Monday, December 18, 2006

Govt to freeze standard fee for national universities

The government plans to leave unchanged the annual tuition fee of 535,800 yen it sets as a standard charge for national universities until the 2009 academic year, when the period of the current midterm plan stipulated by the National University Corporation Law ends, government sources said Sunday.

By keeping the standard charge at the current level for academic year 2007, the government aims to persuade national universities not to raise their tuition fees and to lay the groundwork for them to introduce their own fee-reducing initiatives, the sources said.

The freeze on the standard charge will be formally approved when the education budget is compiled for the 2007 academic year.

It is conventional practice for national universities to raise their tuition fees every two years.

In academic year 2004, national universities transformed themselves into incorporated entities under the National University Corporation Law in return for greater independence.

National universities used to charge uniform tuition fees, but after they became incorporated entities, they were allowed to set their own tuition fees within an upper limit of 10 percent of the government-set standard charge.

However, since a rise in standard charges is linked to cuts in state subsidies, many national universities kept their tuition fees at the same level as the standard charge when it was raised for academic year 2005.

At present, 81 of the nation's 89 national universities' tuition fees are the same as the standard charge, with six charging less and two national universities' special research courses charging more than the standard charge.

Masuo Aizawa, chairman of the Japan Association of National Universities and president of Tokyo Institute of Technology, said if the standard charge was increased every two years there would be little leeway left for national universities to set their own tuition fees.

As such, the government decided to put on hold the increase in standard charges for academic year 2007, a year that should have followed the conventional practice to raise the standard charge, the sources said.

With the standard charge frozen, many national universities likely will keep their tuition fees at current levels for the time being.

Until academic year 2009, incorporated national universities will be able to run their operations with more freedom, which might lead some of them to take the initiative in raising or reducing their tuition fees.

Due to the nation's low birthrate and aging society, it has become more difficult for universities to lure students. Therefore, famous universities may raise tuition fees to improve their research facilities to attract more students, while other universities may lower their tuition fees.

When the new university system was launched in 1949, the tuition fee for national universities was a uniform 3,600 yen. It increased 10-fold to 36,000 yen in 1972.

Since then, it has continued increasing due to rising food prices and the need to narrow the tuition gap between national and private universities.
(Dec. 18, 2006)
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061218TDY02008.htm

Private university enrolls 2 men in 1st 'refugee' quota admission

Kwansei Gakuin University accepted two men from Vietnam and Myanmar as new students in undergraduate programs from April as the first cases in Japan of a "refugee quota" admission established after an agreement with the United Nations refugee agency to promote tertiary school education for refugees.

The private university, based in Nishinomiya, Hyogo Prefecture, said the two new students will be entirely waived of tuition payments and entitled to 50,000 to 80,000 yen per month in scholarship.

The man from Myanmar, 37, lives in Tokyo and works for an information technology-related company, the university said. He will enter the School of Policy Studies of the university.

The Vietnamese man, 22, who lives in Kobe, will enter the School of Economics.

The university has declined to disclose further details about the prospective students.

The university agreed with the Japan office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in May to begin admitting two refugees recommended by the UNHCR each school year.
http://asia.news.yahoo.com/061214/kyodo/d8m0ggc00.html

Famous Yoyogi Animation school applies for rehabilitation

The famous Yoyogi Animation Gakuin school has applied for financial rehabilitation, according to its president.

Yoyogi Animation Gakuin is the largest school of its kind in Japan. Yoyogi Live Animation in Tokyo's Shibuya-ku, which runs the school, applied for corporate rehabilitation under the Civil Rehabilitation Law.

"I wanted to prevent young students from being deprived of their dreams," said the president.
The company reportedly has incurred debts of some 2.3 billion yen. Of that figure, about 1 billion yen is unpaid taxes.

Officials from the company said that they would try to cut costs to reconstruct the firm's finances, while they expect that the number of students would possibly drop. (Mainichi)

December 14, 2006
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/national/news/20061214p2a00m0et019000c.html

Number of foreign students in Japan down for 1st time in 9 yrs

The number of foreign students studying in Japan decreased to 117,927 this year -- the first fall in nine years -- but the figure was still the second highest after a record 121,812 last year, a poll by the Japan Student Services Organization showed Wednesday.

By country, students from China formed the largest proportion, totaling 74,292, down 7.8 percent from a year earlier, while the number of students from Vietnam, which ranked fifth, rose 21.4 percent year-on-year to 2,119, according to the survey as of May 1.

South Korea came second with 15,974 students, up 2.4 percent, Taiwan came third with 4,211, up 1.9 percent, and Malaysia came fourth with 2,156 students, up 2.0 percent, according to the poll.

Japan's academic year starts April 1.

Of the total, 63,437 students were studying at universities, down 2.1 percent, 30,910 were attending graduate schools, up 2.1 percent, and 21,562 were studying at vocational schools, down 14.4 percent, it said.

Tokyo hosted 39,520 foreign students, by far the largest number for the nation's 47 prefectures. Osaka Prefecture had 9,986, Aichi 5,905 and Fukuoka 5,820.

The University of Tokyo was the most popular school among foreign students at universities, with 2,197 studying there, edging Waseda University which had 2,190 foreign students.
http://asia.news.yahoo.com/061213/kyodo/d8lvsml80.html

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Stipends for Chinese students

Toyota Motor Corp. held a stipend presentation ceremony at Ningxia University in China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region on Wednesday to offer assistance to students in midwestern China facing financial difficulties that stop them from entering university.

The Toyota Study Assistance Fund, which extends such assistance, will target one university in each of 20 provincial, municipal and autonomous regions in midwestern China, with stipends available for 10 first-year students a year per university, consisting of an annual amount of 5,000 yuan (about 73,000 yen) for four years.

Toyota said it plans to offer financial assistance to 1,000 university students through the fund over a five-year period to 2010--200 students per year. The entire fund is valued at 20 million yuan (about 292 million yen).

The Toyota Study Assistance Fund was established in March jointly with the Soong Ching Ling Foundation, one of China's oldest community service organizations.

It was established in May 1982 in memory of Soong Ching Ling, the late honorary president of China.
(Dec. 7, 2006)
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/business/20061207TDY08008.htm

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Japan keen to have more Indian students

New Delhi, Nov 29 (IANS) Like a lot of other countries, Japan is keen to have more Indian students for undergraduate courses in its universities, which are currently restricted only to those who know Japanese.

'We are pushing to open some of the undergraduate courses like biotechnology and neurosciences to Indian students,' said Kiyoshi Kurokawa, science adviser to Japan's prime minister. He is also a professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Tokyo.

'I have suggested that at least 20 percent of courses being offered in University of Tokyo be taught in English so that more students from India and other countries can join them,' Kurokawa told IANS.

With very few Indian students well versed in Japanese, the number of students going to Japan for higher studies is very miniscule.Given that Japan has an aging population, the adviser is keen that more Indians study there and contribute to the need for well-trained manpower.

Kurokawa, who was here to attend a conference, said he was in talks with major Indian companies like Hero Group and Infosys for possible collaboration in training programmes.Stating that Japan would like to invite several aspiring talents from Asian countries, Kurokawa stressed that the strength of his country and corporates lay in the focus on research and development.

While the Japanese government spends around three percent of the GDP on research and development activities, mega companies allocate two percent of their annual funds on research.'Research and development is a strong asset for Japan,' said Kurokawa.

Copyright Indo-Asian News Service

http://www.dailyindia.com/show/87087.php/Japan-keen-to-have-more-Indian-students

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Is Keio-Kyoritsu merger a sign of things to come?

The wave of business reorganization has enveloped even private universities. The phenomenon may be a sign of the changing circumstances surrounding universities, which have been hard pressed by the declining birthrate.

Keio University and Kyoritsu University of Pharmacy have agreed to begin formal discussions on merging. Under a merger, Keio University would set up a faculty of pharmacy in the university and a pharmacy graduate course at its graduate school in the 2008 academic year.

Kyoritsu suggested the merger plan to Keio. Kyoritsu changed the four-year course in its pharmacy faculty to a six-year course in the 2006 academic year. The number of applicants for the entrance examination this spring fell by 14 percent from the previous year.

In addition, students are required to train at hospitals for a longer period with the extension of the course by two years, meaning that Kyoritsu had to find hospitals to accept its students. It was two years ago that Kyoritsu broached the idea of a merger with Keio, which has one of the most famous university hospitals, Kyoritsu said.

A pharmacy faculty would be added to Keio, which already has a school of medicine and a faculty of nursing and medical care. With the merger, it would be possible for Keio to offer students the latest on-the-job training in team medical treatment in cooperation with doctors, pharmacists and nurses. Keio likely accepted the merger plan because it judged that it would be able to polish the brand image of the university by establishing the new faculty.

Both universities seem to have seen synergistic benefits in the tie-up.
===


Colleges must adapt or die

There have been no mergers between four-year private universities for more than 50 years. State-run universities were reorganized and integrated to strengthen their business bases and systems for education and research before they were turned into independent administrative entities in 2004. Yamanashi University merged with Yamanashi Medical College, for example, and Tokyo University of Mercantile Marine merged with Tokyo University of Fisheries. As a result, the number of national universities shrank from 100 to 87.

