A Brief History

In 2025, JALT will celebrate its 50th anniversary (and our 51st conference!). Here is a brief history of an organization that began when a group of teachers got together to exchange ideas and has since become one of Japan's largest and most effective associations for professional development in language education.

The idea for an association of language teachers started at a language conference at The Language Institute of Japan in Odawara in 1975 when a group of teachers got together to discuss teaching methodologies. The kernel of an idea was formed.

Tom Pendergast became the first president of JALT when the organization started in 1976 as a group of about 50 teachers in the Kansai Region, originally called the Kansai Association of Language Teachers (KALT). Over the next two years, many more members joined and what started as a collective of teachers crystallized into an organization with a solid structure, purpose, and goals.

Other founding members, David Bycina and Doug Tomlinson, set up a second group called the Kanto Association of Language Teachers (also called KALT) in Tokyo in 1976. Around the same time, Charles Adamson started the Tokai Association of Language Teachers (TALT) in Nagoya. In 1977, leaders from all three groups got together to plan a national annual conference and form a constitution with bylaws establishing JALT as a volunteer, nonprofit organization consisting of three chapters. JALT also became a TESOL affiliate at the same time. Because so much work had gone into the planning and groundwork, the organization recognized 1975 as its founding year. In 1978 the Chugoku Chapter (Hiroshima) was started by Marie Tsuruda, a member of KALT since 1975. At this time there were about 1,000 members in the organization nationwide. The Nishinippon (Fukuoka) and Shikoku Chapters also began in 1978, followed by:

  • Tohoku (Sendai) and Hokkaido in 1979
  • Kyoto and Okinawa in 1980
  • Nagasaki and Aomori in 1981
  • Hamamatsu, Kobe, and Okayama in 1983; Matsuyama and Yokohama in 1984
  • Chiba, Shizuoka, Tokushima, and Yamagata in 1985
  • Ibaraki, Omiya, and Gunma in 1986
  • Niigata, Kanazawa, Fukui, Nagano, Toyohashi, Suwa, and West Tokyo in 1987
  • Kagoshima in 1988
  • Himeji, Iwate, Nara, and Tochigi in 1989
  • Yamaguchi in 1990
  • Akita in 1992
  • Fukushima in 1994
  • Kitakyushu, Kochi, and East Hokkaido in 1995
  • Miyazaki and Kumamoto in 1996
  • Gifu in 1999
  • East Shikoku in 2005
  • Wakayama in 2006
  • Oita in 2009
  • Tottori in 2014

Over the years, some chapters have dissolved and their members have been added to the rolls of surrounding chapters; some have split up (members from Fukuoka Chapter formed Kitakyushu Chapter in 1996); others have changed their names (Suwa and Nagano combined to become Shinshu in 1998 and later reverted to Nagano; Omiya became Saitama in 2014); still others have combined into regional groups (Kagoshima and Miyazaki became Nankyu in 2014 and Nagasaki joined in 2015). (See the current list of JALT chapters.)

Starting in 1979, major revisions were made as JALT realized its potential for growth and the opening of new chapters in other areas. The JALT Newsletter became a monthly publication, edited by David Bycina. The JALT Journal started as a semiannual refereed research-oriented publication, with Nancy Nakanishi as its first editor. It was also around this time a prominent Japanese educator suggested that JALT be for foreigners and that the Japanese set up their own organization. (The suggestion was based on the idea that communication would be easier if there were two organizations, one working in English and the other working in Japanese, working together instead of one.) JALT decided to continue its policy that the organization was open to all teachers, professionals, and students interested in language education no matter what their nationality, where they were teaching, working, or studying, or what language they were teaching.

In 1979, JALT became an affiliate of IATEFL and developed affiliations with TESOL in the US and other ESL organizations in Asia. We now have international partnerships with the following organizations:

  • Thailand TESOL
  • The English Teachers Association of the Republic of China (ETA-ROC)
  • The Philippines Association of Language Teachers (PALT)
  • Korea TESOL
  • The Far Eastern English Language Teachers Association (FEELTA)
  • Cambodia TESOL
  • Linguapax Asia
  • Malaysian English Language Teaching Association (MELTA)
  • the Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language in Indonesia (TEFLIN)
  • the Bangladesh English Language Teachers Association (BELTA)
  • and the Nepal English Language Teachers Association (NELTA).

Domestically, JALT is a board member of UALS (the United Association of Language Studies), and has partnerships with JACET (The Japan Association of College English Teachers), AJET (The Association for Japan Exchange and Teaching), and JASAL (The Japan Association for Self-Access Learning). In 1983, The JALT Newsletter appointed a Japanese editor, Kenji Kitao, which led to an increase in articles in Japanese. In 1984 The JALT Newsletter changed its name to The Language Teacher, but still remained a monthly publication. Of all major language teaching organizations such as TESOL and IATEFL, JALT was the only organization that produced a monthly publication as well as the annual Conference Handbook and PostConference Publication and the semiannual JALT Journal. In 2009, the growing popularity of web publishing convinced the Publications Board that The Language Teacher would work better as a bimonthly publication with faster updates on our website at jalt.org

