Publication Type
Book Chapter
Version
submittedVersion
Publication Date
7-2020
Abstract
The Japanese education system today faces three transnationally created challenges. The first is multiculturalism. Given an increasing number of students whose parents are either migrants or naturalized citizens, the government needs to rethink the nature of public schools, which have traditionally catered to ethnic majority students, and explore how to make them culturally more inclusive. The second is cosmopolitanism. Although cosmopolitanism is regarded as a desirable disposition and competency in a globalizing world, the government has difficulty incorporating it into the education system that continues to function as a central vehicle of nation-building. The third is global isomorphism. While world university rankings have facilitated the internationalization of Japanese universities, they have also suppressed important debates on the public mission of higher education institutions at the local and national levels. How the Japanese education system will respond to these challenges is both pathdependent on its historical trajectory since the Meiji period and coterminous with how the government and citizens will redefine national identity vis-à-vis the complex reality of globalization.
Keywords
Transnational education, Japan, cosmopolitanism
Discipline
Asian Studies | Curriculum and Social Inquiry | Education
Research Areas
Humanities
Publication
Transnational education and curriculum studies: International perspectives
Editor
Z. Li & N. Gough
First Page
55
Last Page
67
ISBN
9781138480889
Publisher
Routledge
City or Country
New York
Citation
1
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://worldcat.org/isbn/9781138480889