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Norihisa Miki: It's Still Too Early to Have a Dream

Publish: August 21, 2018

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  • Norihisa Miki

    Faculty of Science and Technology Professor

    Specialization / Micro/Nano Engineering and its applications in medical, healthcare, and ICT

    Norihisa Miki

    Faculty of Science and Technology Professor

    Specialization / Micro/Nano Engineering and its applications in medical, healthcare, and ICT

The duties of a university faculty member include education, research, and university administration, but I believe that supporting students is the most important and most rewarding aspect. When I was in charge of the Academic Advisory Board for the Department of Mechanical Engineering, I interviewed several students who were struggling. Although the details varied, they all had one thing in common: "I don't know what I want to do" or "I can't find a dream for the future." Everyone seemed truly pained by the pressure from society and themselves to feel that they must have a dream. To those students, I said, "It's okay not to have a dream." This is not a symptomatic sophistry intended to comfort students. It is a fact that can be easily explained.

When you ask elementary school students about their dreams, they say soccer player, baseball player, or YouTuber. Since elementary school students know few role models, these are about all they have. So, as they progress to junior high, high school, and university, how much do they actually know?

Let me look back at myself. I was born into a soy sauce brewery in Tatsuno City, Hyogo Prefecture, a place of scenic beauty. Because my grades in high school were good, I took the entrance exam for the School of Medicine but failed. I then entered the Faculty of Science and Technology through the late-stage entrance exam. My interests shifted from physics to biology, virtual reality, and robots, and I eventually earned my doctorate researching microrobots. When did I ever imagine myself becoming like this?

After that, while researching micro-engines at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, I worked part-time at a law firm, experienced 9/11, and founded an ice hockey team called "Sushis" at the MIT Japanese Association. At that time, did I ever dream that I would one day become the director of the Athletic Association Skating Team and witness the first victory in the ice hockey Waseda-ÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡ rivalry in 43 years?

I became a faculty member in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and conduct research on micro/nano small machines. Currently, I am researching artificial kidneys with a professor from Tokyo Medical University, researching brainwave music with a professor from Tokyo University of the Arts, and last year I founded a university-launched venture related to "salt reduction." Having watched my father run Kanei Soy Sauce, did I ever envision starting a business in the food industry in my future?

There are still many things I don't know and many unexpected things waiting for me. Even now, in my mid-40s, I look forward to new encounters, thinking, "It's still too early to have a dream."

*Affiliations and titles are those at the time of publication.