1 / 13

Very Young Children

Very Young Children. Some basic information: Couples traditionally do not have children within the first year of marriage When a baby is born, the mother spends the first post-birth month or two with her mother, away from her own home

stew
Télécharger la présentation

Very Young Children

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Very Young Children • Some basic information: • Couples traditionally do not have children within the first year of marriage • When a baby is born, the mother spends the first post-birth month or two with her mother, away from her own home • Two key differences in infant careIntegration vs. individuation • “soothing” vs “stimulation” • Families sleep together, children in parents’ bed, as late as age 10

  2. Japanese Preschools • Children go to preschool (hoikuen 保育園) at a rate comparable to that of US children • However, the reasons are culturally specific • Note that the Health and Welfare Ministry (Kōseishō 厚生省) is in charge of preschool administration • Government provision is made for preschool

  3. Questions for discussion • What are the salient differences between Japanese and US preschools, and what do they indicate? • How do child-child and child-teacher interaction differ? • How does Benedict’s concept of the “arc of dependency” fit with preschool education in Japan an the US?

  4. Education: Overview • A 6-3-3-4 system • School year begins in early April, ends in mid-March • Summer vacation, mid-June—late August • New Year’s: late Dec.— ca. Jan. 7 • How many school days in a year? • Usually said to be 220 Japan vs 180 US • BUT contests and festivals consume days

  5. Education: Overview II • Compulsory education to age 16 • 95%+ complete high school, compared with ~60-70% in the US • English language classes begin in 7th grade and continue through high school • Typically, no functional competence achieved • Paternalism: who is responsible for students?

  6. Elementary school (Kristof) • Learning is active • Learning by doing • Students work in groups and teach each other • Middle school: the difficult years • Academic pressure increases • The difficulties of adolescence

  7. High school: the vise closes • College entrance exam looms • Much more rote learning • Little emphasis on analytical thinking • Some schools track students by ability, some don’t • Outlets: clubs, school festival • Academically, Japanese students are ahead of their US counterparts at graduation

  8. University • Difficult to get in, easy to get out • Failing a course is nearly impossible, especially in the first two years • Academic standards are low • Universities work to match students and employers • The school’s reputation is critical

  9. Getting into university • Two routes:examination and recommendation • “examination hell” • The recommendation system (suisen):an alternate route • The “inverted funnel” system of education

  10. School after school: juku • Extra review in preparation for exams • Can start in elementary school, but usually starts in middle school • Do students resent it? • Surprisingly, no. • Another chance to see friends • Better teaching • Young, interesting teachers

  11. Teaching K-12 • High prestige • Stable, especially in public schools • Fairly competitive job market • Low to middling salaries; public schools pay better than private • 30-40% of urban high schools are private

  12. Education issues • Ijime (bullying) • The “education mama” • Classroom chaos (Takahashi) • The examination system • Suicide • Analytical thinking, English education

  13. Summary • 6-3-3-4 system, year starts in April • The pressure of the examination system • The “inverted funnel” system • Being a university student in Japan • School and work • Being a teacher in Japan • Education issues

More Related