Japanese Language Industry Faces Struggle to Raise Standards

Society Education Language

Japanese language schools are meeting with renewed scrutiny as Japan braces for an influx of foreign workers under new immigration rules set to go into effect in April. In a candid interview, a veteran teacher and founder of one of Tokyo’s most respected Japanese language schools traces the industry’s woes, including a critical teacher shortage, to three decades of expedient, short-sighted government policies.

Behind the Teacher Shortage

Japanese language schools can be set up as either private business enterprises or educational institutions. While educational institutions can take advantage of generous tax breaks, only a small fraction of authorized Japanese language schools enjoy that status; about 70% (including KAI) are joint-stock companies.

“The Japanese language schools launched in the 1980s were all small, individually owned businesses that were in no financial position to buy the land and school facilities needed to operate a school, which is a requirement for authorization as an educational institution,” explains Yamamoto. While KAI and other schools have expanded over the years, the cost of incorporation as a private educational institution is still prohibitive for most. “Our overhead costs are high because we have to recruit students from abroad and then provide various support services once they arrive in Japan. So, the more conscientiously you run your school, the less likely you are to build up the internal reserves you would need to get incorporated as an educational institution.”

In addition to high overhead costs, Japanese language schools must cope with fluctuations in enrollment caused by continual changes in the government’s immigration-control policies and screening procedures. This makes it difficult to draw up long-term personnel plans. “To adjust to those fluctuations, we have no choice but to make heavy use of part-time instructors,” explains Yamamoto.

Most Japanese language teachers are paid on an hourly basis. According to Yamamoto, the shortage in instructors has driven wages up a bit, but even in central Tokyo, starting rates still hover at about ¥2,000 an hour. Moreover, under the Justice Ministry’s standards, each instructor is permitted to teach no more than 25 hours per week. At today’s typical starting rate, this limits a teacher’s monthly income to around ¥200,000 (less than US $2,000). “Almost all of my male instructors quit to find better-paying work as soon as they begin thinking seriously of marriage,” notes Yamamoto.

To raise teacher salaries, Japanese language schools need to boost their business proceeds, but their options are limited. Other Justice Ministry regulations, including the limit of 20 students per instructor, make it difficult to expand enrollment. Competition from less conscientious schools makes it risky to raise tuition.

Pushing for School Ratings

With immigration reform looming, the government has finally begun to hammer out measures to raise the level of Japanese language education, including stricter standards for Justice Ministry–recognized Japanese language schools. But as long as these schools remain under the jurisdiction of the Immigration Bureau, oversight will inevitably focus on compliance with immigration laws and requirements. Keeping tabs on curriculum and instruction is outside of the bureau’s domain.

“The Ministry of Justice decides whether you can open a Japanese language school, but it’s another matter entirely to follow up with periodic evaluations and separate the good schools from the mediocre ones. For that, you need independent assessments by a publicly accredited body,” says Yamamoto. “For thirty years now, I’ve watched as the abuses of a few bad actors gave the entire industry a black eye and triggered periodic crackdowns on the admission of students. There has to be some incentive for them to do better.”

Some are hopeful that the establishment of a front door for foreign labor will reduce the need for back doors in the form of shady language schools, but Yamamoto is not optimistic. “As part-time workers who pay all their own expenses, international students are an irresistible source of labor for businesses,” she says. “The kinds of schools that sponsor international students for that purpose aren’t going away anytime soon. So, I doubt that the Specified Skills visa is going to raise the level of Japanese language education in the short run.”

Over the long term, Yamamoto anticipates that the flow of student workers will taper off naturally as economic growth and development push up wages in other Asian countries. “Going forward, Japan needs to put more effort into attracting international students who might eventually qualify for visas as highly skilled professionals. This will mean bolstering both the quality of Japanese language teaching and the number of teachers. In addition, we’ll need to institute a school assessment system and apply international standards so that outstanding programs can make their case to prospective students.”

At present, schools can voluntarily request an independent assessment by the Association for the Promotion of Japanese Language Education (established with the backing of the Justice Ministry in 1989), but few take advantage of the service. It is also possible to apply for certification by the International Standards Organization under ISO 29991, Language Learning Services Outside Formal Education. Thus far, however, only four Japanese language schools have been certified, and the industry’s awareness of the standard is very low.

“It’s because the government doesn’t take a stand,” says Yamamoto. “Supposing the immigration authorities were to guarantee visas to students who enrolled at ISO-certified schools? Then I’ll wager schools would get serious about improving the quality of instruction.”

Low Prestige, High Demands

Contributing to the ongoing quality issues afflicting Japanese language schools is the low esteem in which society holds Japanese language teachers. “There’s this idea that any native Japanese speaker can teach Japanese, so we can just leave the job to housewives with some time on their hands,” complains Yamamoto.

In fact, the requirements of the job are getting more demanding all the time. “Before, we were teaching Japanese to foreigners who were expected to go home after a few years. But more and more these days, we’re being called on to work with the local community to help integrate migrants into Japanese society. It’s not enough to teach Japanese in the classroom. Instructors have to be able to design, organize, and carry out field trips and other educational experiences out in the community. They need to be conversant in the latest information and communication technologies. And they need to be able to teach an increasingly diverse group of students. It requires a very high level of skill and commitment. So, we’re facing an unprecedented shortage in Japanese language teachers at a time when acquiring real proficiency takes longer than ever before.”

Japan currently has no national certification system for Japanese language teachers, although such a system is under study. Public certification would doubtless enhance the prestige of the profession, but it will not permit cash-strapped schools to offer their instructors higher pay.

On the eve of a major influx of foreign labor into Japan, the country’s Japanese language schools are in a sorry state after three decades of expedient neglect. Without a serious infusion of public funding to boost teacher compensation and support top-quality schools, the outlook for improvement is bleak.

Note: There are three ways to qualify as a Japanese language instructor at a Justice Ministry–recognized Japanese language school: (1) pass the Japanese Language Teaching Competency Test administered by Japan Educational Exchanges and Services, (2) graduate from a four-year university and complete a 420-hour Japanese language teaching course, and (3) graduate from a four-year university with a major in Japanese language education. The Agency for Cultural Affairs publishes curriculum guidelines for the training of Japanese language instructors, but it was not until April 2018 that the guidelines (revised for the first time in 18 years) clearly stipulated minimum requirements by content area.—Ed.

(Originally published in Japanese on January 29, 2019. Text by Itakura Kimie of Nippon.com. Banner photo: International students at a job seminar held by Mynavi Corp. in Tokyo, March 2018. © Yomiuri Shimbun/Aflo.)

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