Private universities have been reluctant to merge because it is difficult for them to find a suitable partner in terms of academic history and culture, the standards for grading entrance examinations and site locations. Also, there are many university administrations who do not want to see the names of their universities disappear after merging.

However, they must adapt to deal with the declining birthrate. The number of entrants into universities and colleges peaked at 810,000 in 1993 and dropped to 690,000 in 2006. Nevertheless, the number of private universities has risen to 568, 30 percent up on the 1996 figure.
===


Demand to meet supply

According to the Promotion and Mutual Aid Corporation for Private Schools of Japan, 40 percent of private universities did not meet their intake quotas after the entrance exams this spring. This was shocking news because the figure rose 10 percent from the previous year.

In local areas, some private universities went bankrupt. We should avoid by all means a situation in which young people are deprived of the opportunity to study.

The current situation has also affected famous private universities in urban areas. Some have responded to the challenge of the changing times by establishing new, attractive faculties and departments. Kwansei Gakuin University and Seiwa College, both based in Nishinomiya, Hyogo Prefecture, have been holding negotiation to merge in April 2009.

For the next academic year, the number of university applicants will match the number of places available. It is possible that the merger decision by Keio and Kyoritsu will prompt the administrations of many other private universities to explore merger opportunities.
(From The Yomiuri Shimbun, Nov. 22, 2006)
(Nov. 22, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/editorial/20061122TDY04006.htm

Keio University, Kyoritsu University of Pharmacy to seek merger

Keio University and Kyoritsu University of Pharmacy, both based in Tokyo, said Monday they have agreed to begin discussions on merging in April 2008.

They plan to work out a merger contract document in March 2007 and, if the plan materializes, Keio University will set up a pharmaceutical faculty and graduate school pharmaceutical division, officials of the universities said.

The Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Ministry said there have been only two past cases of four-year-curriculum universities in Japan.

"We expect a merger to propel the levels of our research and work advantageously in the competition that private universities are facing," Keio University President Yuichiro Anzai said in a press conference.

Kyoritsu University of Pharmacy President Yoshiyuki Hashimoto said their merger would provide a better education environment for pharmaceutical students than studying in a school that has only one faculty.

Keio University currently has nine undergraduate faculties and 11 graduate departments with about 32,300 students.

Kyoritsu University of Pharmacy has only one pharmaceutical school for undergraduates and one for graduates with some 970 students.

The two universities have traditionally had links as Kyoritsu was established by a Keio graduate.
http://asia.news.yahoo.com/061120/kyodo/d8lgr9600.html

Barber schools combing nation for new students

The number of people interested in becoming barbers is on the decrease, and without an effective image strategy targeted at young people, barber training schools are finding it difficult to attract students.

While the job of beautician has been enjoying a vogue, vocational schools specializing only in training barbers are having difficulties in meeting their intake quotas, forcing some to consider closing down.

With this trend, "kao o ataru," a once common Japanese expression meaning "to shave one's face at a barber shop," is becoming obsolete. Given the harsh reality it is facing, the barbering industry has been trying hard to pass the tradition and benefits of being a barber down to the younger generation. But there are no signs of any renaissance for the industry.

Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry statistics show that the number of people taking the national exam to become beauticians between 2002 and 2006 was in the range of 39,649 to 46,367 people a year.

In contrast, the number for those taking the barber exam has been steadily decreasing and is now only one-tenth of the figure for the beautician test, standing at 4,293 in 2006, down by more than 20 percent compared to 5,547 in 2002.

In Tokyo, there are now only two vocational colleges specializing in training barbers.

One of them, Central Barbers College in Shinjuku Ward, is offering a beautician course in spring.

A decade ago, the college had nearly 300 students, now it has about 40, making it difficult for the school to survive just by teaching the barber course.

Yoshio Ibe, the head of the other academy, Tokyo Riyo Senshu College in Chiyoda Ward, said, "The beautician industry has so-called charismatic hairdressers, but we've never heard of anyone like that in the barbering industry."

"Probably the barber industry lacks an image strategy to appeal to young people," he added.
One of the victims of this lack of image is the Yamanashi Barber Training School in Kofu. With only 10 of its 40 student openings filled, the college has decided to close down next autumn, which will affect its 20 lecturers and trainers.

The academy has been redirecting applicants to Tokyo schools.

Some academies that offer both beautician and barber courses are not meeting their intake quotas for the barber course either.

Hair & Beauty Academy Yokohama in Yokohama stopped accepting applications for the barber course from the last year, while Gifu Beauty College in Gifu made the same decision two years ago.

But some schools are battling to regain lost ground.

Sakushin Hair Beauty College in Utsunomiya last month held a fashion show at its affiliated school, Sakushin Gakuin High School, inviting a barber who had won a prize for haircutting at a national competition.

The college staff member in charge of the show said, "We want young people to know that working as a barber requires technical skills, and so it's an attractive occupation that can realize a lifelong career."

Kobe Barber and Beauty College in Kobe for the past several years has been sending lecturers to high schools in Okayama, Hiroshima and other prefectures, to promote the school and tell students what it is like to work as a barber.

However, barbering schools have yet to see a marked increase in the number of applicants and are still facing a serious shortage of new students.
(Nov. 20, 2006)
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061120TDY03002.htm

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Pune schools show a yen for Japanese

PUNE: While a large number of software firms within and outside Pune are training their programmers in Japanese language, some schools in Pune have set a new precedent by introducing Japanese language courses for their students.

Apart from the traditional French and German language courses, Japanese has now acquired a prominent place among foreign languages taught by various schools in Pune. Sinhgad Springdale Residential Public School, Jnanaprabodhini Navnagar Vidyalaya (JNV) and Dr Shamrao Kalmadi School are some of the city schools that have included Japanese language courses in their curriculum.

The increasing demand for Indian professionals in Japan and projections of greater demand in the years to come is one of the primary catalysts for this development. "This is the first foreign language we have introduced," said JNV principal Suman Shenoy. "Our courses are open to students from other schools as well. We will be starting the classes in August," she added.

"We will also have an introductory session for our students between July 25 and 30 to acquaint them with the details of the course," she added. Spring Dale school Principal Priya Menon said her school had decided to introduce Japanese in its curriculum because of the "extensive job opportunities available for Indians in Japan."

The courses, focusing on the basics of the language, are offered to students from classes V to X as an extra curricular activity. "Out of the four levels that generally constitute a comprehensive course in Japanese language, we only have the first level, which is ten months long," said Spring dale teacher Joyti D Dawaldhakta who comes from Seed Infotech, a firm specialising in teaching Japanese to IT professionals.

Narendra Barhate, CEO and Director, Seed Infotech, said: "We provide Japanese teachers to a few schools in Pune like Springdale because this language has a large scope due to the emerging Indo-Japanese collaborations."

Rachna M Navale, a class X student of Spring Dale, said that the first level enabled students to learn communication skills. Both schools conduct these classes on weekends. Spring Dale offers the ten-month course free of cost while JNV charges Rs 2,000.

Dr Shamrao Kalmadi School has a Vishwa Bharti Language and Culture Centre (VBLCC) that offers coaching for students from other schools as well. "We'll start a two-month introductory course in Japanese in August. The classes will be twice a week and the course is open to all school students," said Vikram Singh Chadha, head, VBLCC. Most students are excited at the prospect of learning Japanese.

"I am planning to do higher level courses in Japanese as well," said Raj Phadtare, a Springdale student.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/74361.cms

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

National universities to open up new admissions

The upper limit on the percentage of high school students admitted to national universities based on recommendation and those enrolled through admission offices is to be extended from 30 percent to 50 percent, according to the Association of National Universities.

The new quota system will apply to students entering university from the 2008 academic year.

Some national universities, especially in the departments of technology in universities outside the major urban centers, are suffering from a decrease in the number of applicants because of the falling birthrate, prompting some members of the association to call for the upper limit on the percentage of those admitted by recommendation and through admissions offices to be raised.

The recommendation system selects candidates through their school records and interviews based on the recommendation of their high school. Admissions offices assess candidates on their motivation and personality and screen them through interviews, group discussion and other records.

The Education Ministry, now reorganized as the Education, Science and Technology Ministry, limited the proportion of university entrants on recommendation to 30 percent in public and private universities in 1995. The association followed suit in national universities the following year and maintained the same quota after 2000, when the ministry extended its proportion to 50 percent.
(Nov. 10, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061110TDY03001.htm

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Training entity held strings for trainees visas

The Tokyo-based Japan International Training Cooperation Organization (JITCO), which profits from insurance policy commissions on foreign trainees, also has collected various other commissions from small and midsize firms in need of foreign trainees to cover labor shortages.
"We can't get permission for trainee visas from immigration unless we go through JITCO," said a company official preparing to accept foreign trainees.

Trainees must have a trainee visa status based on the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Law. When the company official asked the immigration authority about how to obtain the visas, he was told to ask JITCO about it.

One of JITCO's profit-making operations is its preparation of documents for submission to the immigration authority on behalf of such firms. JITCO receives 5,500 yen to 11,000 yen in commissions per case for the procedure.

