Challenges in fostering democratic participation in Japanese education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.31.7996

Keywords:

democracy, education, diversity, relevance, Japan

Abstract

I draw on Dewey’s concept of democratically constituted society to investigate whether Japanese schools are organized in a way that students can experience democratic living, by examining diversity and interaction within schools. I also rely on Reimer’s notion of citizenship education to explore whether schools in Japan foster the competencies necessary to understand, care about, and act upon global challenges, by examining the teaching of relevance and development of sense of purpose. Based on the analyses of PISA data, I find the following characteristics of Japanese education compared to OECD countries: (1) the high school system sorts students not only by their academic achievement but simultaneously by their family background, creating the least diversified schools; (2) interaction, measured by student participation and debate in class, is low; (3) teaching relevance and application of scientific concepts in class are limited; and (4) students have a low sense of purpose at the end of compulsory education. The lack of opportunity to practice and internalize democratic values in the school, to connect what is being taught to real-world issues, and to develop one’s sense of purpose may partly explain the current youths’ political apathy and why there is little youth-led collective activism in Japan. 

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Author Biography

Yuko Nonoyama-Tarumi, Musashi University

Yuko Nonoyama-Tarumi is professor in the Sociology Department at Musashi University in Tokyo. Her research examines patterns of educational inequality. In particular, she studies disparities in academic achievement by student’s socioeconomic status, family structure, and gender in Japan. Her research also draws on international large-scale assessments and household surveys to compare educational inequality across countries.

Published

2023-09-19

How to Cite

Nonoyama-Tarumi, Y. (2023). Challenges in fostering democratic participation in Japanese education. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 31. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.31.7996

Issue

Section

Education and the Challenges of Democracy