The Japanese model of schooling : comparisons with the United States

Bibliographic Information

The Japanese model of schooling : comparisons with the United States

Ryoko Tsuneyoshi

(Reference books in international education, v. 27)

Routledge, 2015

  • : pbk

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Note

Inluces bibliographical references (p. 201-213) and index

"Garland reference library of social science ; v. 1472 . Reference books in international education ; v. 27"--T.p. verso on CIP

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this book, Dr. Tsuneyoshi observes the educational approach of two nations, one most often cited as being the home of rugged individualism, and the champion of the free market, the other more often cited as being the most groupist amongst the industrialized societies, known for strong central guidance. He argues that American approach individualizes assistance, is competitive, focuses on the child's cognitive sphere, differentiates its faculty, and each faculty deals with the child in a specialized sphere. Meanwhile, the Japanese approach stresses the whole child, places children and faculty in close proximity with each other for extended periods of time in a cooperative framework, levels of self-containment are higher, collective goals, tasks, and reward structures are extensively organized, and the school provides the same treatment for all. Yet, despite such differences, Dr. Tsuneyoshi points out that we can notice many parallels, both in the contexts of education, and in the direction in which the two societies are headed. Dr. Tsuneyoshi brings to light both similarities and differences, asking and attempting to answer the difficult question all educators are asking: What do we need to teach children for the 21st century?

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1. Patterns of Childrearing: Legacy and Change Chapter 2. The Basic American and Japanese Models of Schooling: A Decade of Continuation Chapter 3. The Basic Patterns at Work Chapter 4. The Emergence of the Japanese School Model Chapter 5. The Japanese Model Under Siege Chapter 6. Newcomers in the Japanese Classroom: Implications for Change Chapter 7. Beyond the School Chapter 8. Parallel Issues and Common Concerns: Japan and the United States Concluding Remarks Implications from Japanese and American Styles of Management Toward a Synthesis Notes References Appendix Index

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