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Connecting to Today: Planning a Trip to Japan-

Plan a trip to Japan using the links below.
Select at least five specific locations to visit in Japan, including natural wonders, historic sites, and other points of interest.
Prepare a travel itinerary. Illustrate your itinerary with a map or photographs of some of the places you will visit.
For the five specific locations in Japan, you will want to include a picture for each and a paragraph explaining the site and why you would like to visit it.

2007-01-09 04:21:29 · 1 answers · asked by cassy w 1 in Education & Reference Homework Help

1 answers

I've done a project like this before, but for a diff country. Most countries have photos galore online of tourist attractions. Search on "visit Japan" on yahoo or google, and you'll come up with tons of sites. One famous attraction is Mt. Fiji (I think it's called, or Fuji)--everyone who visits Japan goes there. That would be an example of a natural wonder. Japan also has a lot of unique wildlife, so I'm sure there are some wildlife preserves/zoos that would be of interest: there's a nearly-extinct species of baboon that lives in Japan near hot springs. Historic sites: what about Hiroshima, where an atomic bomb was dropped? You can't get much more historic than that. You might be interested in looking into Japanese cultural attractions: Buddhist temples, for example, or authentic restaurants. Search the web like you would if you were planning a trip to New York, but make it for Japan instead: countries make sure to keep sites full of enticing details, maps, and photos to attract tourists. To prepare an itinerary, just make a schedule: I'll see this attraction today, that one tomorrow, etc. This is how long I'll be there and what cities I'll stay in. Don't forget Tokyo, Japan's capital! You could probably spend your whole trip there! When I did this for my country (one in south america) I made a brochure with photos and descriptions of the places I wanted to go to and my itinerary. Depending on what your teacher wants, you might be able to use a posterboard, etc. instead, or one of those science project backboards. Don't sweat it! All of what you need can be found online--just get creative, and "get into it" like you're doing it for real. Good luck!

2007-01-09 04:38:15 · answer #1 · answered by kacey 5 · 0 0

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