In the event a foreign trainee is hired for the three-year maximum, the firm must prepare certain documents several times, including applications to renew trainee status. The firm must pay JITCO a commission on the paperwork every time.

Of the foreign trainees that came to work in the country last year, about 56,000, or more than 60 percent, acquired trainee visas with JITCO support.

JITCO only assists in immigration paperwork for foreign trainees of its supporting member firms. Based on their capital funds, firms hoping to hire foreign trainees must pay JITCO 50,000 yen to 300,000 yen in annual membership fees.

A company president in Okayama Prefecture said, "If you want to obtain trainee visa status smoothly, the only way is to become a supporting member of JITCO and pay the commission every time it's necessary."

According to JITCO, the firm took in 1.148 billion yen in income last fiscal year from its supporting members, more than triple the amount 10 years ago.
(Nov. 8, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061108TDY03004.htm

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Universities tweak admissions process

Many public and private universities started Wednesday accepting applications for admission based on high school recommendations, but given the recent revelation that hundreds of high schools failed to provide courses required for graduation, many universities are expected to take cautious and varied approaches toward their admissions processes.

Some universities are asking high schools to carefully reexamine their recommendation reports on applicants, after it came to light recently that many high schools falsified such reports to make it appear that students had acquired credits for compulsory subjects, even though courses had not been taught.

Yet despite these revelations, some other universities expressed continued confidence in high schools.

The Education, Science and Technology Ministry, for its part, plans to ask high schools that have already submitted falsified reports to universities to draft new recommendation reports and will request that they leave blank the column for academic records for any subjects not taught.

Yamagata University's medical department has announced a policy of not admitting students whose recommendation reports are found to have been falsified--even if the students get a pass mark. The university denounced the falsification of reports as an act that has undermined trust between high schools and universities.

The department sent a letter to about 140 high schools that have in the past applied for admissions based on recommendations, asking them not to fill in academic credits for the subjects not taught to applicants.

Tottori University has announced that it intends to withdraw places offered to applicants who failed to attend any of the required courses.

Private universities are also exercising caution.

After receiving applications, Sophia University plans to send a letter to applicants' high schools to confirm whether they made false reports on students' academic records.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061102TDY01004.htm

Monday, October 30, 2006

Academia dumbing down to keep enrollments up

If comics are your thing, why not make a career of it? In Japan, you can actually major in comics at a fully accredited university. And moreover, the Department of Manga (comics) at Kyoto Seika University, Spa! (10/24) reports, has been in existence for 33 years.

"I suppose 10 to 20 of our graduates have gone on to careers as professional artists," says a spokesperson for the institution, who adds that numerous others eventually take up such diverse occupations as editors, designers of video games and animated films, and other forms of media where cartoons are used, such as in advertising and industrial arts.

But certain programs at other institutions of higher learning seem a bit less focused. For instance, the eggheads at Denen Gakuen Women's College in Hyogo Prefecture have come with courses leading to a degree in "Future Design."

"While reviewing broad themes related to humanity and culture, they can propose designs for the coming future," explained a spokesperson for the institution who oversees entrance examinations.

Denen Gakuen also offers courses in "Life Pathology Studies," which go into the details of love relationships between men and women. Another popular course is Media Systems, in which students can study -- I kid you not -- about the ways people communicate via their cell phones.

This inventive approach to learning is not entirely new. Back in 1999, Utsunomiya Kyowa University in Tochigi Prefecture set up its "Faculty of City Life," which provides instruction in "fulfillment in urban living."

"If we had put 'economics' in the course name, co-eds would probably never sign up it," explains a staff at the registrar's office. "So we had to come up with something catchier." The institution must be doing something right, as it boasts that last year 100 percent of its graduates found jobs, well above the national average.

Some of the other unique or unusual programs the Spa! article introduces (and the institution where located) include:

- Faculty of Environmental Disaster Prevention (Fuji Joyo University) - Faculty of Healthy Produce (Hamamatsu University) - Faculty of Hospitality Tourism (Meikai University) - Faculty of Wellness Tourism (Josai International University)- Faculty of Canned Food Packaging (Toyo Food Industries Junior College)

In addition to accumulating regular course credits, students at Kansai International University in Miki City, Hyogo Prefecture, can avail themselves of its "campus mileage" point system.

Students who, for example, belong to clubs, take part in volunteer activities or acquire certification in some skill earn additional points that can be exchanged for a variety of goods and services, including meals at the campus cafeteria, parking on campus, items in shops on campus and even payment toward overseas study tours.

If institutions seem to be trying harder, notes Spa! it might be because they're running scared. For the past three years, the number of students enrolling in universities and junior colleges has declined. Out of 500 private institutions in Japan, enrollment at nearly one-half -- 225 -- is at less than full capacity.

Of course the falling birth rate is one factor. Yet another, according to Reiji Ishiwatari, a journalist and author who covers advanced education, tells Spa! is that despite the decline in college-age students relative to the overall population, the number of institutions of higher learning in Japan actually grew by 172 between 1995 and 2006.

"During the past decade, many two-year junior colleges metamorphosed into four-year programs," says Ishiwatari. "Also, many local cities and towns encouraged institutions to set down roots as a strategy to attract young people or keep them closer to home.

"But now the size of the pie is shrinking, and these schools are scrambling for creative ways to boost their enrollment." "Another thing you have to realize is that the teaching of many types of job specialties, such as medical technicians, nursing, tourism, and so on that were once the exclusive preserve of vocational schools, has shifted to the universities," Ishiwatari adds. "So you are bound to encounter a lot of new and unfamiliar departments."
(By Masuo Kamiyama, contributing writer)
October 28, 2006

http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/waiwai/news/20061028p2g00m0dm014000c.html

Indian intl school to open in Yokohama

Yokohama Mayor Hiroshi Nakada signed Thursday an agreement with an Indian nonprofit organization to set up a branch of an international school run by the group.

The establishment of the Global Indian Education Foundation school in Yokohama follows the opening of its first school in Edogawa Ward, Tokyo.

The school is planned to open in spring 2008.

GIEF was established to provide the children of Indian businessmen and engineers abroad with good quality education. It has schools in five countries, including Singapore, where it operates two private schools teaching kindergarten to high school. About 2,600 students from about 30 countries--mainly India--attend the two schools.

In Kanagawa Prefecture, there are about 1,100 Indians, mainly in Yokohama.

Nakada said in a press conference, "Yokohama is making efforts to invite Indian companies, including the information technology industry. Opening an Indian international school is one effort to develop an environment that would be attract such companies." He said he had urged GIEF to come to Yokohama and was able to reach a swift agreement.

The GIEF Yokohama school hopes to have about 200 students when it opens and the city government will cooperate in selecting a site for the school.

GIEF Chairman Atul Temurnikar said at the signing ceremony, "We'd like Japanese children who are interested in an Indian education program, with the emphasis on advanced science and math classes taught in English to enter our school ."

(Oct. 28, 2006)
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061028TDY03004.htm

Chiba goes back to school to attract international business

How does one go about attracting foreign investment? It's a common preoccupation, but the Chiba prefectural government has come up with a novel solution: The prefecture's first private international school.

There's a lot riding on the new plan. For when it comes to foreign investment, Chiba Prefecture is lagging badly behind. According to the prefectural government, some 60 foreign firms had their headquarter operations within Chiba Prefecture as of fiscal 2005. In Tokyo, it was roughly 2,600 firms, and in Kanagawa Prefecture, some 300.

Officials say they hope the school, which will be located in Chiba city's Makuhari Shintoshin district, will not only increase investment from foreign companies, but also attract Japanese who are returning from overseas. This in turn, they say, will help stimulate the local economy.

Chiba is a special case. The city has been approved as a special deregulation zone for education, meaning that the school will be approved as a regular school under Article 1 of Japan's School Education Law, becoming the nation's first international school to be set up as an Article 1 school, according to the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.

The new school, to open in April 2008, will be able to accommodate an estimated 120 kindergarteners and about 290 elementary school children.

It is scheduled to be built on a roughly 10,000-square-meter plot located about 700 meters from JR Kaihin-Makuhari Station. The location is also close to the Makuhari Messe international convention facility as well as the large-scale France-based supermarket Carrefour.

Elementary school classes will have about 20 to 24 pupils per class, and lessons--with the exception of Japanese-language classes--will be conducted in English.

Previously, conventional international schools in Japan were considered "unapproved schools," because their academic curriculums do not meet the standards established by the central government.

This meant that not only were they not eligible for private school subsidies from the central government, but if a child of Japanese citizenship attended one of these elementary or junior high schools, the child's guardians would be held in violation of a law requiring children to be educated. (In Japan, only elementary and junior high school education are mandatory.)

But the new Makuhari international school will be treated just like any other.

Why a school? An official at the Chiba prefectural government's policy promotion department explains, "Foreign companies often determine the location of their offices and stores based on whether there is a good educational environment for their employees' children. We have had cases where foreign firms decided to set up office outside of Chiba because there were no international schools within the prefecture."

The international school is intended to welcome Japanese children who were raised overseas due to their parents' work obligations. By attracting families who lived overseas to live in Makuhari, the prefectural government hopes the city's population will increase, the local economy will be stimulated and the area's image improved.

