Wednesday, May 2, 2012

"Tsukuba Style" Curriculum - Environment-Related Exercise, Grade 7

Tsukuba's public middle schools began the new school year on April 9. In his first year at Yatabe Higashi Junior High School, my son today brought home his first assignment for the new "Tsukuba Style" Curriculum. A letter from the school principal, this assignment asks parents and guardians to provide information for a CO2 emissions audit.

"Tsukuba Style" Curriculum - Broad Outline

In 2007, Tsukuba City declared that it would reduce CO2 emissions from the city 50% by 2030. As part of this effort, it developed a new eco-global curriculum, the "Tsukuba Style" curriculum. Piloted in 2011, it is now being fully implemented in grades 1 through 9 in Tsukuba's public schools.

This blogger's son is entering this curriculum in grade 7.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Tsukuba Schools Introduce New Eco-Global Curriculum

Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan. The parents' orientation handouts listed two hours a week for "Tsukuba Style Studies." My wife and I raised our eyebrows. What are 'style' studies and why would our son get two hours a week of it when he enters Yatabe Higashi Junior High School in April?

The handout page for Tsukuba Style Studies listed objective thinking, problem discovery, communications, cooperation, self-consciousness, independent correction, "information gathering, analysis and activism," regional and global citizenship, life and career design, creativity and innovation - all leading edge education areas.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Eating Manners of Farm Women - Tsuchiura, circa 1926

The Japanese character for "to eat" 食 has two readings. The first that students of Japanese learn is "taberu" (食べる), which carries connotations that most people associated with eating: sitting at a table with family and friends to consume a meal. The other reading "kuu" (食う) treats the act as a bodily function with no graces. This distinction separated farm women from town women.


From: "Life in the Sewing School (お裁縫所の暮らし)," told by Oshima Mitsu, born 1906

Friday, December 30, 2011

Rice, Pawn Shops & Day Laborers - Tsuchiura, circa 1920-1925

When it rained, there would be no work - and no rice. After a day of rain, maybe day laborers would pawn something. More days of rain meant no rice: they would run out of things to pawn. Some families would subsist on barley alone.


From "Tenements (不動長屋)," told by Terauchi Ryutaro, born in 1905


Monday, December 26, 2011

Bathing the Neighborhood - Tsuchiura, circa 1915

Tatsutamachi in Tsuchiura is is a neighborhood once surrounded by rivers and canals. In 1915, it was a cluster of thatched tenements bordered on its west side by a middle school for women.

From "Mystery in Tatsuta (立田の怪)," told by Ishido Yoshio, born in 1905

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Japan Cabinet designates Tsukuba an "International Strategic Zone"

22 December 2011, Tsukuba.

Japan's Cabinet Office has designated Tsukuba City as an "International Strategic Zone." This designation is part of a national initiative to create 360,000 new jobs in strategic zones.