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Chiben Gakuen Middle School (Campuses in Nara and Wakayama) Fukuoka Daiichi High School; Friends School; Horikoshi High School; Joshibi High School of Art and Design; Musashi Junior & Senior High School; Kaisei Academy; Yamamura Kokusai High School; Taku Senior High School; Seien Girls' High School; Kobe Ryūkoku Junior High School, High School ...
Akamon (赤門, Red gate) is a historical gate located in the Bunkyō ward of Tokyo, Japan.. One of two remaining gates of the Edo period daimyō mansions in the city (the other one is Kuromon, currently located in the Tokyo National Museum).
Immediately before and during World War II, state education was used as a propaganda tool by the Japanese fascist government. Today, virtually all elementary education takes place in public schools. Tuition to these schools is free, although families have to pay for school lunches, supplies, and non-school expenses, such as extra books or lessons.
The Shanghai Japanese School (Pudong Campus pictured) is the only nihonjin gakkō in the world that offers senior high school classes.. Some of the nihonjin gakkō in Asia have a long history, originally established as public schools in the Japan-occupied territories in Thailand, Philippines, and Taiwan.
The oldest U.S. Japanese weekend school with Japanese government sponsorship is the Washington Japanese Language School (ワシントン日本語学校, Washington Nihongo Gakkō), [20] founded in 1958 and serving the Washington, DC metropolitan area. [21]
As of 2023, around 65% of Japanese aged 25 to 34 have attained some form of tertiary education, with a significant number holding degrees in science and engineering, fields crucial to Japan’s technology-driven economy. [18] Japanese women surpass men in higher education attainment, with 59% holding university degrees compared to 52% of men.
Supplementary Japanese schools in the United States (25 P) Pages in category "Japanese international schools in the United States" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
"Japanese Childhood, Modern Childhood: The Nation-State, the School, and 19th-Century Globalization", Journal of Social History (2005) 38#4, pp 965–985 online; Saito, Hiro. "Cosmopolitan Nation-Building: The Institutional Contradiction and Politics of Postwar Japanese Education", Social Science Japan Journal, Summer 2011, Vol. 14 Issue 2, pp ...