
News in Easy English: MLB star Shohei Ohtani appears most in new school textbooks
Textbooks sometimes use famous people to make learning easy and interesting for students. But textbook publishers must be careful. If a famous person has problems or scandals, the companies must change the textbooks.
Ohtani is in 12 new textbooks. He appears in textbooks for four different classes in two school subjects. For example, in one "English Communication I" textbook, students can practice English using Ohtani's goal-setting chart.
Other famous athletes, like Haruka Kitaguchi (javelin throw), Hina Hayata (table tennis), and Tokito Oda (wheelchair tennis), are also in new textbooks. Books teaching Japanese language have songs and works by music artists and TV stars, too. Examples are Gen Hoshino and Neru Nagahama.
One textbook from Taishukan Publishing first included Ippei Mizuhara, who helped Ohtani with English, in an English lesson. But Mizuhara had a gambling scandal, so Taishukan Publishing changed that part of the textbook. It now uses a story about a Japanese-Canadian baseball team from before World War II. The education ministry said Mizuhara's scandal made the lesson "difficult" to use.
Another textbook for junior high school also had to change after Mizuhara's scandal. A different textbook with a picture of entertainer Fuwa-chan also took her out after she wrote a bad thing about a comedian on social media.
Textbook companies say choosing famous people is very difficult. A worker at a textbook company said, "We always think about scandals when we decide the people in our textbooks. We can only check online. We just hope that people don't have scandals in the four years until we make textbooks again."
Vocabulary
celebrity: a famous person (example: singer, actor, or athlete)
athlete: a person who plays sports
scandal: a big problem about someone's actions, usually in news or on the internet
gambling: playing games for money -- can be bad or against the rules
entertainer: a person who sings, acts, or makes jokes to make people happy
publisher: a company that makes books or textbooks
Hashtags

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


Kyodo News
5 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Golf: Yamashita credits British Open win to father, self-belief
TOKYO - Women's British Open winner Miyu Yamashita on Tuesday credited her breakthrough victory to her father's coaching and support, as well as an unshakable belief in her own playing style. The LPGA Tour debutant, who turned 24 on Saturday, led by three strokes at the halfway point of the tournament at Royal Porthcawl in Wales before surviving a difficult third round en route to her two-shot win. Yamashita said she had been inspired to win a major by watching compatriot Hinako Shibuno's 2019 British Open triumph and realized the dream after working with her father and coach Masaomi ahead of the final round at the blustery links course. "Of course my technique is better (than his)," she quipped at a press conference in Tokyo. "He does play golf, but his score is somewhere around 100, and I've been better since I was little." Yamashita said their professional relationship had not always been smooth, but she kept faith in her father's coaching. "In the end, his advice has been right," she said. "I think he's a very good teacher." Yamashita said she was able to "pay back" the support she received from her mother's home prefecture of Ishikawa, as well as neighboring Toyama, where Masaomi was raised, both of which were affected by the powerful earthquake that struck the Noto Peninsula and surrounding areas on Jan. 1, 2024. Her maiden LPGA title also eased some of the disappointment from last summer's Paris Olympics, when she missed out on a medal and finished fourth after hitting a double bogey late in the final round. "I was really frustrated at the time," she said. "But that motivated me to build on the experience, and aim to win an overseas tournament, specifically. I feel I've managed to improve since. My short game wasn't good at the time." Standing 150 centimeters, Yamashita said her small stature prevented her hitting the ball as far as some of her rivals, but her victory showed there was more to succeeding in golf. "While I haven't pursued distance, I've valued accuracy," she said. "I thought I could compete on the technique side. I'm sure junior golfers can also win in the future at overseas tournaments by honing their short game and shot accuracy." Yamashita said she was encouraged by the strong performances by other Japanese players at the British Open, as well as the rising standard of play on the Japan Ladies Professional Golfers' Association Tour. While her major victory has put her under the spotlight and rocketed her to sixth in the latest world rankings, Yamashita said she was already focused on her next goal. "I'm always concentrating on the tournament right in front of me," she said. "I would certainly like to be ranked first in the world one day, but only as the result of doing the things I need to do."


Yomiuri Shimbun
10 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Central League to adopt DH from 2027
For the baseball purists who like to see pitchers bat, the last holdout has succumbed to modern times. Japan pro baseball's Central League will adopt the designated hitter starting with the 2027 season, the league decided at its board meeting on Monday, a half-century after the 'position' was first introduced into Japan. The historic move shows the league's acceptance of the global trend, and will influence team strategy while also reducing the burden on players. The designated hitter, who bats in place of the pitcher in the batting lineup, was first introduced by Major League Baseball's American League in 1973. Japan's Pacific League followed suit in 1975, but the Central League resisted make the change, preferring the 'tradition of nine-man baseball' and the subtleties of player usage and other tactical decisions. However, the DH has become the mainstay in recent years, and is used at the World Baseball Classic and the Olympics. It was fully introduced in the major leagues in 2022 when the National League adopted it. Looking at the amateur game in Japan, the nation's top university league — the Tokyo Big6 Baseball League — does not currently use the DH, but has decided to introduce it next spring, meaning that all 27 college leagues under the Japan University Baseball Federation will be in alignment. The Japan High School Federation decided on Friday to adopt the DH next year. At the Central League board meeting on Monday, board members from all six clubs unanimously decided in favor of the DH. Kiyoaki Suzuki, director of the Central League board and the chief of the Hiroshima Carp team office, said at a press conference on Monday that the high school federation's decision had great impact. 'We felt we had to make the decision when the high school federation took the step,' Suzuki said. To give the teams time to adjust their rosters, the DH will start from the 2027 season. The league plans to adopt the so-called 'Ohtani rule' in which a player doubling as the starting pitcher and DH can continue as DH after being taken out from the mound. 'It is a significant step forward [for Japan pro baseball], now that the Central League has made a decision to take up the challenge of the new form of baseball,' Nippon Professional Baseball Commissioner Sadayuki Sakakibara said.


Kyodo News
12 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Golf: Women's British Open winner Miyu Yamashita rises to 6th in world
TOKYO - Women's British Open winner Miyu Yamashita jumped from 15th to sixth in the latest world golf rankings announced Monday, placing highest among the Japanese. The 24-year-old secured her first U.S. LPGA Tour win at the fifth and final major of the year by two strokes at Royal Porthcawl in Wales, where the tour rookie became the second Japanese winner of the tournament after Hinako Shibuno in 2019. Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand moved up a place to top the rankings as Nelly Korda of the United States dropped to second. Lydia Ko of New Zealand remains third. Rio Takeda was 11th, Mao Saigo 12th and Ayaka Furue 21st among other Japanese golfers.