Saturday, December 22, 2007

Gifts For Students


For many people who work as teachers, gift-giving in Japan is largely a one-way street. The students give and the teacher receives. The biggest reason for this is that the Japanese are in the habit of giving gifts as a means of building relationships and they particularly have the habit of giving gifts to people who offer services.

Further, it is also the case that each student has one teacher and each teacher has many students so it’s very impractical for the teacher to be giving gifts to students on a regular basis, at least if the teacher wants to be relatively egalitarian about it. Nonetheless, when my husband visited home last May, he spent a large amount of money on souvenir See’s Candy for the students who he saw repeatedly and who he felt a good emotional connection with. He wanted to indicate to them that he enjoyed the time he spent with them in lessons.

Since this is the season where people traditionally show their appreciation and affection, he wanted to work out a way to offer up a Christmas “gift” that would express this sentiment again to those people who he’d be encountering in mid to late December. For this, we decided to go back to doing something I used to do for my coworkers when I worked in a Japanese office. We assembled “goodie bags”.

In the past, my goodie bags were mainly a boatload of homemade baking goods including pumpkin cake, brownies, sugar cookies, and peanut butter cookies with a candy cane or maybe some peanut butter cup miniatures thrown in for good measure. Unfortunately, I don’t have the energy or time to do all that baking. Also, while I delivered my goodies on one day and distributed them to the entire office at once, he needs to string out is gifts over 2 weeks as he sometimes sees students once every few weeks. This made timing everything rather complex and made it imperative that we mainly use items that would keep without freezing or loss of freshness.

My husband bought a vast quantity of imported chocolates and I made peanut butter cookies which we packaged up in craft bags. I drew a Calvin & Hobbes Christmas scene in Adobe Illustrator and we sealed them with a commercial Christmas sticker. As individual packs, they may not really be much of a big deal but assembling so many of them has taken a lot of time, effort, and expense. Fortunately, the students’ responses have been worth it. They have been unfailingly gracious and happy with the bags of treats.

One thing which isn’t necessarily unique to Japanese culture, but is definitely more common is that people are happier with the effort you make more so than the content of the gift you give. Back home, most gifts seem to be received with higher expectations about the value of the contents than about the gesture itself. Sometimes I wonder if this relates to the fact that we have more occasions where people “expect” big gifts or gifts in larger quantities (Christmas and birthdays) and this anticipation has an effect on how gifts are viewed overall. The focus seems to be on what it is rather than why it’s given. While I’m certainly not concluding that the Japanese have no focus on what it is or that people back home never think about why it’s given, I think the heavier focus tends to be on why in Japan and what in the U.S.

3 comments:

  1. How fun! That is a great little gift, especially for co-workers. I have always been interested in the Japanese custom of gift-giving as thank yous. It seems so unique and such a pleasant thing. Perhaps I am blind or have bad perception or just stereotyping, but it seems that the Japanese people are just generally nice...at least outwardly. I think it is great that you and your hubby would do something such as this...it shows that you care. If only more people did this.

    The ladies in Accounting have give out little goodie bags to me around Valentines and Easter, and it is always fun to see what kind of candy and other treats they have for me. They say that I deserve it for all the crap they put me through. The thing is that their problems are always legitimate, unlike so many others. :)

    My company recently instituted a "Random Acts of Kindness" program, where every month a few random people around the company are given some tchotchkes and candy and such. It is great fun, totally unexpected...as to who and what they will get...and always something great like chocolate candies, low-value gift cards, pens and calendars and such.

    It really can be the little things in life that are precious and remembered.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Those sound like really cute gifts. I haven't been giving out gifts as I have about sixty students, but when I left my last school I made about the same amount of hand-made cards. Even if I say so myself, they were gorgeous and the students really appreciated them and you can imagine the time they took. I was really pleased to have done it though.

    Today I was given some beautiful flowers and an odd little assortments of things which apparently will keep me warm. I haven't quite got to the bottom of waht they do yet, but I'll let you know.

    ReplyDelete
  3. very nice. wouldn't have minded being your students. :-)

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.