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JIS University was established in 2014 through the Legislative Act of the Government of West Bengal, viz. The JIS University Act, 2014 (West Bengal Act XXII of 2014) that came into force in February, 2015 by the JIS Group Educational Initiatives, an educational conglomerate of Eastern India with 24 years of experience.
The school, which opened on September 2, 1975 [4] in Queens, New York City, [6] was New York City's first Japanese language day school. [7] The school was established because several Japanese parents were concerned with their children's education in the U.S., and all parties at the school emphasized re-integration into the Japanese educational ...
Jakarta Intercultural School (JIS), formerly Jakarta International School, is a private, international school in Jakarta, Indonesia. It was established in 1951 for expatriate students living in Jakarta and is the largest international primary and secondary school in Indonesia. JIS has more than 2,000 students aged 3 to 18 from over 60 ...
The Japanese School of New York established a branch campus in New Jersey on April 1, 1992, with grades one through four. [5] Its original enrollment was 13, but by May 1993 it had 60 students. That month, the school employed three Americans as teachers, while Japanese people had other teaching positions. [6]
The Japanese Weekend School of New York (JWSNY; ニューヨーク補習授業校 Nyūyōku Hoshū Jugyō Kō) is a Japanese supplementary school in the New York City metropolitan area. It has its offices in New Roc City in New Rochelle, New York . [ 1 ]
The school's first principal, Aimee Horowitz, left a career as an attorney in California in the 1990s to become a school teacher in New York City. In 1999, she became assistant principal of social studies at Edward R. Murrow High School in Brooklyn before taking the job as the founding principal of CSIHSIS. [9]
Aoba-Japan International School was initially founded as Aoba International School (AIS) in 1976 by Regina M. Doi in the Meguro area of central Tokyo. Shortly after being founded, the school moved to a site adjacent to Saigoyama Park. A second campus was established near Daikanyama Station in 1979 under the name Japan International School (JIS).
InsideSchools article on proposed school, 2010; New York Times article on school closure, 2001; Times article on controversies in school redesign, March 3, 2002 (May 2003) Secondary School for Law, Journalism, and Research, "an administrative nightmare for the district," bans journalist; Secondary School for Research