
Konica Minolta to Provide Schools with AI-Powered Real-Time Translation Service Using Tablets
Konica Minolta, Inc. will launch 'KOTOBAL,' a multilingual interpreting service using tablets and other devices, for use in schools.
As the number of foreigners living in Japan has increased, the number of children with foreign backgrounds enrolled in childcare centers and schools has been rising sharply, and the service is designed to support communication between teachers and other children.
Three municipalities have already introduced the service on a pilot basis since April, and the company aims to have 30 municipalities adopt it by the next fiscal year.
KOTOBAL is an AI-assisted, real-time automatic translation service, and is available in 23 languages, including English, Chinese and Vietnamese. The service enables students to check in their native language what the teacher is saying in Japanese during class via a tablet or other device. The service is also intended to be used for conversations between foreign and Japanese students during break times.
A service in which remote interpreters respond to users' questions will also be available in approximately 20 different languages. A system will be set up to provide counseling on higher education and bullying. Also, parents and guardians of the students will be able to participate in meetings with teachers with no appointment necessary.
According to the Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Ministry, the number of foreign students requiring Japanese-language instruction in public schools was 57,718 in 2023, about double compared to nine years earlier. A survey showed that about 30% of them do not understand classes held in the Japanese language, which has become an issue in the field of education.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Mainichi
44 minutes ago
- The Mainichi
Japan big makers' confidence improves to 13 in June from 12: BOJ
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Business confidence among major Japanese manufacturers improved to 13 in June from 12 three months earlier, the Bank of Japan's Tankan survey showed Tuesday. The sentiment index measuring confidence among companies such as those in the auto and electronics sectors was higher than the averge market forecast of 10 in a Kyodo News survey. The index for large nonmanufacturers, including the service sector, fell to 34 from 35 in the previous survey in March.


Nikkei Asia
an hour ago
- Nikkei Asia
BOJ survey signals resilience in Japanese business mood
The Bank of Japan's Tankan survey for the April-June period was its first since U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement of "reciprocal" trade tariffs. (Photo by Maho Obata) JADA NAGUMO TOKYO -- Business sentiment among large Japanese manufacturers improved for the first time in two quarters in the April-June period, according to the latest survey by the country's central bank. The Bank of Japan on Tuesday released its quarterly Tankan survey, with the headline diffusion index (DI) among large manufacturers coming in at 13, slightly up compared with plus 12 in January-March. The median forecast in a QUICK survey of economists was plus 10.


The Mainichi
3 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Trump complains about Japan not importing enough American rice
WASHINGTON (Kyodo) -- U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday complained that Japan is not importing enough American rice, expressing further frustration as his administration and officials from the key Asian ally struggle to make progress toward a deal in bilateral tariff negotiations. Trump said on social media that Japan "won't take our RICE, and yet they have a massive rice shortage. In other words, we'll just be sending them a letter, and we love having them as a Trading Partner for many years to come." In Trump's post on his Truth Social platform, which singled out Japan in a way he rarely does online, he started by saying he wanted to give an example of how "spoiled" countries have become with respect to the United States. His statement came a day after saying in a TV interview that he has no plans to roll back the hefty auto tariffs imposed on Japan, despite Tokyo's persistent opposition expressed in now-stalled tariff negotiations. "I could send one (letter) to Japan: 'Dear Mr. Japan, here's the story. You're going to pay a 25 percent tariff on your cars,'" Trump said on Fox News. During the interview that aired on Sunday, Trump also accused Japan of importing too few American cars. "They won't take our cars, and yet we take millions and millions of their cars into the United States. It's not fair," he said. To curb its trade surplus with the United States, he said Japan could purchase "a lot of oil" and other goods from his country. On Monday, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said Trump plans to meet with his trade team this week to discuss tariff rates for many individual countries. She told a press briefing that Trump will set the rates if countries "don't come to the table to negotiate in good faith." In recent days, Trump and his officials have ramped up pressure on U.S. trading partners as a 90-day pause on country-specific tariffs, granted in a bid to facilitate negotiations, is set to expire on July 9. Each year, Japan imports 770,000 tons of rice tariff-free under a "minimum access" agreement with the World Trade Organization. Of that amount, up to 100,000 tons is allowed to be imported for human consumption. Any rice imported to Japan beyond the special quota is subject to a tariff of 341 yen (about $2.40) per kilogram. Meanwhile, the country charges no tariffs on imported vehicles. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and Trump failed to reach a breakthrough trade deal when they held talks in Canada in mid-June on the fringes of a Group of Seven summit. Japan's chief tariff negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, was in Washington for four days through Sunday for his seventh round of ministerial talks on tariffs with the United States. But there was a lack of tangible progress, with sharp differences apparently remaining over the Trump administration's April increase in the tariff on imported automobiles to 27.5 percent from 2.5 percent.