Page 15 - Japanese Growth and Education: 演講人:Motohisa Kaneko教授
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Japan’s Development and Education - Past, Present and Future -c115





                   children from lower income families.


                   Government

                       At the early stage after the War, the utmost goal for the government in the
                   1950s was to accomplish the postwar educational reform. However, through the

                   1950s, demands for upper secondary and higher education started to grow. The
                   government initially took a restraint policy – maintaining the quality of schools
                   which had been badly hurt during the war had to be given the priority.

                       As the popular demand for secondary and higher education grew, the
                   political pressures to allow expansion mounted, and the Ministry of Education
                   eventually gave in.  However, the government lacked enough financial

                   resources to provide for sufficient upper secondary schools and higher education
                   institutions to satisfy the demand. Instead, it took the policy to allow the private
                   sector to expand, either through increasing the enrollment of existing institutions

                   or through allowing new ones to open. In other words, frustrated demands were
                   satisfied by the private sector, which was financed mainly by contribution from
                   the family.

                       On the other hand, the government diverted the limited financial resources
                   on the national institutions, which accommodated less than 20 percent of
                   undergraduates. Particularly, departments of engineering and natural sciences

                   were expanded substantially throughout the 1960s, securing the supply of
                   technical engineers necessitatd for development of fledging machinery and
                   chemical industries. It should be also noted that the tuition at the national

                   universities was kept at a much lower level. This in effect created a strong
                   incentive for the talented high school graduates to advance to engineering and
                   natural sciences courses at national universities.
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