Chōsen gakkō

Chōsen gakkō (Japanese: 朝鮮学校, Korean: 조선학교) are North Korean schools in Japan. "Chosen" means Korean, referring to the Joseon dynasty, and "gakko" means school. They are affiliated with the Chongryon (the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan) which has strong ties to North Korea. Sometimes Chosen schools are referred to as Chongryon schools.

They teach loyalty to the North Korean regime and hostility to the Western Bloc. Their students are born in Japan, but the lesson has a distinctive North Korean perspective. Japan has no control over the curriculum.

As of 2012, there were 135 Chosen schools in Japan: 38 kindergartens, 54 elementary schools, 33 middle schools and 10 high schools, along with Korea University (not to be confused with Korea University in Seoul).

As of 2014, there were about 150,000 Zainichi Koreans affiliated with the Chongryon in Japan, and they form the clientele of the schools. As of 2013, these schools had almost 9,000 ethnic Korean students.

The vast majority of Koreans in Japan do not attend Chosen gakko. For example, 87% of Koreans in Osaka attend wholly Japanese schools which make no provisions for bilingual education.

They are distinct from Kankoku gakkō (한국학교, 韓國學校, 韓国学校) which are overseas South Korean schools (재외한국학교,在外韓國學校,在外韓国学校) in Japan, which receive approval from the South Korean government and incorporate the South Korean educational curriculum and regular Japanese curriculum.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.