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Education in Japan - Structure

Education in Japan - Structure: Encyclopedia II - Education in Japan - Structure

Education in Japan is a national, prefectural, and municipal responsibility. The MEXT has dozens of internal study groups that study how education should be done, and provide guidance and advice to prefectural governments based on this research. In the past, these "guidance" and "advice" have been something to be studiously observed and straying from them resulted in cuts in the budget and other difficulties. However, recent reforms have handed over more power to prefectural governments. The MEXT also checks textbooks to see that they are ne ...

See also:

Education in Japan, Education in Japan - Education in Japanese society, Education in Japan - History, Education in Japan - Primary and secondary education, Education in Japan - Structure, Education in Japan - Legal foundation, Education in Japan - The Ministry of Education, Education in Japan - Local boards of education, Education in Japan - Financing, Education in Japan - Teachers, Education in Japan - Reference

Education in Japan, Education in Japan - Education in Japanese society, Education in Japan - Financing, Education in Japan - History, Education in Japan - Legal foundation, Education in Japan - Local boards of education, Education in Japan - Primary and secondary education, Education in Japan - Reference, Education in Japan - Structure, Education in Japan - Teachers, Education in Japan - The Ministry of Education, Preschool and daycare in Japan, Elementary school in Japan, Secondary education in Japan, Juku, Higher education in Japan, List of schools in Japan, List of universities in Japan, Imperial universities, Eikaiwa, Education law of Japan, Japanese Society for History Textbook Reform, Saburo Ienaga

Education in Japan: Encyclopedia II - Education in Japan - Structure



Education in Japan - Structure

Education in Japan is a national, prefectural, and municipal responsibility. The MEXT has dozens of internal study groups that study how education should be done, and provide guidance and advice to prefectural governments based on this research. In the past, these "guidance" and "advice" have been something to be studiously observed and straying from them resulted in cuts in the budget and other difficulties. However, recent reforms have handed over more power to prefectural governments. The MEXT also checks textbooks to see that they are neutral in their points of view and include correct information that should be taught according to grade levels. One of the important points from the recent reforms is that in the past, the MEXT set the maximum of information to be included in a textbook. But today, the MEXT sets the minimum amount of information to be included in a textbook. Schools used to have textbooks and supplementary textbooks not checked by the MEXT because the textbooks contained minimal information that made teaching difficult as the textbooks lacked information that would help develop a deeper understanding of the subject.

Every prefectural government has its own Prefectural Board of Education that offers guidance, advice, and directs prefectural schools and private schools. This Prefectural Board of Education has a wide variety of responsibilities including, but not limited to, choosing textbooks to use, hiring teachers, and along with the governor, making the budget.

Both the MEXT and the prefectural government give guidance and advice to municipal governments. The municipal government also has its own Municipal Board of Education that has the same task as its prefectural counterparts.

Education in Japan - Legal foundation

The late twentieth-century Japanese education system has a strong legal foundation. Three documents in particular, the Fundamental Law of Education, the School Education Law, and the new Constitution, all adopted in 1947, provide this legal basis. The system is highly centralized, although three levels of government administration--national, prefectural, and municipal--have various responsibilities for providing, financing, and supervising educational services for the nation's more than 62,000 schools and more than 25 million students (in 1991). At the top of the system stands the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture (hereafter, the Ministry of Education, or Monbusho), which has significant responsibility for funding, curricula, textbooks, and national education standards.

Education in Japan - The Ministry of Education

More general responsibilities of the Ministry of Education are the promotion and dissemination of education, scientific knowledge, academic research, culture, and sports. The ministry is supported by advisory bodies and standing councils, such as the Central Council on Education, and by ad hoc councils, such as the National Council on Educational Reform.

The ministry's authority and responsibilities are not limited to public institutions. Most of its regulations, particularly concerning compulsory education, also apply to private institutions. The ministry has power to approve the founding of universities and supervises the national universities. In addition, it provides financial assistance and guidance to lower levels of government on educational matters and is empowered to mandate changes in local policies.

The ministry drafts its annual budget and education-related legislation and submits them to the National Diet. Monbusho administers the disbursement of funds and cooperated with other agencies concerned with education and its finance. In 1990 a main ministry activity was implementing reforms based on the reports and recommendations of the National Council on Educational Reform, whose final report was submitted to the prime minister in 1987.

Education in Japan - Local boards of education

Each of the forty-seven prefectures has a five-member board of education appointed by the governor with the consent of the prefectural assembly. The prefectural boards administer and operate public schools under their supervision, including most of the public upper-secondary schools, special schools for the handicapped, and some other public institutions in the prefecture. Prefectural boards are the teacher- licensing bodies; with the advice of municipal governments, they appoint teachers to public elementary and lower-secondary schools; they also license preschools and other schools in their municipalities and promote social education.