The Chiba prefectural government also believes the new school will act in a similar way to draw foreign companies. And foreign companies that have the funding, technology and manpower to move overseas, the prefectural government believes, can be expected to make investments within the prefecture as well.

One example of this was the opening of Swedish furniture retailer IKEA in Funabashi, Chiba Prefecture. Not only did the company create jobs locally but it also attracted more customers to local furniture stores.

The prefectural government plans to fund the roughly 1.4 billion yen in construction and maintenance costs for the school through donations from companies and individuals.
At a September meeting to promote the school plan and discuss the rough outline of its development, the Chiba prefectural government sought the support of 18 major companies including Chiba Bank and Oriental Land Co.

A foundation set up to prepare for the school's founding is to manage the costs. Neither the Chiba municipal government nor the Chiba prefectural government plans to contribute funding.

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200610240086.html

Nagoya to open school for returnee kids

NAGOYA (Kyodo) The Nagoya Municipal Government has decided to open a public school in fiscal 2010 for students who return from abroad before entering 10th grade, officials said Monday.

It will be Japan's first public school for returnees to offer elementary and middle school curricula, according to the education ministry. It will also accept regular students, the officials said.

The idea for the school arose from the need to handle increasing numbers of children whose parents were sent abroad by Toyota Motor Corp. and other local companies that have been expanding overseas operations.

As of January, there were 725 returnees enrolled at public elementary and middle schools in Nagoya, and the number is rising, they said.

The school will introduce proficiency-based teaching in Japanese and mathematics while allowing returnees to study Japanese history and geography together with regular students. It will also provide English conversation lessons with native speakers after school.

"One of our goals is to help children acquire an international way of thinking," said Fumio Kato, a senior official of the Nagoya board of education. "We are considering introducing English classes at an early stage and would like to make a unique school."

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20061024a7.html

Nagoya to open school for returnee kids

NAGOYA (Kyodo) The Nagoya Municipal Government has decided to open a public school in fiscal 2010 for students who return from abroad before entering 10th grade, officials said Monday.

It will be Japan's first public school for returnees to offer elementary and middle school curricula, according to the education ministry. It will also accept regular students, the officials said.

The idea for the school arose from the need to handle increasing numbers of children whose parents were sent abroad by Toyota Motor Corp. and other local companies that have been expanding overseas operations.

As of January, there were 725 returnees enrolled at public elementary and middle schools in Nagoya, and the number is rising, they said.

The school will introduce proficiency-based teaching in Japanese and mathematics while allowing returnees to study Japanese history and geography together with regular students. It will also provide English conversation lessons with native speakers after school.

"One of our goals is to help children acquire an international way of thinking," said Fumio Kato, a senior official of the Nagoya board of education. "We are considering introducing English classes at an early stage and would like to make a unique school."

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20061024a7.html

Monday, October 23, 2006

First Japanese cyberspace high school gets go-ahead

Students will be able to get a high school education in the first Japanese cyberspace classroom starting in April, according to a team of educators and business consultant Kenichi Ohmae, president of Business BreakThrough (BBT).

The Chiba Prefectural Government has authorized Toyo Senior High School, a private school in Funabashi, Chiba Prefecture, to offer the Air Campus distance-learning course and issue high school diplomas.

BBT and Ichikawa Senior High School, run by Ichikawa Gakuen School Corp. and known for having a good program for students who want to go on to college, will provide the curriculum, designed to help graduates get into first-rate universities.

The private high school run by the Funabashi Gakuen school corporation will offer the program through an interactive distance-learning system developed by BBT, the group told a news conference Thursday that was attended by Shinichi Sanukiya, chairman of Funabashi Gakuen; Shigehisa Matsui, principal of Toyo Senior High School; and Masaichi Koga, chairman of Ichikawa Gakuen.

Ohmae, who is dean of the Kenichi Ohmae Graduate School at BBT University, a distance-learning school, told reporters the course can be taken anywhere, in Japan or abroad, as the students have basic IT skills, including knowing how to use e-mail. He said the tuition would be reasonable.

About 75,000 high school students drop out every year and many others refuse to go to school for a number of reasons, the school officials said. But most of them still want to graduate and go to a university.

The distance-learning course will give them the opportunity to reach that goal, they said, adding they want to bring a breath of fresh air to high school education at a time when student achievement and teaching quality is declining, and the dropout rate is increasing.

BBT will also provide video on the Internet for parents to help their kids study, as it believes parents play an important role in their children's education.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20061021a8.html

School evaluates its immersion experience

This is the 20th installment in a series on the government-designated Super English Language High School (SELHi) pilot project.

UJI, Kyoto--In a classroom in a red brick building at Ritsumeikan Uji High School in Uji, Kyoto Prefecture, 19 students were deep in discussion in late September about Shusaku Endo's novel Deep River. What was a bit unusual was that the book was an English translation of Endo's novel, and the discussion was entirely in English.

"How does Endo show you that Isobe is important?" asked teacher Timothy Chanecka, walking around the classroom and looking at students' faces. "He appears first," one student replied.

Chanecka nodded and said, "That's right, he's the first character in the book. And why is he difficult?" "Regret," another student said. "Very good, he regrets. Then what does he regret?" To this question, various voices overlapped in the classroom, saying, "He didn't care for Keiko," and "He didn't show Keiko his love."

The discussion went on about the relationship of Isobe and Keiko, a married couple who are the central figures in the novel, and about Isobe's mental development after he loses his wife. In the meantime, the students did not hesitate to say, "Tim, I have a question," which enlivened the discussion.

The third-year students who participated in Chanecka's literature class were those taking the high school's Super English Language (SEL) course, which is also called the Immersion Program, a program that literally immerses students in English. All classes except for Japanese are conducted in English and taught mainly by native English speakers.

The high school has 11 classes in a grade, with about 40 students in each class. One class for each grade takes the SEL course, while the other 10 classes take the normal course. SEL course classes for most subjects and normal-course English classes are divided in two for small-group instruction.

The high school was first designated as a SELHi in fiscal 2002, and after the completion of the three-year pilot project, it received its second designation in a row in fiscal 2005.

"What is highly regarded is the Immersion Program, although our English classes of the normal course are also credited," said teacher Kunihide Okamoto, director of SEL courses at the school.
The Immersion Program started in fiscal 2000, long before the SELHi project. Several years before the launch of the program, the high school staff began discussing a change in their education policies, eyeing the 2000 opening of Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (APU) in Beppu, Oita Prefecture. That institution is run by the same school corporation, and has become known for its large number of foreign students and the international atmosphere of its education.

The discussion concluded that more emphasis should be put on language learning and information technology, with the high school setting itself the goal of fostering students who can hold their own while studying with international students at a university like APU, or even go to universities abroad if they wish to.

The Immersion Program has two major pillars: classes conducted in English and studying for a year in an English-speaking country. A year abroad is optional, but most students choose to do it.

The effect is visible. Students who score around 350 to 400 in the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) when starting high school can exceed 600 by the time they graduate, according to the school. "Of course, TOEFL is not the only way to evaluate their ability, but it's one assessment," said Okamoto. "And we can say for sure that there are almost no mental barriers to speaking English for SEL students--they can have discussions or give presentations at a satisfactory level."

However, one problem that teachers have noticed SEL students do have is that they can speak fluent English, but lack accuracy. They have no problem communicating in English, but their weakness is evident in their writing, as they often select the wrong words or use incorrect grammar.

"This is a dilemma for us," Okamoto said. "We basically follow the Japanese standard high school curriculum, so even though the classes are given in English, they are content-focused. We can't spend time on correcting students' grammatical mistakes every time, as we have to move on in content."

Immersion is a widely known way of learning a language. But it usually starts when learners are at a younger age, around the early primary school years. At such an age, content is not as important, and the method can be easily adopted.

However, there is a virtue in starting at an older age, according to Okamoto.

Despite being immersed in English every day, Okamoto said, there is little sign that the students' Japanese ability deteriorates. Children who go through immersion language learning often have problems in their mother language, but for high school students it does not become a threat, as they had already built up their native language skills.

"Actually, it could be a benefit for them to take another look at Japanese, because, after being immersed in a foreign language, their overall language ability is improved," he said.

One student who was in Chanecka's class was a good example. Eriko Hayashi, who entered the high school from a public middle school in Osaka Prefecture and has spent a year in New Zealand, wants to major in Japanese literature at university.

"I enjoy the class very much. Everyone takes part in it and we have frank discussions, which is unthinkable at the middle school I came from," she said. "Such discussions made me feel that I want to see Japan from various aspects. That's why I want to know about Japan more."
===


Coordination between teachers


Although the Immersion Program often gets most of the attention, the English classes of the high school's normal course are also well regarded. They are part of the SELHi project as well.
Among about 50 normal-course English teachers, half of them are native English speakers, and the other half are Japanese.

For first- and second-year students, classes are mostly done in English even when the teachers are Japanese. The purpose is to get students feeling comfortable communicating in English.

One class The Daily Yomiuri visited was of first-year students, and teacher Kazunori Takeuchi spoke English throughout the class period except for several occasions when he gave translations of certain words that might be a little difficult for the students, such as "counterfeit" or "greed."

