Jump to content

英文维基 | 中文维基 | 日文维基 | 草榴社区

Japanese School in London

Coordinates: 51°30′49″N 0°16′51″W / 51.5136°N 0.2807°W / 51.5136; -0.2807
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Japanese School of London)

The Japanese School of London
ロンドン日本人学校
Address
Map
87 Creffield Road, Acton

,
W3 9PU

Coordinates51°30′49″N 0°16′51″W / 51.5136°N 0.2807°W / 51.5136; -0.2807
Information
Department for Education URN101958 Tables
OfstedReports
Websitewww.thejapaneseschool.ltd.uk/nihonjingakko/

The Japanese School in London (ロンドン日本人学校, Rondon Nihonjin Gakkō) is a Japanese international school in Acton, London Borough of Ealing.[1] The school is incorporated as The Japanese School Limited (日本人学校有限会社, Nihonjin Gakkō Yūgen Kaisha). The Japanese Saturday School in London (ロンドン補習授業校, Rondon Hoshū Jugyō Kō), a Japanese supplementary school, is a part of the institution.

Junko Sakai (酒井 順子 Sakai Junko),[2] author of Japanese Bankers in the City of London: Language, Culture and Identity in the Japanese Diaspora, described the school as one of the "geographical centres" of London's Japanese community.[3]

In 1999 the Saturday school programme had three divisions: elementary school for ages 6–12, junior high school for ages 13–15, and senior high school, equivalent to the English sixth-form.[4] The Saturday school uses three campuses: the Acton Campus (アクトン校舎 Akuton Kōsha), which uses the Japanese School in London building; the Brent Campus (ブレント校舎 Burento Kōsha), which uses the Whitefield School; and the Croydon Campus (クロイドン校舎 Kuroidon Kōsha), which uses the Croydon School for Girls.[5]

As of 2021 the head teacher of the day school is Hideki Ishiyama (石山 秀樹, Ishiyama Hideki).[6][7]

History

[edit]
The current campus previously housed the Haberdashers' Aske's School for Girls.

The school, operated by the Japanese Ministry of Education, was established with the financial involvement of Japanese companies.[8] It first opened as a supplementary school, with four teachers and 20 students, in the Convent of Our Lady Sion in September 1965. It was upgraded to an official supplementary school in 1974 when the Japanese Ministry of Education sent its first teacher; it had done so due to an increase in the student body. The day school was established on 18 June 1976. The Japanese Ministry of Education had sent Katsuya Tanaka, the first headmaster, to London the previous April.[9]

In October 1976 the school had 79 students, with 54 in primary school and 25 in junior high school. That month it moved to several buildings on the property of the Japan Club and the Japan Embassy Information Service Centre. In April 1977 the school moved to a new location,[9] the current North Bridge House School in Camden,[10] In April 1987,[9] it moved to West Acton,[3] in a site formerly held by a British educational system school,[8] the Haberdashers' Aske's School for Girls.[11] At the time of the move, the Japanese community had a position of relative expansion.[8]

In 1987 the day school had 657 students.[12]

In 1988 the company Wilmott Dixon Western did a renovation on the school facility, adding two rooms for science classes and seven other classrooms, with work scheduled to be done by May 1989. The cost was £725,000.[13]

In 1991 the school had 980 students.[12]

In 1999 the Saturday school had 1,602 students and 82 teachers at three sites, making made it the largest of the eight Japanese Saturday schools in the United Kingdom. At the time the Saturday school had three sites: Acton, Camden, and Croydon.[4]

It was a site of filming for the 2009 film An Education.[11]

Academic standards

[edit]

The 2014 Ofsted report graded the day school as 'a school that requires improvement', down from "good" in 2011. While the behaviour and safety of pupils was rated as 'good', leadership and management, quality of teaching and achievement of pupils were all cited as requiring improvement. A standard inspection in 2017 also found that the school required improvement, and in 2018 it was found inadequate. There were additional inspections—with no reported grade—in 2018 and 2019. As of June 2021 the last inspection was an additional one on 4 June 2019.[7]

Student demographics

[edit]

In 2001 the day school had 583 students.[8] In 2012 most Japanese living in London sent their children to either the Japanese school or to local schools.[3] In 2003 Paul White, author of "The Japanese in London: From transience to settlement?", wrote that "even company movers do not necessarily put their children through the Japanese schooling system in London" and several British and international schools in London cater to Japanese students.[8]

Saturday school demographics

[edit]

