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Japan: Overview of the Reform of English Education in Elementary and Secondary Schools in Japan
From: Foreign Language Teaching in Primary and Secondary Schools
ISSN 1002-6541 CN 11-1318 (Vol. 26, No. 11, pp. 19-21, 2003) Korea.
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I think that the current situation of the reform of the basic education curriculum in foreign countries is that they all belong to the education curriculum. The reduction is now to increase the physical education curriculum to increase the resistance and physical condition of the children.
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Could you please compare and analyze the current status of basic education curriculum reform in various countries? (Japan, South Korea, United States, Canada, Finland).
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Comparative analysis of basic education curricula in various countries, Japan, South Korea, and the United States?
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Could you please compare and analyze the current status of basic education curriculum reform in various countries? (Japan, South Korea, United States, Canada, Finland).
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South Korea's basic education is very similar to China's education methods and methods, but the development of South Korea's basic education is relatively balanced, while China's basic education has a gap between urban and rural areas, eastern, central and western regions. This is one of the aspects where there is a big gap between China and South Korea in education. In terms of higher education, South Korea has a higher degree of internationalization than China, and it has done a better job than China in terms of learning from Western developed countries in terms of discussion-based teaching.
However, in terms of the strength of higher education, South Korea has not surpassed our country. Since 2014, the Ministry of Education has carried out the reform of the college entrance examination in Zhejiang and Shanghai, which is a substantial reform carried out in the field of education in China, and its purpose is to gradually guide China's education from the current purpose of knowledge education to the track of quality education.
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Prefectures in Japan are equivalent to our provinces in China.
The first-level administrative regions of China are provinces, and the whole of Japan is divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo, Hokkaido, Osaka, Kyoto). Metropolises, provinces, prefectures, and counties are parallel first-level administrative regions, directly under ****, but each metropolis, province, prefecture, and county has autonomy. Corresponding to their respective national administrative regions, Japan's prefectures are equivalent to China's provinces.
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Prefectures in Japan (県) are equivalent to our provinces in China.
Japan's capital, province, prefecture, and prefecture are parallel first-level administrative regions, directly under ****, but each capital, province, prefecture, and prefecture have autonomy. The country is divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo: Tokyo Province (Hokkaido:.)
Hokkaido), 2 prefectures (Osaka, Kyoto: Kyoto) and 43 prefectures.
Japan's local administrative division system, which was established in 1871 with the Meiji ** policy of abolishing feudal domains and prefectures, is generally divided into two levels: metropolises, provinces, prefectures, and prefectures (regional public bodies), and cities, towns, and villages (basic local public bodies).
Today, the country is divided into 47 first-class administrative regions: Ichito (Tokyo), Ichichi (Hokkaido), Nifu (Osaka and Kyoto), and 43 prefectures, under which cities, towns, and villages are established.
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Prefectures in Japan are administratively equivalent to provinces in China.
Japan's capital, province, prefecture, and prefecture are parallel first-level administrative regions, directly under the ****, and China's provinces are also directly under the **, in Japan, all capitals, provinces, prefectures, and prefectures have the right of autonomy. The country is divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo Province (Hokkaido), 2 prefectures (Osaka Prefecture and Kyoto Prefecture) and 43 prefectures, which are divided into cities, towns, and villages. Its offices are called "government offices", that is, metropolitan offices, provincial offices, prefectural offices, and prefectural offices, and the chief executive is called the governor.
Each metropolis, province, prefecture, and prefecture has a number of cities, towns, and villages (equivalent to towns in China). Its offices are called "government offices", and the chief executive is called mayors, town heads, and village heads.
China's administrative division of the implementation of **-province--city (state, league)--county (district, flag)-town (township) five-level institutional framework, Japan's administrative framework due to the land and population is much less than China, the entire land of Japan and China's general provinces of the area is about the same, the administrative framework is less than the intermediate link, by the first - county (capital, province, government) - city (town) composition, the most basic village-level units and our country is the same, the county is directly under the **, and our country is the province is the same.
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Prefectures in Japan are equivalent to provinces in Japan, and counties in Japan are municipalities, and prefectures in Japan are in turn prefectures. In addition, the administrative divisions of Japan are Ichito (Tokyo), Ichichi (Hokkaido), Nifu (Kyoto, Osaka), and 43 prefectures.
In other words, Japan is not as big (slightly small) as Yunnan Province, and it is absolutely impossible to carve out so many administrative regions.
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Prefectures in Japan are equivalent to provinces in China, and the following administrative divisions in China are divided into provinces, municipalities, autonomous regions, and special administrative regions. In Japan, it is divided into prefectures, provinces, prefectures, and prefectures.
Related knowledge: Japan's administrative regions include one prefecture, one capital, two prefectures, and 43 prefectures, and the capital is Tokyo, which is the political, economic, and cultural center of Japan. One is Hokkaido, which was developed later than the rest of the country.
Nifu is Kyoto Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture, the historical and economic center of the Kansai region. Japan's prefectures are the equivalent of China's provinces (much smaller in size, of course), with a total of 43 prefectures. As a result, there are a total of 47 administrative divisions in Japan.
Japan's provinces are equivalent to China's ** departments, for example, Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs is equivalent to China's ***.
If you still have a question, you can send me a text message to communicate, and if the problem is solved and no better answer appears, please set my answer to the best.
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It's the equivalent of our region, which is the next level at the provincial level
Japan now has a county system that our ancestors used, but they don't call it that name
Huh
Just take a look at Japan.
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