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Takehiro Usui; Mitsuko Chikasada; Edwin Aloiau – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2024
Some people in Japanese society have been classified as 'invisible' because they could not complete their compulsory elementary school education and have failed to assimilate into mainstream society. The 2010 Japan Census identified about 1.3 people per thousand over 15 years old who had not graduated from elementary school. However, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Attainment, Educational Status Comparison, Educationally Disadvantaged
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Schomburg, Harald – European Journal of Education, 2007
Measures of professional success provided by surveys on higher education graduates can be divided into objective (e.g. income or professional position) and subjective (e.g. job satisfaction, reported use of knowledge and skills, work autonomy) indicators. In this article a broad range of measures of professional success is used to describe aspects…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Graduates, Educational Background
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Kinmonth, Earl H. – Comparative Education Review, 1986
Contrary to misinformation circulating in the United States, the United States has more engineers absolutely and relatively than does Japan; and U.S. engineers have higher relative income and status than their Japanese counterparts. Compares U.S. and Japanese enrollments in engineering education, curriculum content, engineers' earnings relative to…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Degree Requirements, Educational Status Comparison, Engineering Education
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Jones, F. L.; And Others – Social Forces, 1994
Applies loglinear models of social mobility to six surveys of Australian and Japanese men covering the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Finds similar patterns of association between social origins and social destinations in the two countries, no evidence of change over time in Japan, and only small evidence of increasing openness in Australia. (SV)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Status Comparison, Foreign Countries, Males
Yano, Masakazu – 1985
The purpose of this paper is to clarify the characteristics and current issues of the Japanese educational system by examining the relationship between income distribution and education. This relationship is not simply a one-way effect of education on income distribution, but an interaction between the two. Thus, we must consider the reverse…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Educational Mobility, Educational Opportunities, Educational Status Comparison
LeTendre, Gerald K. – 1991
Third-year students (equivalent to U.S. 9th graders, ages 14-15) in six rural and urban Japanese middle schools were given two questionnaires. Information was gathered on family background, school life, educational aspirations, sources of information about high school and high school entered. The number of students who returned one or both of the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Attainment, Educational Background, Educational Mobility
Japan Audio-Visual Education Association, Tokyo. – 1970
Intended to describe how audiovisual teaching materials and new techniques are presently used for educational purposes in Japan, this booklet first provides an outline of the current status and structure of Japanese public education. The status of other types of education outside of the public school system is also covered briefly. An overview of…
Descriptors: Audio Equipment, Audiovisual Aids, Audiovisual Instruction, Autoinstructional Aids
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Ishida, Hiroshi; And Others – American Journal of Sociology, 1995
Examines three themes about the relationship among class origin, education, and class destination in 10 industrial nations. Finds that the patterns of association between class origin and education and between education and class destination are similar across the nations. Presents implications for the study of comparative macrosociology. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context, Education Work Relationship, Educational Attainment
Wray, Harry – 1999
Continuing concern regarding the quality and future of education in both America and Japan prompts many comparisons of their nation's educational systems. Chapter 1, "Japanese Schools' Higher Achievement, Literacy, Efficiency, Discipline, Classroom Management, and Strengths of Civilization," attempts to explain the superior performance…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies, Discipline Policy