In 1999 the Saturday school had 1,602 students, including 1,152 students in 48 elementary school classes, 258 students in 12 junior high school classes, and 93 senior high school students in four classes. That year, the average Saturday school class sizes were 24 pupils per class in elementary school, 21.5 pupils per class in junior high school, and 23.25 pupils per class in the senior high school. In 1999 within the Saturday school there were 98 children of mixed British and Japanese heritage who came from mostly Anglophone homes. The Saturday school provided "basic" classes for these pupils, with those students divided into five classes.[4]

Teachers

[edit]

In 1991 teachers of the day school were sent by the Ministry of Education of Japan for secondments (terms of temporary transfer) of three years.[12]

In 1999 the Saturday school had 82 teachers,[4] the majority of whom were women.[14] In regards to the Saturday school the head teacher and senior teachers originate from Japan while the school recruited other teachers locally,[4] including postgraduate students studying in the United Kingdom and housewives.[14]

Curriculum

[edit]

The Saturday school uses approved textbooks from the Japanese Ministry of Education.[14]

Transport

[edit]

The school has a system of buses that picks up and drops off Japanese students living in various areas in London.[8]

Funding

[edit]

The school is primarily funded by tuition fees, though it also receives a subsidy from the Japanese Ministry of Education and donations from Japanese companies. The school, like other British independent schools, has a charitable status.[14]

See also

[edit]

British international schools in Japan:

Japanese senior high school programs in England:

References

[edit]
  • Aizawa, Kazue. "The Japanese Saturday School." In: Yamada-Yamamoto, Asako and Brian J. Richards. Japanese Children Abroad: Cultural, Educational, and Language Issues (Issue 15 of Bilingual education and bilingualism). Multilingual Matters, 1999. ISBN 1853594253, 9781853594250.
  • Sakai, Junko. Japanese Bankers in the City of London: Language, Culture and Identity in the Japanese Diaspora (Routledge Studies in Memory and Narrative). Routledge, October 12, 2012. ISBN 1134645082, 9781134645084.
  • White, Paul. "The Japanese in London: From transience to settlement?" In: Goodman, Roger, Ceri Peach, Ayumi Takenaka, and Paul White (editors). Global Japan: The Experience of Japan's New Immigrant and Overseas Communities. Routledge, 2003. ISBN 0203986784, 9780203986783.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Home Archived 2014-01-02 at the Wayback Machine." Japanese School in London. Retrieved on 1 January 2014. "所在地:87 CREFFIELD ROAD, ACTON, LONDON, W3 9PU, U.K."
  2. ^ "教員一覧" (Archive). Ferris University. Retrieved on 11 May 2015. "酒井順子 イギリス社会史"
  3. ^ a b c Sakai, Page unstated (PT 67). "Although the Japanese have no precise geographical location for their community, they are connected with each other personally, and one of their geographical centres is the Japanese school in London, previously in North London and now in West Acton."
  4. ^ a b c d e Aizawa, p. 27.
  5. ^ "<学校紹介>" (Archive). The Japanese Saturday School of London. Retrieved on April 5, 2015. - See "9.校舎 "
  6. ^ "学校概要". Japanese School in London. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  7. ^ a b "The Japanese School". Ofsted. Retrieved 6 July 2021. List of, and links to, inspection reports since 2008.
  8. ^ a b c d e f White, p. 89.
  9. ^ a b c "School Outline" (). Japanese School in London. June 24, 2001. Retrieved on April 24, 2016.
  10. ^ "Which School?" Truman & Knightley Educational Trust, 1989. p. D-66 (See search page). "THE JAPANESE SCHOOL I Gloucester Avenue, London, NWI Tel (01) 485 0700 Head H Fujino Type Co-educational Day 9-14 No of pupils 536 Fees On application NORTH BRIDGE HOUSE JUNIOR SCHOOL I Gloucester Avenue, London,"
  11. ^ a b Barber, Lynn (7 June 2009). "Educating Lynn: take one". The Observer. London. Archived from the original on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2009. () "Amanda asked if I'd like to watch some of the filming, and said I should come to the Japanese School, Acton, to watch one of the classroom scenes." and "But no - the Japanese school was there and in fact turned out to be the old Haberdashers' Aske's girls' school which we used to play at lacrosse."
  12. ^ a b c "Britain: Japanese Spoken Here." The Economist. 14 September 1991. Volume 320, Issue 7724, p. 67. ISSN 0013-0613. CODEN ECSTA3. Accession number 00541106, 00898348. Available on ProQuest, Document ID 224204538. "The best known is the Japanese School in Acton, West London. It caters for 980 pupils--up from 657 in 1987--and is staffed by Japanese teachers on three-year secondments from the Ministry of Education in Tokyo."
  13. ^ "Rising soon". Pinner Observer. Harrow, London. 15 December 1988. p. In Business IX – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ a b c d Aizawa, p. 28.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]