Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies

Japan's educational system has undergone a series of reforms over the past decade or so. Through these reforms, the ruling party has strengthened the involvement of the government and local authorities in education. At the same time, there has been a growing tendency for teachers to avoid taki...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hiroyuki Yumoto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2017-02-01
Series:International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=fb973cff-c998-4d02-a530-d5640d33dcf3
id doaj-b2aa46be2d5744768f1f2730b015ff24
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b2aa46be2d5744768f1f2730b015ff242020-12-16T09:46:34ZengUCL PressInternational Journal of Development Education and Global Learning1756-52782017-02-0110.18546/IJDEGL.8.3.04Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policiesHiroyuki YumotoJapan's educational system has undergone a series of reforms over the past decade or so. Through these reforms, the ruling party has strengthened the involvement of the government and local authorities in education. At the same time, there has been a growing tendency for teachers to avoid taking up political issues in classrooms, in order to comply with the idea of political neutrality in education. This article attempts to extract the present-day meaning of development education and its implications for citizenship education by critically examining certain aspects of recent Japanese educational policy. Specifically, while pointing out that government-directed citizenship education has become increasingly 'patriotic', the article reaffirms that development education is a kind of political education. Finally, the article argues that development education should be expanded to democratic citizenship education to nurture active citizens with global perspectives.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=fb973cff-c998-4d02-a530-d5640d33dcf3
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hiroyuki Yumoto
spellingShingle Hiroyuki Yumoto
Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies
International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning
author_facet Hiroyuki Yumoto
author_sort Hiroyuki Yumoto
title Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies
title_short Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies
title_full Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies
title_fullStr Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies
title_full_unstemmed Questioning the 'politicization of education': Development education and citizenship education in the context of Japanese education policies
title_sort questioning the 'politicization of education': development education and citizenship education in the context of japanese education policies
publisher UCL Press
series International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning
issn 1756-5278
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Japan's educational system has undergone a series of reforms over the past decade or so. Through these reforms, the ruling party has strengthened the involvement of the government and local authorities in education. At the same time, there has been a growing tendency for teachers to avoid taking up political issues in classrooms, in order to comply with the idea of political neutrality in education. This article attempts to extract the present-day meaning of development education and its implications for citizenship education by critically examining certain aspects of recent Japanese educational policy. Specifically, while pointing out that government-directed citizenship education has become increasingly 'patriotic', the article reaffirms that development education is a kind of political education. Finally, the article argues that development education should be expanded to democratic citizenship education to nurture active citizens with global perspectives.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=fb973cff-c998-4d02-a530-d5640d33dcf3
work_keys_str_mv AT hiroyukiyumoto questioningthepoliticizationofeducationdevelopmenteducationandcitizenshipeducationinthecontextofjapaneseeducationpolicies
_version_ 1724381308821438464