Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Information on education in Japan, OECD – contains indicators and information about Japan and how it compares to other OECD and non-OECD countries; Diagram of the Japanese education system, OECD – using 1997 ISCED classification of programs and typical ages.
An elementary school class in Japan. In Japan, elementary schools (小学校, Shōgakkō) are compulsory to all children begin first grade in the April after they turn six—kindergarten is growing increasingly popular, but is not mandatory—and starting school is considered a very important event in a child's life.
Tennessee Meiji Gakuin High School, an example of a shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu. Zaigai kyōiku shisetsu (在外教育施設 'Overseas educational institution'), or in English, Japanese international school or overseas Japanese school, may refer to one of three types of institutions officially classified by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT or ...
Japan was very unified by the Tokugawa regime (1600–1867); and the Neo-Confucian academy, the Yushima Seidō in Edo was the chief educational institution of the state. Its administrative head was called Daigaku-no-kami as head of the Tokugawa training school for shogunate bureaucrats.
Boys' Hachioji Academy (became coeducational in 1947); Girls' Aoyama Gakuin Yokohama Eiwa High School (was a girls' school until 2018); Jiyu Gakuen Girls' School (Tokyo); Ono Gakuen Girls' Junior High and Senior High School (小野学園女子中学・高等学校), now Shinagawa Shouei Junior and Senior High School []
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.
Toggle Official Japanese schools (certified by Japanese Government) subsection. 4.1 Public high schools. 4.2 Private high schools.
A Review of Higher Education Reform in Modern Japan. Paul Doyon. Higher Education, Vol. 41, No. 4 (Jun., 2001), pp. 443–470. Japan's Top 30 Universities. William Currie. International Higher Education, Winter 2002 ; Engineering Tasks for the New Century: Japanese and U.S. Perspectives (1999) Office of International Affairs