Municipal-level governments operate the public elementary and lower-secondary schools in their jurisdictions. Supervision is conducted by the local board of education, usually a five-member organization appointed by the mayor with the consent of the local assembly. The board also makes recommendations to the prefectures about the appointment or dismissal of teachers and adopts textbooks from the list certified by the Ministry of Education. Mayors also are charged with some responsibilities for municipal universities and budget coordination.

Education in Japan - Financing

All three levels of government--national, prefectural, and municipal--provide financial support for education. The national government is the largest source of direct funding, through the budget of the Ministry of Education, and is a significant source of indirect funding of local education through a tax rebate to local government, in a tax allocation grant. The national government bears from one-third to one-half of the cost of education in the form of teachers' salaries, school construction, the school lunch program, and vocational education and equipment.

The ministry's budget between fiscal year (FY) 1980 and FY 1988 increased a total of about 7 percent. But as a percentage of the total national budget (before the deduction of mandated expenses and debt service), the ministry's share actually declined steadily during the 1980s, from about 10 percent in 1980 to about 7.7 percent in 1989. A slight increase was seen in the early 1990s. For example, the FY 1992 budget provided 5.319 trillion Yen, or 7.9 percent of the national budget.

Education in Japan - Teachers

Teaching remains an honored profession, and teachers have high social status, stemming from the Japanese cultural legacy and public recognition of their important social responsibilities. Society expects teachers to embody the ideals they are to instill, particularly because teaching duties extend to the moral instruction and character development of children.

Formal classroom moral education, informal instruction, and even academic classes are all viewed as legitimate venues for this kind of teaching. Teachers' responsibilities to their schools and students frequently extend beyond the classroom, off school grounds and after school hours.

Teachers are well paid, and periodic improvements also are made in teachers' salaries and compensation. Starting salaries compare favorably with those of other white-collar professionals and in some cases are higher. In addition to their salaries, teachers are eligible for many types of special allowances and a bonus (paid in three installments), which amount to about five months' salary. Teachers also receive the standard health and retirement benefits available to most salaried workers.

Whether for economic reward, social status, or the desire to teach, the number of people wishing to enter teaching exceeds the number of new openings by as many as five or six applicants to every one position. Prefectural boards and other public bodies are able to select the best qualified from a large pool of applicants.

By the late 1980s, the great majority of new teachers were entering the profession with a bachelor's degree, although about 25 percent of the total teaching force at the elementary school level did not have a bachelor's degree. The program for prospective teachers at the undergraduate level included study in education as well as concentration in academic areas. Most new teachers majored in a subject other than education, and graduates of colleges of education were still in the minority. After graduation, a teacher had to pass a prefectural-level examination to be licensed by a prefectural board of education.

Changes also occurred during the 1980s in in-service training and supervision of new teachers. In-service training, particularly that conducted under the auspices of the Ministry of Education, had been questioned for many years. After considerable debate, and some opposition from the Japan Teachers Union (Nihon Kyoshokuin Kumiai-- Nikkyoso), a new system of teacher training was introduced in 1989. The new system established a one-year training program, required new teachers to work under the direction of a master teacher, and increased the required number of both in-school and out-of-school training days and the length of time new teachers were under probationary status.


Other related archives

April 1, Asuka, Buddhist, Chinese culture, Confucian, Country Studies, Edo period, Education, Education in Japan, Eikaiwa, Elementary school in Japan, Heian, Higher education in Japan, History of Education in Japan, Imperial examination, Imperial universities, Iwakura mission, Japan Teachers Union, Japan-U.S. security treaty, Japanese, Japanese Society for History Textbook Reform, Japanese society, Japanese values, Juku, Kamakura period, Library of Congress Country Studies, List of schools in Japan, List of universities in Japan, MEXT, Meiji Restoration, Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Nara, National Council on Educational Reform, National Diet, Preschool and daycare in Japan, Prussian, Saburo Ienaga, Secondary education in Japan, Teachers, Wikipedia articles in need of updating, Yen, allied occupation, bachelor's degree, board of education, budget, bushi, colleges, compulsory, conformity, cram schools, creativity, curricula, diligence, education reform, entrance examination, fiscal year, flexibility, governor, gymnasium, high school, literate, mathematics, militarism, municipal, national, new Constitution, o-yatoi gaikokujin, playground, population, prefectural, preschool, private school, public domain, public school, rangaku, samurai, secondary education, self-criticism, self-discipline, swimming pool, terakoya, textbooks, trimester, universities, weekdays



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Structure", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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