For third-year students, grammar and translation are emphasized, and Japanese is frequently used in classes, according to the school.

Just like SEL students, normal-course students get very good TOEFL scores in listening and reading but do not do very well in grammar--an unusual state of affairs for Japanese students.

Teacher Yumino Nakahara, who is in charge of English education for both courses, said, "It's very difficult to coordinate classes between Japanese and native English-speaking teachers."

Currently, Japanese teachers are responsible for "inputs"--reading and grammar--while native English-speaking teachers take care of "outputs"--writing and speaking. "But it's tough. Writing classes by native English speakers are sometimes too difficult for students, while Japanese teachers don't get the feedback on what they taught," Nakahara said.

Although Nakahara feels communicative English has been overly emphasized, she believes native English speakers are very important in language teaching. "We Japanese teachers may be as fluent in English as native English speakers, but the impression we make on students is totally different from what native English speakers can give to them. When students find themselves communicating with foreigners, it makes a great impact," she said. "We only have to find a way to leverage them in a more effective way."

Prof. Kenji Yamaoka of Ritsumeikan University, who acts as a language education adviser to the high school, said: "Ritsumeikan Uji High School students are very privileged in terms of the language learning environment. The largest challenge the school has is how to take advantage of the great environment and motivate the students."
(Oct. 19, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/language/20061019TDY14001.htm

Monday, October 16, 2006

Megabank's recruits get homework

With their schedules already filled with exams, theses and other academic activities, about 1,400 college seniors will receive yet another assignment--from Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.
The students, who will join the megabank in spring after graduation, will be asked to start studying for a qualifying exam to become a certified securities sales representative, bank sources said.

Sumitomo Mitsui plans to put more emphasis on sales of investment trusts, and qualifications as securities sales representatives are necessary for its new business strategy.

It will be the first time a major bank has asked prospective employees to begin studying for the certification exam six months before they even join the bank.

Many major banks face a serious manpower shortage caused by past downsizing efforts to deal with disposal of non-performing loans.

The work-force deficiency means there are not enough employees to train the new recruits during their first several months on the job.

Regardless of what career track the prospective employees will pursue, they will all receive training materials from Sumitomo Mitsui, beginning this month.

The materials are designed to prepare them for the Type 2 securities sales representative exam.

The bank's goal is to have all the rookie employees pass the test to be held in May, about a month after they officially join the bank.

The securities sales representative exam is not easy. Only between 60 and 70 percent of exam-takers pass the test.

Until now, the bank has encouraged only career-track employees to pass the exam in November of their first year with the bank.

Sumitomo Mitsui officials said the new education program was partly in response to requests from the college seniors.

"In the past, we passed out lists of books only to prospective employees and hoped they would read them before entering the bank," said an official in the personnel department. "But today's college students are more ambitious, and many ask us what they should study before entering the bank.

"While we believe they will be very busy working on both their senior theses and the qualification exams, we decided that it would be beneficial for us to take advantage of their eagerness."

Sumitomo Mitsui has also prepared other materials for ambitious college seniors to teach them bookkeeping and foreign languages over the Internet before they enter the bank.

The bank's 500 or so rookie employees on the career track will undergo a six-month off-the-job training program to learn the basics of banking, such as loans and foreign exchange, after joining the bank.(IHT/Asahi: October 13,2006)

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200610130144.html

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Bold proposals needed on education reform

The Education Rebuilding Council--a key organ established by the administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to promote education reform--has begun discussions.

The 17-member council is tasked with deliberating specific ways to accomplish Abe's oft-stated goal of revitalizing the state-run education system to provide all children with the opportunities to develop higher scholastic ability and proper respect for social norms. The blue-ribbon panel has said it will submit proposals reached through consensus one by one.

The new council is the first of its kind to be created under the direct control of the prime minister since the establishment of the National Commission on Educational Reform in 2000.

The latter panel was launched by then Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi and operated until his successor, Yoshiro Mori, quit in April 2001. The commission on education reform was preceded by the Provisional Council on Education, which came into being in 1984, when Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone was in office.

Abe should take the initiative in making tangible progress in revitalizing the education system.

There are concerns that proposals to be advanced by the new panel may contradict the measures implemented for similar purposes by the Education, Science and Technology Ministry and submitted by the Central Council for Education, a key advisory body to the ministry.
===
Fresh ideas needed

After receiving proposals from the Central Council for Education, the ministry has already started devising measures to require teachers to periodically renew their licenses. This is also true with another proposal issued by the council to adopt a system in which primary, middle and high schools are assessed by independent organs--not by themselves, as in the past--concerning their teaching programs and school administration. In September, the ministry started the system at 124 public schools on a trial basis.

The education ministry and the two separate panels on education reform reportedly have agreed on which roles should be fulfilled by which organ. The Education Rebuilding Council is charged with laying down an overall framework for education reform and setting basic goals.

Meanwhile, the ministry and its Central Council for Education are responsible for discussing specific ways to attain such targets. It is necessary to coordinate the opinions and proposals advanced by each organ in preventing any confusion from arising among their respective tasks.

It should be noted, however, that many members of the public hope to see the new panel come up with proposals distinct in nature from those usually submitted by government organs. We feel it may be impossible for the council to achieve its goal if it stands by the framework laid down for a similar purpose in the past. In that event, the panel would be criticized as having failed to live up to the expectations of the public.

The list of possible topics to be addressed by the council includes the adoption of a system designed to issue all families coupons called education vouchers for their children to attend schools of their choice, as well as a system in which a new semester at colleges and universities would start in September. Another topic would concern whether to require students to engage in volunteer activities.
===
Implement proposals quickly

The education voucher system could help invigorate the public education system through competition among schools in attracting children. However, critics say the system could widen the disparity in popularity among schools, even forcing some schools to shut down.

The industrial and educational circles remain cautious about starting a new semester in September. The pros and cons of introducing the system were discussed by the Provisional Council on Education and the National Commission on Educational Reform. However, the proposal has not been widely accepted by the public. This is also true with a proposal to obligate students to engage in volunteer work. During its discussion, the commission decided the proposal should not be carried out.

How to halt the decline in the scholastic ability of children will be an issue that the new panel must not fail to address. Topics related to that problem include how to increase the number of class hours to make up for a large cut in such hours made following calls for the introduction of "stress-free" education. The panel should also assess the current five-day school week at public schools.

We hope the new council's 17 members will conduct constructive discussions by closely looking at how the education system works and what teachers and students need. The government should waste no time implementing proposals to be submitted by the panel.

We also hope many people will discuss education reform, spurred by debates at the council.
(From The Yomiuri Shimbun, Oct. 12, 2006)
(Oct. 12, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/editorial/20061012TDY04005.htm

Fewer students = demographic spiral for Japan's private colleges

Yonosuke Fukuda succeeded his father as chancellor of Tohwa University, a private engineering college on Japan's Kyushu island, five years ago. He plans to close it down when the current crop of students graduates in 2009.

"There is no bright future" for Japanese universities, said Fukuda, 38, who had 140 student applications for 160 slots this year. "It's time to quit before things get even worse."

Japan's 550 private universities are running out of students as the country's birthrate declines. About 40 percent of colleges failed to meet their enrollment targets this year, and a quarter are in the red, according to the Education Ministry.

The shortage is forcing some colleges to recruit students from overseas, especially China, with its large population, proximity and linguistic similarities. Others are creating programs that appeal to the swelling ranks of retirees.

"It's a life or death situation," said Makiko Yoshimura, a credit analyst at Standard & Poor's in Tokyo, who studies college finances. "Fewer students means a cash-flow problem."

While 52 percent of Japanese 18-year-olds are attending college this year, up from 46 percent a decade ago, their numbers dropped to 1.4 million in 2005 from 2.1 million in 1992, according to the Education Ministry.

Japan's population shrank last year for the first time, with 21,266 more deaths than births.
Ten years ago, only 3.8 percent of private universities failed to enroll enough students, according to the Promotion and Mutual Aid Corporation for Private Schools.

"Japanese universities never had to compete like this," said Yasuhiko Nishii, a division manager at the corporation.

Private colleges expanded faster than their public counterparts as the population grew after World War II. Some 478 private universities served 74 percent of Japan's students in 2000, up from 105 with 52 percent of enrollment in 1950, ministry figures show.

Japan's 87 state-run universities aren't immune from student shortages, said Norihito Hisada, who tracks college finances for the ministry. Mergers have pruned their ranks from 94 two years ago, he said.

Some students may benefit from the crunch.

Many colleges are relaxing acceptance requirements, making career-defining entrance exams less stressful, said Keigo Nakano, a spokesman at the ministry's college-entrance section.

At 55, Yasuju Sato may be a poster man for change. The president of Ginseido Ltd., which rents office buildings in Tokyo, is taking a master's course tailored to seniors at Tokyo Keizai University.

Sato wasn't required to take an entrance exam and has four years to complete his degree in economics instead of two.

"It's very important to keep exercising your brain," he said.

So far, Sato is the only student in the senior program, said Katsuya Sasagawa, a university spokesman.

http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/news/150514.php

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Japan's Student Shortage Forces Colleges to Recruit in China

Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Yonosuke Fukuda succeeded his father as chancellor of Tohwa University, a private engineering college on Japan's Kyushu island, five years ago. He plans to close it down when the current crop of students graduates in 2009.

