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NEW EDUCATION EXPO(NEE)positions itself as one of Japan’s largest seminars and exhibitions for education professionals, under the theme “co-creating the future of learning.” In 2026, it will have main venues in Tokyo and Osaka, with satellite venues in Sapporo, Kushiro, Sendai, Nagoya, and Fukuoka. A Public ICT Forum for administrative personnel will also be held alongside it. Overall, it is closer to an education-industry conference and trade show than a traditional structured course.
Based on the page content, NEE covers topics such as education ICT, generative AI, school administration DX, use of educational data, CBT, collaborative learning, library systems, electronic whiteboards, Google Workspace, AI-powered drill practice, and future classrooms. Formats include keynote speeches, special lectures, mini seminars, corporate exhibitions, on-site Future Classroom experiences, and open demonstration classes. The page does not show information about livestreams, recordings, or 1-on-1 teaching, so it should primarily be understood as an offline event.
The speaker lineup is one of its major strengths. The page lists participants such as the President of Sophia University, the Director-General of the Higher Education Bureau at the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, professors from the University of Tokyo, an emeritus professor from Keio University, and a vice president of Tokyo Gakugei University. School principals, education consultants, and corporate solution leads also take part. The exhibition section says there are more than 120 education-related companies, making it suitable for getting a concentrated view of Japan’s edtech and school digitalization ecosystem.
The page provides visitor registration, seminar sign-up details, registration deadlines, and first-come-first-served capacity limits for some sessions, but it does not disclose ticket prices, payment methods, or whether the event is paid. It also does not mention certificates, completion documents, or accreditation. Therefore, if evaluated as a “course ROI” product, transparency is limited; however, if the event is free or low-cost, its density of industry information may be quite high.
The advantages are its broad topic coverage, authoritative speakers, and strong offline experience: attendees can listen to talks, view products, and experience future classroom scenarios in one place. The drawbacks are that it is not a structured course and lacks a clear learning path, assignment feedback, or ongoing mentoring. Popular small-group experience sessions have limited capacity, and most of the information is oriented toward Japan’s domestic education context.
NEE is best suited to school administrators, teachers, education board personnel, education ICT procurement staff, and researchers. For Chinese users attending in Japan, it can serve as a window into Japan’s education DX landscape. The source text does not specify network access or payment conditions, so these remain unknown. If attending in person is not feasible, alternatives include following education technology exhibitions such as EDIX, BETT, and ISTE, or domestic conferences related to educational equipment and smart education.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on edu-expo.org official site.
edu-expo.org is an Japan Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach edu-expo.org directly.