Over the years, Japanese involvement in JALT grew and the Kyoto conference in 1985 marked the first time a Japanese member, Kazuo Yoshida, co-chaired JALT's annual international conference. In 1989, JALT held its first annual conference outside of the Kanto, Kansai, and Tokai regions. The conference was held at Notre Dame Seishin University in Okayama. By this time, conference banquets and One-Can Drink parties had become social highlights of the conference. In recent years, the conference venue has rotated mainly between Shizuoka, Tsukuba, and Nagoya, though in the past, we've held the conference in a variety of locations (see the list here: https://jalt.org/main/conference). In November 2020, we had planned to hold it at Tsukuba, but due to the Coronavirus, we held our conference online for the first time. JALT2021 was planned to be a return to the Granship in Shizuoka, but that, too, became an online conference due to the Coronavirus. JALT2022 was our return to in-person conferences, our first time in Fukuoka City and our third time in Fukuoka Prefecture.

In 1988, JALT started an Asian Scholar Program through which teachers from other Asian countries are hosted in Japan, meet with teachers here, and give presentations at the annual international conference as well as at local chapters all over Japan on the Four Corners Tour program. In 2008 the program was renamed the Balsamo Asian Scholar Program in honor of Bill Balsamo, president of the Himeji Chapter and founder of the Teachers Helping Teachers SIG. Over the years, teachers from many countries have visited Japan on this program, including four teachers from China; four from Vietnam; three from the Philippines; two each from Cambodia, Laos, India, and Malaysia; and one each from Russia, Pakistan, Indonesia, South Korea, Bangladesh, and Thailand.

The 90s brought more changes to JALT. An office supervisor, Junko Fujio, was hired in 1992 and JALT's Central Office was set up in Tokyo. At one point, the monetary reserves for the organization totaled more than 44 million yen. With the bursting of the bubble economy, JALT faced financial hardships like everyone else. Problems included:

  • publication costs had increased
  • the annual conference had become so large that it now needed to be held at a more expensive commercial site
  • textbook companies merged
  • fewer advertisements were sold.

Complicated by inadequate accounting procedures and many teachers losing their jobs, which meant they left the country, JALT used most of its reserve funds and faced a serious financial crisis. The National Treasurer, with the help of the financial steering committee, brought expenses under control. As JALT entered the new millennium, it promised to have a balanced budget and to start operating in the black again. JALT changed the system of its finances in 2001 by asking an outside accounting firm to support the financial operations of JALT in order to reduce the burden on the Director of Treasury.

National Special Interest Groups (N-SIGs) started forming in 1990 with the first two being Bilingualism and Video N-SIG. Other SIGs quickly began to form, covering a wide range of areas from Japanese as a Second Language to Testing and Evaluation. Over the years, as interests have changed and developed, some SIGs have dissolved and others have combined. See this page for a full list of current SIGs. The SIGs started holding an annual PanSIG Conference in the spring of 2002, each year in a different city and co-hosted by a different chapter (though in recent years, the extent to which the local chapter is involved or not has been a local decision). The PanSIG Conference produces another major publication each year, now called the PanSIG Journal.

JALT has led the way in developing the Pan Asian Consortium (PAC) Conferences, which started in 1997 in Bangkok, Thailand, and have since continued in a diverse range of locations throughout the Asia region, including Cebu, Kitakyushu, Manila, Seoul, Taipei, Tokyo and Vladivostok.

JALT was granted NPO status in 1999 and has since then been a nonprofit organization registered with the Tokyo Metropolitan Government under the NPO Law passed in 1998, a law specifically designed to encourage the development of public interest groups. Under its NPO Constitution and Bylaws, JALT holds one Ordinary General Meeting and three Executive Board Meetings each year. In 2013, the Executive Board approved a JALT mission statement to guide JALT in future planning and development: JALT promotes excellence in language learning, teaching, and research by providing opportunities for those involved in language education to meet, share, and collaborate.

全国語学教育学会は言語教育関係者が交流・共有・協働する機会を提供し、言語学習、教育、及び調査研究の発展に寄与します。

In 2014, the Kevin Cleary Invited Speaker program was begun in memory of a beloved JALT President, to bring another excellent scholar to address JALT members at the conference. Recipients of this award are

  • 2014: Ma. Milagros Laurel
  • 2015: Ken Urano
  • 2016: Debbie West
  • 2017: Fumiko Murase
  • 2018: Mehrasa Alizadeh
  • 2020: Heather McCulloch (JALT Gunma Chapter President),
  • 2021: Lyndell Nagashima, (JALT Study Abroad SIG Coordinator)
  • 2022: Jo Mynard (Kanda University of International Studies)
  • 2023: Melodie Cook (University of Niigata Prefecture)
  • 2024: Robert Chartrand (Kurume University)

What does the future hold for JALT? The organization is looking for ways to better serve our members and the wider community of language teaching professionals. JALT is also trying to improve our international ties with other Asian countries through the Pan Asia Conferences and exchange programs, and to improve our ties with domestic organizations through partnerships and UALS. Most importantly, JALT is committed to fulfilling our mission by serving our members, partners, and the wider community for years to come.