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    Alo Japan All About Japan
    people creating a sunscreen testing strip
    In Tokyo

    Tokyo HS students tackle Hawaiʻi’s real-world topics through STEM

    August 1, 2025

    Reading time: 2 minutespeople creating a sunscreen testing stripStudents creating a sunscreen testing strips with rubbing alcohol, iron tablets, hydrogen peroxide and coffee filters

    Fifteen high school students from a STEM-focused girls’ school in Tokyo traveled to Hawaiʻi not just to learn—but to help tackle some of the islands’ toughest social and environmental issues, from reef-safe sunscreen to houselessness.

    people conducting an interviewToshimagaoka School students conducting interviews

    In July 2025, the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Pacific Asian Center for Entrepreneurship (PACE) collaborated with Very50, a Japan-based social enterprise accelerator, to bring the group of students from Toshimagaoka Girls’ School to Oʻahu. The partnership provided a cross-cultural and problem-solving learning experience for both the students from Japan, as well as students from UH.

    The week-long, rigorous PACE X Very50 collaboration encouraged students to use STEM skills to solve social and climate issues in Hawaiʻi. Three student teams tackled:

    Testing strips that indicate if sunscreens brought into Hawaiʻi are reef-safe
    A card game to encourage players to create personas to reduce prejudice around houseless individuals
    An app for individuals, such as hikers, who are interested in native and endemic species

    To develop their solutions, students interviewed residents and tourists in English to gather information and insights. After her second field day of conducting interviews, Miu Nagase said, “We were able to interview many people on topics such as homelessness and interesting things about the cultures of those we met. I noticed my growth in opening up to talking to people.”

    A UH experience
    professor teaching studentsProfessor Camille Pagniello talking about her research and the Marine Innovation Lab for Leading-edge Oceanography.

    While on campus, the visiting students worked on their projects at the Walter Dods Jr., RISE Center’s coworking and maker spaces, and were treated to a visit and demonstration of marine bioacoustic equipment at School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology Professor Camille Pagniello’s Marine Innovation Lab for Leading-edge Oceanography.

    UH students (Kai Higuchi, art; Timothy Lum, computer science; Landon Momohara, marketing; Kensho Munakata, economics; Kaitlyn Tokunaga, accounting/management information systems and Japanese) assisted by identifying and pointing the students to people and places to conduct interviews; and guiding the teams through prototyping tangible representations of their solutions. On the final day, students presented their projects with demonstrations of their proposed solutions to PACE Executive Director Sandra Fujiyama.

    group photo of peopleToshimagaoka students and Very50 mentors

    “This collaboration helped students develop an innovative problem-solving mindset,” Fujiyama said. “They brought fresh perspectives to Hawaiʻi’s challenges, and their impressive projects offer tangible steps toward meaningful local impact.”

    Ryoh Sugitani from Very50 added, “The project turned out great and I am thankful to the Toshimagaoka and UH students who participated in this project! Very50 is looking forward to working with UH again in the future.”

    businessEntrepreneurshipHawaiihawaii collegehawaii higher educationhawaii universityhouselessness education hawaiijapan hawaii cultural exchangejapanese high school stemmanoa campusmanoa collegemanoa enhancing student successmanoa universitynewspacepacific asian center for entrepreneurshipreef safe sunscreen projectriserise centersandra fujiyamashidler college of businessSTEMstem education hawaiistem social issues hawaiistudent innovation hawaiiTokyotokyo girls school uhtokyo newstokyo students hawaiitokyo students oahuuhuh manoauh manoa pace programuh manoa stem outreachuh manoa student collaborationuh rise centeruhmuniversity of hawaiiuniversity of hawaii at manoavery50 japanwalter dodswalter dods jr rise center東京東京都

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