Higher school (Japan)
Appearance
Higher school (高等学校, Kōtō Gakkō or 旧制高等学校, Kyūsei Kōtō Gakkō) was an institution of higher education in Japan, which was a preparatory institution for imperial universities and national medical colleges until the educational reform in occupied Japan.[1]
Apart from the Imperial Japanese Army Academy and the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy, higher schools were the most prestigious pre-university higher education institutions in Japan and provided liberal arts education based on 'Kyōyōshugi' instead of specialised education.
The higher schools have now been converted or mergerd into universities.[2] Despite the same name, Kōtō Gakkō (高等学校), higher schools are completely different to high schools (新制高等学校, Shinsei Kōtō Gakkō) after WW2.
List
[edit]3-year Schools
[edit]Number Schools
[edit]school name | The First Order of Higher Education (1894) era | The Second Order of Higher Education (1919) | New university |
---|---|---|---|
First Higher School (Tokyo) | Daigaku Yoka | Kōtōka | University of Tokyo |
Facultyl of Medicine (Chiba) | Independent as Chiba Medical College (1901) | Chiba Medical College (now Chiba University School of Medicine) | |
Second Higher School (Sendai) | Daigaku Yoka | Kōtōka | Tohoku University |
Faculty of medicine | Independent as Sendai Medical College (1901) | Tohoku Imperial University School of Medicine (Tohoku University School of Medicine) | |
Third Higher School (Kyoto) | Faculty of Law | 1901 abolished | ―――― |
Faculty of Engineering | 1901 abolished | ―――― | |
Faculty of Medicine (Okayama) | Independent as Okayama Medical College (1901) | Okayama Medical College (now Okayama University School of Medicine) | |
Daigaku Yoka (1897) | Kōtōka | Kyoto University | |
Fourth Higher School (Kanazawa) | Daigaku Yoka | Kōtōka | Kanazawa University |
Faculty of medicine | Independent as Kanazawa Medical College (1901) | Kanazawa University School of Medicine | |
Fifth Higher School (Kumamoto) | Daigaku Yoka | Kōtōka | Kumamoto University |
Faculty of Medicine (Nagasaki) | Independent as Nagasaki Medical College (1901) | Nagasaki University School of Medicine | |
Faculty of Engineering (1897) | Independent as Kumamoto Higher Technical School (1906) | Kumamoto University | |
Sixth Higher school (Okayama) | Daigaku Yoka (1900) | Kōtōka | Okayama University |
Seventh Higher School, Zōshikan (Kagoshima) | Daigaku Yoka (1901) | Kōtōka | Kagoshima University |
Eighth Higher School (Nagoya) | Daigaku Yoka (1908) | Kōtōka | Nagoya University |
Name Schools
[edit]Year of establishment | school name | New university |
---|---|---|
1886 | Yamaguchi Higher School | Yamaguchi University |
1919 | Niigata Higher School | Niigata University |
1919 | Matsumoto Higher School | Shinshu University |
1919 | Yamaguchi Higher School | Yamaguchi University |
1919 | Ehime Higher School | Ehime University |
1920 | Mito Higher School | Ibaraki University |
1920 | Yamagata Higher School | Yamagata University |
1920 | Saga Higher School | Saga University |
1920 | Hirosaki Higher School | Hirosaki University |
1920 | Matsue Higher School | Shimane University |
1921 | Osaka Higher School | Osaka University |
1921 | Urawa Higher School | Saitama University |
1921 | Fukuoka Higher School | Kyushu University |
1922 | Shizuoka Higher School | Shizuoka University |
1922 | Kochi Higher School | Kochi University |
1923 | Himeji Higher School | Kobe University (Himeji Branch) |
1923 | Hiroshima Higher School | Hiroshima University |
1940 | Ryojyun Higher School (Lushun, Manchukuo) | (abolition) |
1943 | Toyama Higher School | University of Toyama |
Postwar Special Higher School
[edit]Predecessor medical and dental college of | school name | New university |
---|---|---|
Japan Women's Dental College | Nihon higher school | Japan Women's Health Junior College (Now Kanagawa Dental University) |
Toyo Women's Dental College | Toyo Higher School | Toyo Women's Junior College (now Toyo Gakuen University) |
Akita Prefectural Women's Medical College | Akita Prefectural Higher School | (Closed in 1950, converted into Akita University) |
Yamanashi Prefectural Medical College | Yamanashi Prefectural Higher School | (Closed in 1951, converted into Yamanashi University) |
Yamanashi Prefectural Women's Medical College | ||
Tokushima Medical College | Tokushima Higher School | Tokushima University |
Fukuoka Prefectural Medical and Dental College, Department of Medicine | Fukuoka Prefectural Higher School | (Closed in 1951, converted into Kyushu Dental University) |
Nagasaki Medical University College of Medicine | Nagasaki Higher School | Nagasaki University |
7-year Schools
[edit]kinds | Year of establishment | school name | New university | New junior high school / high school |
---|---|---|---|---|
national | 1921 | Tokyo Higher School | University of Tokyo | Junior and Senior High School, University of Tokyo |
1922 | Taihoku Higher School (Taipei) | (Abolished, converted to National Taiwan Normal University) | ||
public | 1923 | Toyama Higher School | (Transferred to a national school in 1943, abolished the vulgaris department) | |
1926 | Naniwa Higher School (Osaka) | Osaka University | (Abolition of vulgar department) | |
1929 | Tokyo Metropolitan Higher School (Tokyo) | Tokyo Metropolitan University | Metropolitan New Institution of Higher Education | |
private | 1922 | Musashi Higher School (Tokyo) | Musashi University | Musashi Junior and Senior High School |
1923 | Konan Higher School (Tokyo) | Konan University | Konan Junior and Senior High School | |
1925 | Seikei Higher School (Tokyo) | Seikei University | Seikei Junior and Senior High School | |
1926 | Seijo Higher School (Tokyo) | Seijo University | Seijo Gakuen Junior High School and High School |
See also
[edit]- Imperial Universities (帝国大学)
- Daigaku Yoka (大学予科)
- Specialized School (Japan) (旧制専門学校)
References
[edit]- ^ "c. Higher Schools as the Preparatory Course for the Imperial Universities:文部科学省". www.mext.go.jp. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
- ^ "(6)The New University System:文部科学省". www.mext.go.jp. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
External links
[edit]- JAPAN'S MODERN EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM - Government official articles by MEXT, Japan