``There is no bright future'' for Japanese universities, said Fukuda, 38, who had 140 student applications for 160 slots this year. ``It's time to quit before things get even worse.''

Japan's 550 private universities are running out of students as the country's birthrate declines. About 40 percent of colleges failed to meet their enrollment targets this year and a quarter are in the red, according to the Education Ministry.

The shortage is forcing some colleges to recruit students from overseas, especially China, with its large population, proximity and linguistic similarities. Others are creating programs that appeal to the swelling ranks of retirees.

``It's a life or death situation,'' said Makiko Yoshimura, a credit analyst at Standard & Poor's in Tokyo, who studies college finances. ``Fewer students means a cash-flow problem.''

While 52 percent of Japanese 18-year-olds are attending college this year, up from 46 percent a decade ago, their numbers dropped to 1.4 million in 2005 from 2.1 million in 1992, according to the Education Ministry.

Japan's population shrank last year for the first time, with 21,266 more deaths than births.

Ten years ago, only 3.8 percent of private universities failed to enroll enough students, according to the Promotion and Mutual Aid Corporation for Private Schools.

New Competition

``Japanese universities never had to compete like this,'' said Yasuhiko Nishii, a division manager at the corporation.

Private colleges expanded faster than their public counterparts as the population grew after World War II. Some 478 private universities served 74 percent of Japan's students in 2000, up from 105 with 52 percent of enrollment in 1950, ministry figures show.

Japan's 87 state-run universities aren't immune from student shortages, said Norihito Hisada, who tracks college finances for the ministry. Mergers have pruned their ranks from 94 two years ago, he said.

Some students may benefit from the crunch. Many colleges are relaxing acceptance requirements, making career-defining entrance exams less stressful, said Keigo Nakano, a spokesman at the ministry's college-entrance section.

Many private universities will have to merge to survive, said Kazuhito Miyamoto, an administrator at Johnan Academic Preparatory Institute Inc. in Tokyo, which helps students prepare for college entrance exams.

``Old students and the foreign students may influence their revenue to a certain extent,'' Miyamoto said. ``But I doubt it will significantly contribute to their bottom line.''
Tailored to Seniors

At 55, Yasuju Sato may be a poster man for change. The president of Ginseido Ltd., which rents office buildings in Tokyo, is taking a master's course tailored to seniors at Tokyo Keizai University.

Sato wasn't required to take an entrance exam and has four years to complete his degree in economics instead of two. ``It's very important to keep exercising your brain,'' he said.
So far, Sato is the only student in the senior program, said Katsuya Sasagawa, a university spokesman.

Efforts to lure overseas students also are meeting with mixed success. Japan hosted 121,812 such students as of May 1, 2005, more than double the number in 1995, Education Ministry figures show. China accounted for 80,592 students, followed by South Korea with 15,606, Taiwan with 4,134 and Malaysia with 2,114. There were 1,646 U.S. students.

China's Growing Wealth

By comparison, 44 percent of the 572,509 overseas students in the U.S. came from China in 2003-2004, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

While growing wealth in China is allowing some parents to pay for their children's overseas education, Xu Liang and Cheng Shuai said they needed financial help to attend Waseda University in Tokyo, one of Japan's two leading private colleges.

Getting a scholarship to Waseda was easier than winning one in the U.S., said Xu, 23. The son of a police officer and a school teacher from Jiangsu province, he is pursuing a doctorate in international politics.

Cheng, whose father is a coal miner in Shanxi province, is completing undergraduate degrees in international politics at Beijing University and international relations at Waseda.

``In Japan, the prices are very, very high,'' said Cheng, 20. ``But Japanese is easier than English because of Kanji.'' Kanji script, one of three used to write Japanese characters, is derived from Chinese.

Losing the Fight

State-run University of Tokyo charges 535,800 yen ($4,545) a year for tuition, plus a one-time admission fee of 282,000 yen. Waseda's tuition is 732,000 yen and admission is 290,000 yen.

In southwestern Japan, Hagi International University is losing the fight. The private college opened in 1999 with local government backing, advertised in China for students and added an 18-hole golf course, said spokesman Ryosuke Okano.

The moves didn't work. Hagi filed for bankruptcy protection in June 2005 with 3.7 billion yen of debt, the first university to do so.

Chancellor Fukuda of Tohwa University said he doesn't regret deciding to close. The financial drain was starting to imperil his high school and junior college, both of which are profitable.

``It's a positive step,'' Fukuda said.

To contact the reporter for this story: Tak Kumakura in Tokyo at tkumakura@bloomberg.net . Last Updated: October 9, 2006 11:30 EDT

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=aWcGGhNyH190

Univ.-led ventures top target / But many lack business acumen and capital reserves

In the five years since the government proposed a plan to establish 1,000 venture firms under the initiative of universities, the actual number of such companies stands at more than 1,500.

But the business footholds these venture firms have secured is not necessarily strong, as many of them are lacking in management skills and funds.

The government's efforts to foster venture firms faces the hurdle of moving from the quantity stage to the quality stage.

Shinya Kuno, an assistant professor at Tsukuba University, is also president of Tsukuba Wellness Research, a venture firm established under the initiative of the university.

"I used my expertise to set up this firm in an effort to popularize correct health enhancement methods, not for profit," Kuno said.

The company was established in 2002 to commercialize the results of studies into muscular training, walking and other sports science matters in which Kuno is knowledgeable. He established the company to help elderly people remain healthy.

The company has contracts with 23 local governments and organizations, including the Chiba prefectural government.

It provides exercise programs that are specially tailored to accommodate the physical condition of the end users. The company has been in the black from the first year and Kuno has an initial public offering of its shares in sight.

Kuno set up a firm under the university's initiative because he wanted to avoid the trap under which the pursuit of profits would distort his health-enhancement programs.

Under the initiative of Hokkaido University, GEL-Design Inc. was established two years ago to utilize the fruits of its studies of gel, an area in which the university is on par with the best in the world.

The venture firm is enjoying a good business performance as one of its products, lunch boxes featuring an insulator made from gel, has proven popular.

President Hiroyuki Tsukeshiba, 32, studied gel when he was a student at the university and later established the company.

"Raising money is a tough job, but I am fortunate to have an excellent staff. My goal is to develop highly functional products, such as medical materials," he said.

These venture firms develop and sell products and services based on studies by universities.
In 2001, the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry launched the project to foster venture firms in expectations that start-up companies would lead to the creation of new businesses and an improvement in Japan's international competitiveness.

The ministry has offered management consultation and helped the start-up firms procure funds. The Education, Science and Technology Ministry cooperated by allowing researchers at state-run universities to work also at the venture firms.

As a result, 1,503 venture firms had been set up as of the end of March, far exceeding the initial target of 1,000 in the first three years.

The management styles of the firms are varied. In some, the managers are also the researchers, and in others the managers were invited from the private sector.

Many of the firms are in highly competitive markets. Thirty-eight percent of the firms are in the biotechnology field, such as the development of new medicines and foodstuffs, and 30 percent are in the information technology field, such as the development of computer software.

Some of the firms are engaged in unique areas to which ordinary commercial companies probably pay no attention.

For example, one venture firm set up under the auspices of Hiroshima University manufactures equipment to measure the ripeness of fruit, and another under the initiative of Takarazuka University of Arts and Design is developing electronic eyeglasses for people with visual impairments.

According to the ministries, the average annual sales of 1,141 of firms that have begun commercial business operations is estimated at 148 million yen, and the average number of employees is 12.3.

The ministries estimate that the venture firms have created an economic effect worth 364.2 billion yen, including spillover to related industries, and employ 25,858 people.

Although Tsukuba Wellness Research is a successful example, not all of the venture firms have enjoyed smooth sailing.

In August, the Creative Research Initiative "Sousei"--Hokkaido University's institute--and The Yomiuri Shimbun jointly surveyed 1,172 major venture firms created under the initiative of universities.

Of the 82 firms that responded to questions on business performance, 52 percent said they were in the red, with only 46 percent saying they had shown a profit.

The major reason for the losses was heavy investment in research and development. Many of the firms relied on public financial assistance, and 78 percent said they had used funds from public assistance schemes.

Business analysts point out it is difficult for the venture firms to secure and foster talented workers, and develop sales channels. In searching for potential clients, it is essential for the venture firms to receive assistance from other local companies and organizations for bridging industrial and academic sectors.

The Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry's Academic-Industry Cooperation Promotion Division plans to bolster such assistance saying it is important to shift priority from growing the number of venture firms to improving their performance.

Some critics say it should be examined whether the use of public assistance for this shift is proper, as relying on aid money could lead to a lack of business efforts.

Koichi Sato, Hokkaido University's designated assistant professor for the venture firm project, said, "Universities must strengthen checks over whether subsidies and financial aid could work as good booster shots."

Managers of the venture firms are also required to change their way of thinking.
In the joint survey, only 46 percent of the firms are looking to a public offering of shares, suggesting that managers want to keep their firms under their own control.

