn and Renton among the cities that will feature the new buses

Kent Police arrest a suspect Jan. 16 after he reportedly stabbed a man earlier in the day at the Kent Library. COURTESY PHOTO, King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office
Man, 37, faces assault charge in Kent Library stabbing

Reportedly stabbed 18-year-old man in arm Jan. 16 in unprovoked attack

U.S. Courthouse in Seattle. COURTESY PHOTO, USDOJ
Man found guilty of robbing multiple people in King County

2-hour carjacking spree in 2022 covered Kent, Bellevue, Redmond, Seattle and ended in Renton

t
Kent man sentenced to over 10 years for Auburn bank robbery

The defendant had multiple felonies on his criminal record.

t
Man gets 6-year prison sentence as part of drug ring

Operated from Kent to Everett dealing fentanyl, cocaine