Shao Feng-Li wrote:What does Akamatsu-san try to accomplish with stories such as Negima or Love Hina?
Love Hina is an example of how if you work hard enough, your dreams can come true. Keitaro is a three year ronin. He's taken entrance exams to go to Tokyo U, a VERY difficult university to get into. Everyone tells him he should give it up, but he refuses. Ultimately, his dream comes true and he gets in. Well, sorta. You have to read it to figure out what I mean by that.
The point is, by sticking to his guns and not giving up, he accomplished something NO ONE thought he could do.
Also, it's to show that there's hope for everyone. Keitaro is a complete and total geek, and the women in Hinata House think he's kind of a pervert (but he really isn't!). However, despite this...
[SPOILER]Naru manages to fall for him. Keitaro laments in the first few manga volumes that him and Naru would never be together, but that's how it ended up after all.[/SPOILER]
Negima is only three volumes long in the US, but what I can gain from the little bit I've read, the main moral seems to be that you can't judge a book by its cover. Negi is only ten years old, yet he's a teacher at a university. Everyone thought it was a joke when he first showed up, but they learned that he's actually a pretty decent teacher despite his age.