Hokkaido University Prof. Yasuyuki Hamada, an economic researcher specializing in venture investment studies, said: "Venture firms created under the initiative of universities are seen quasi-public entities because they have received public financial aid from the very early stage of research and development. The firms can not grow if managers have a sense that 'This is my company.'"
(Oct. 9, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/science/20061009TDY03003.htm

Tokyo schools facing surge in student numbers

With an increasing number of people choosing to live in central Tokyo, primary schools in the capital are expected to be filled to capacity and suffer from a shortage of classrooms, prompting many Tokyo ward governments to look for extra classrooms in preparation for the surge of students.

The number of primary school children in Tokyo's 23 wards had been declining until 2001 for 22 years and many primary schools were closed or merged. However, more and more young families have moved to central Tokyo.

Minato Ward is planning to build a prefabricated school building and will borrow classrooms from a middle school, while Arakawa Ward will build a new primary school for the first time in half a century.

The number of primary school children in the 23 wards peaked in 1958 at 855,869--the baby boomer generation born between 1947 and 1949--and the number fell steadily from that point. Many primary schools have merged or closed since the 1990s, including some that were established during the Meiji era (1868-1912).

However, the number of primary school-age children started to rise in 2002, with the increase in housing development. According to a Tokyo Metropolitan Board of Education estimate, the number of children in public primary schools in the 23 wards will hit 356,683 by 2011, an increase of almost 10,500 from the current figure. The increase will be most noticeable in the center of Tokyo, as the number in the Tama district, a suburban area outside the 23 wards, will only increase by a projected 642.

The ward that expects the largest increase is Minato Ward, with the number of children estimated to rise by 2,688 in five years, the equivalent of 67 classes. Konan Primary School is planning to build a prefabricated building with the principal's room and teachers room in the playground at its waterfront location and is planning to borrow classrooms from nearby Konan Middle School.

In Koto Ward, which also covers the waterfront area, Toyosu-Kita Primary School will open in the Toyosu redevelopment district in April. Toyosu Primary School, about 500 meters south of the new school, is full to its capacity of 17 classes, and 80 children living a few minutes' walk away from the school have to take a 10-minute bus ride to a different primary school.

Close to Toyosu-Kita Primary School, an apartment complex containing more than 6,000 units is scheduled to be built in five years.

Koto Ward restricts the construction of apartment buildings in six school districts, including that of Toyosu Primary School. However, according to the metropolitan board of education, the number of children in the ward will jump by 25.4 percent in the next five years.

The ward office has started looking at land on which to build schools, but one official pointed out that "building a school costs about 2 billion yen to 3 billion yen."

Arakawa Ward plans to open a new school in a few years, as space is scarce at Shioiri Primary School due to developments close to Minami Senju Station. It will be the first new public school in a Tokyo ward since 1959.
(Oct. 7, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20061007TDY02006.htm

Monday, October 02, 2006

Career design should be taught at universities

The ratio of new university graduates who quit their first jobs within three years was 34.7 percent in 2002.

Observers say the greatest factor behind this trend is the gap between the image students have of work and the reality they face when they actually land jobs.

How can universities reconcile this disparity?

It is common for university students to start looking for prospective employment in their third year, more than a year before graduation.

Yet, I am often surprised at how little they know about different industries, individual companies and the many types of jobs that are available in the real world.

It is common, moreover, to come across students who are unsure of where they stand, and have no idea for what kind of a job they are cut out.

Meanwhile, universities basically offer two types of educational streams: general and specialized. I do not mean to say this way of teaching is meaningless or rigid. However, as someone who landed a job with a university after many years working for an airline and its affiliated hotel, I think universities should also focus more on real society. Students need to be taught what is actually going on out there.

During the hiring "ice age" of the late 1990s after the collapse of the asset-inflated economy, universities embarked on a series of programs to help students land jobs.

For example, they sought the service of outside counselors or introduced internship programs to improve their students' subsequent employment rate.

In many ways, these efforts were as much to help students as to ensure their own survival. Universities badly need a way to stay in business, as the falling birthrate makes it increasingly difficult to attract students.

But one thing they have failed to do is not to teach, as academic subjects, employment matters of crucial importance--why working is important, and how students should go about developing a proper career.

In addition to general education and specialized studies, I believe all universities should introduce "career design"--the study of how to build a career--as the third pillar of their curriculums.

Hosei University has already established the Faculty of Lifelong Learning and Career Studies in 2003. Others should follow suit.

But what exactly should be taught in career design? I propose the following:

・The systems of real society.

Universities should give students a general overview of industrial structures and individual fields. They should offer courses studying medium and small business, general corporate structures, organizations and job flows. Active businesspeople from various fields can be brought in to keep the lectures lively and dynamic.

・Identity-building.

Universities should provide guidance to help students "discover themselves": namely, objectively identify their character, strengths and weaknesses. Students should also be taught how to draw up blueprints for their prospective careers.

・Practical training.

Currently, universities across the nation offer internship programs that last only about two weeks. The duration of these programs should be extended, and students should be required to take part in more than one program so as to acquire experience in a number of different fields.

That will give them the opportunity to see how society really operates, as well as exposing them to the harsh realities to which they will eventually have to grow accustomed.

・Support in making occupational choices.

The work of individual schools' job placement offices should be expanded in order to resolve mismatches between students and jobs.

The 21st century is shaping up to be a time of confusing, violent change. As students prepare to enter this real-world turbulence, what is needed more than anything is career design: nothing short of total human studies.

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200610020085.html

Friday, September 22, 2006

Yomiuri, McGraw-Hill to hold education seminars

Two Japanese experts on English education will present lectures in Japanese at English education seminars that The Daily Yomiuri is to cohost with the McGraw-Hill Co. in Osaka and Tokyo in October.

The two lecturers are Yuji Ushiro, an associate professor at Tsukuba University, and Shinichiro Torikai, a professor at Rikkyo University.

Ushiro, a member of an action plan committee for the Education, Science and Technology Ministry and a supervisor of the curriculums of several teacher training programs and Super English Language High Schools (SELHi), will talk on the theme of "Strategies for Communicative Reading: From Soup to Nuts." Using Reading Activator, he will demonstrate how to practice and apply various reading strategies and skills.

Torikai, who also is director of the Rikkyo Institute of English Language Education and a presenter of NHK English I, an NHK English TV program for high school students, will talk on the theme of "Innovation in the college English curriculum." He will talk about how Rikkyo University has been innovating in the English curriculum for the past 10 years and discuss some new challenges it is currently confronting.

The seminar targets teachers of English at high school to university level. It will be held at The Yomiuri Shimbun offices in Osaka on Oct. 28 and in Otemachi, Tokyo, on Oct. 29, both from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Admission is free but registration is required at mhejpn@mcgraw-hill.co.jp.
For more information, call (03) 5298-7221.
(Sep. 15, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/language/20060915TDY14005.htm

Asia/ China's bid to become an educational superpower

SUZHOU, China--They call it the "Venice in the East," but these days the city of Suzhou, located about 70 kilometers west of Shanghai, is attracting attention for a different reason: its newly established educational district.

In the "Suzhou Dushu Lake Higher Education Town," located in the outskirts of the city, stand a number of new school buildings, research facilities and libraries.

The Suzhou city government started development of the 10-square-kilometer educational district in 2002 with a budget of about 10 billion yuan (about 150 billion yen). The district has already accepted branch schools of eight prestigious public universities in China, including those in Shanghai and Xian.

Most of the new schools offer graduate and undergraduate programs with a scientific or technical focus, and have been established in cooperation with universities in Britain, Singapore or Hong Kong.

The total number of both undergraduate and graduate students in the education district has jumped from 200 in 2003 to 12,000 this summer. The figure is expected to increase further to 20,000 in the near future. A U.S journalism school and China's leading film school are also considering setting up branch schools in the academic district.

Since most students are from rich families from China's coastal areas, they can afford to pay the high annual tuition fees, which range from 10,000 to 20,000 yuan (about 150,000 to 300,000 yen).

In an industrial development zone next to the education district, 2,000 foreign companies from Europe, the United States, Japan and other countries are waiting for the time when they will be able to hire capable graduates from among the students here. According to the management office, universities in the district also hope that their research results in fields such as electronic engineering and new materials will be used to develop new products in related industries.

In Ningbo, a port town in Zhejiang province, a university has been set up jointly by Nottingham University in Britain and a local private company.

The school opened in September 2004, and uses the same system as that of Nottingham University. All lectures are given in English by teachers sent from the university in Nottingham. Students will receive the same undergraduate or graduate degrees as those the university gives in Britain.

Most of its faculties cater to the social sciences, including business administration. Despite annual tuition fees as high as 50,000 yuan (about 750,000 yen), about 1,000 students have enrolled at the new university.

Zhejiang Wanli Education Group, the Chinese company behind the Nottingham University branch, operates a variety of educational facilities, from high schools to driving schools.

Xu Yafen, 49, the company chairman, embarked on the new university because he felt, based on his own experience, the necessity of education to train business people. The son of a painter and decorator, Xu worked at a state-run factory after he graduated from senior high school.

The establishment of a number of foreign and local businesses has put Ningbo at the forefront of China's economic revival. Xu thought that an internationally-minded and highly trained work force would be a valuable asset to the economy. This belief dove-tailed nicely with the British university's plan to move into China, leading to the establishment of the university in Ningbo.

Most of the construction costs--about 550 million yuan (about 8.25 billion yen)--were covered by Xu's company, but the Zhejiang provincial government and the Ningbo city government also contributed to the project.

"Producing a Nobel laureate (from our university) is my dream," Xu said. In the meantime, the next step is to include the natural sciences.

However, despite the university construction rush, many graduates are having difficulties landing jobs.

In the Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region in inland China, one such 26-year-old graduated from a public Xinjiang Medical University in the region's capital Urumqi in summer last year.
Despite a major in preventing epidemics, the man was unable to find a job and was forced to work for free at the emergency department of a public hospital until early June this year. He chose to work for free while looking for a hospital position because he did not want to let his parents down after they had paid his expensive university tuition fees.

His family covered his living expenses, but times were hard, and sometimes he had to skip breakfast to save money. In the end, he gave up hope of landing a job at the hospital and returned to his family home close to the boarder with Kazakhstan.

Other graduates are also worried they may have no choice but to work at companies that have nothing to do with the medical field. In fact, more than 20 of the man's 36 classmates are still looking for jobs while working temporarily at pharmaceutical stores or other firms part time, he said.

According to Xinjiang Medical University, about 4,600 students are taking undergraduate courses at the university. About 1,100 people graduated from the school this summer.

The university has not revealed what percentage of its graduates succeeded in landing jobs, but it acknowledges that a significant number failed to secure jobs at medical institutions where they could gain the experience necessary to qualify for the national examination for medical practitioners.

Up until 2000, almost all graduates could be sure of finding employment. In some underdeveloped inland areas, however, hospitals have been slow to increase the intake of university graduates. In spite of that, Xinjiang Medical University, for example, expanded its quota for new students this year, taking on 60 percent more than in 2000.

Outside of medicine, graduate job shortages are even more serious.

The total number of new university graduates this summer is estimated to be 4.13 million, an increase of 20 percent on the previous year. Sixty percent of those graduates will have difficulties in finding a job, according to a government report.

Meanwhile, the cost of university tuitions imposes a heavy financial burden, especially for families in rural areas. In some areas, parents need to pay the equivalent of 35 times their annual income to enable a child to get a university education, according to local media.

The university construction boom really took off in 1998 when former Chinese president Jiang Zemin announced a university expansion policy that would give China "state-of-the-art world-leading universities."

This led to the integration and expansion of existing universities and the establishment of new ones. Currently, there are more than 50 "university towns," including the Suzhou Dushu Lake Higher Education Town.

National statistics show that the number of universities increased from 1,022 in 1998 to 1,792, including 249 private schools, in 2005.

Since 1999, universities have expanded student enrollment at an annual rate of 15 to 20 percent. In 2005, the total number of students reached 15.62 million, more than five times the corresponding figure 10 years ago.

China has become one of the world's largest "university nations," with 23 million students, including those at graduate level. The ratio of senior high school students who go on to universities has increased to 21 percent.

While the country is making efforts to encourage the advancement of human resources and developing advanced technologies, there are those who are concerned that pushing university level education may have a negative impact as well as lead to the deterioration of the quality of education as a whole.

Behind all the construction is a large amount of debt. Between 150 billion yuan and 200 billion yuan (about 2.25 trillion yen and 3 trillion yen) in bank loans have been extended to public universities in China, according to a report by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government-affiliated research institute.

Nonetheless, some universities have failed to keep up with the rapid increase of students due to shortages of staff and research facilities. As a result, educational quality has declined.

Not only that, but should some universities fail to repay their loans, the report warns, it could result in financial crisis.

It's a warning that central government is taking seriously. At a State Council meeting in May, Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao called on ministers to tackle the education issue, with an emphasis on the problem of graduate unemployment.

Yang Dongping, 56, a professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology, explains that in the late 1990s, after the Asian currency crisis, university construction became a major means for economic growth in some parts of the country.

"Our university systems need to improve in terms of (education) quality rather than size," said Yang, an expert on higher education.

"Also universities are not accessories of the government. They should be independent from it," he added.

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200609130121.html

Emergency info service system for Japanese launched in N.Y.

The Japanese Foreign Ministry on Friday started operating a new information service system, which enables Japanese residents and travelers in North America to leave their messages so that their families and friends will be able to confirm their safety in an emergency.

"The number of Japanese who reside overseas is growing steadily," the consul general in New York, Motoatsu Sakurai, said at a news conference.

Currently, more than 1 million Japanese live outside of Japan. Of them, 40 percent, or 400,000 people, are in North America. In addition, more than 3 million Japanese visit North America every year.

Therefore, the Foreign Ministry first launched this system here, Sakurai said.
In a state of emergency, phone calls cannot easily be connected.

Sakurai said the newly introduced system uses more than 200 phone lines of three long-distance telephone companies' networks in order to secure better connection.

The system, which cost $290,000, turns on only in case of emergency.

http://asia.news.yahoo.com/060908/kyodo/d8k0vh782.html

Monday, September 04, 2006

University to launch student-run TV channel

Shinshu University in Matsumoto, Nagano Prefecture, will use a cable television channel to broadcast public lecture schedules and information on its affiliated hospital every day starting Oct. 1.

The project is the first of its kind among the country's universities, according to the Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry.

The project aims to offer the latest information on the university, especially for the elderly, who rarely use the Internet.

The channel, allocated to the university by TV Matsumoto, a cable television station, is named SUTV, which stands for Shinshu University Television.

About 40 graduate and undergraduate students from the university's information-engineering and arts faculties will plan and produce all broadcast programs.

"I hope students can learn to contribute to the surrounding communities with this project," Atsushi Komiyama, president of the university, said.

The state-run university has earmarked 1.8 million yen from its annual budget for the project, in addition to 7 million yen spent on editing equipment.

It was presented with two TV cameras, worth 800,000 yen, by TV Matsumoto on Aug. 24.
SUTV will be on air between 10 a.m. and 11 p.m. daily except Sundays, when it goes off air at 10 p.m.

The students are planning a special program, provisionally called "a student's diary," which will focus on everyday campus affairs through the eyes of a fictitious student.

They are also considering producing a documentary that will highlight the association between handicapped children and volunteers.

SUTV is targeting 700,000 households in Matsumoto and five adjacent municipalities.

However, viewers will need a digital TV tuner priced at 5,250 yen. In the area, about 4,500 households currently have the tuner.
(Sep. 4, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20060904TDY10003.htm

National universities scrambling to earn a crust

National universities, which became financially independent administrative corporations in 2004, are making desperate efforts to turn a profit.

Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, which owns many training ships, including four ships with a displacement of more than 100 tons, said fuel costs for the ships totaled 125 million yen in fiscal 2005, up 25 million yen from the previous year, despite efforts to save expenditures.

After it became an independent administrative corporation, the Koto Ward, Tokyo-based university began to allow filmmakers and TV stations to shoot pictures on its campus with the aim of covering some of those expenses.

The campus, which is home to some historical buildings, was used in the recent movie "Hachimitsu to Kuroba" (Honey and Clover) and the TV drama "Nobuta o Purodyusu" (Producing a Wild Pig). The university earned 3 million yen from 19 movie shoots carried out in fiscal 2005.

"We truly welcome these perquisites," a university official said.

Since they became independent administrative agencies in April 2004, national universities, whose profits were formerly supposed to go directly into the government's coffers, are now able to decide how to use the profit for the benefit of their students and for research. On the other hand, they are required to manage themselves more efficiently as government subsidies have been reduced year by year after their institutionalization.

Many other universities develop original products to earn profit and advertise themselves.
Mie University has started to rear expensive brand cattle named Matsusaka-ushi and popularly called Matsusaka-gyu, at its own farm. Officials of the university visited farmers raising Matsusaka-ushi to learn how to rear the cattle. They also visited Kobe University, which sells Kobe-dai (Kobe University) beef.

They provided each cow with a stall and fed them with originally processed straw. Some of the cows will be put on the market this winter.

"We can expect more profit when our beef's value is enhanced with the Matsusaka-ushi brand," an official said. "We'd like to compete with Kobe University."

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology in January set up a pilot shop in the campus, where vegetables and fruit harvested in the university's farm and jam made from these products are sold to local residents once a week. The shop is so popular that people queue in front of it before it opens at noon. Last year, the shop's profit increased by 1.2 million yen in fiscal 2005 from the previous year.

Many universities have also implemented belt-tightening measures.

Kyoto University asks its students to close the lid of the toilets equipped with heating functions to prevent the heat from escaping.

In the university's bathrooms, there are stickers that read, "You can save electricity if you close the lid" and "You can save 800 yen per toilet a year."

Shiga University of Medical Science in July last year installed a water-saving device in almost all the 2,800 faucets in its buildings.

"A penny saved is a penny earned," an official said.

About 30 employees at Utsunomiya University repaired in March an old auditorium built during the Taisho era (1912-1926), spending two days on the job. They saved about 2 million yen by doing the repair work, a task that formerly was commissioned to private firms.

"We learned that we can save a substantial amount of money with the help of the employees," the director of the finance division of the university said.
(Sep. 3, 2006)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20060903TDY01005.htm