Jump to content

Kyoritsu Women's University: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
The Anomebot2 (talk | contribs)
Replacing geodata: {{coord missing|Tokyo}}
fixed roomaji for kyoritsu joshi gakuen at top
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Gakko hojin kyoritsu joshi gakuen kodo.jpg|thumb|An auditorium at Kyoritsu Women's University.]]
[[Image:Gakko hojin kyoritsu joshi gakuen kodo.jpg|thumb|An auditorium at Kyoritsu Women's University.]]
{{nihongo|'''Kyoritsu Women's University'''|共立女子学園|Kyōritsu joshi daigaku}} is a [[private university|private]] [[women's college]] in [[Chiyoda, Tokyo]], [[Japan]], established in 1949.
{{nihongo|'''Kyoritsu Women's University'''|共立女子学園|Kyōritsu joshi gakuen}} is a [[private university|private]] [[women's college]] in [[Chiyoda, Tokyo]], [[Japan]], established in 1949.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 17:34, 2 June 2010

An auditorium at Kyoritsu Women's University.

Kyoritsu Women's University (共立女子学園, Kyōritsu joshi gakuen) is a private women's college in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan, established in 1949.

History

The predecessor of the school, a vocational school, was founded in 1886.[1] The name "Kyoritsu", meaning "standing together" in Japanese, came from the fact that 34 people were involved in the foundation of the school; among them were educator Haruko Hatoyama, Kyuichiro Nagai (the father of writer Kafu Nagai) and educator Seiichi Tejima.

Mission

The founding of Kyoritsu marked the very beginning of women's higher education in Japan. To recognize the need to "educate modern women in knowledge and skills, and to elevate the position of women in society."[2]

The university has established exchange-links with international institutions of higher education—for example, the University of Pennsylvania[3]

Notable faculty

Kaoru Hatoyama was a schoolmaster at the university founded by her mother-in-law, Haruko. Kaoru is well known as the wife of a politician, as the spouse of Ichirō Hatoyama, who was the 52nd, 53rd and 54th Prime Minister of Japan, serving terms from December 10, 1954 through December 23, 1956.[4]

In 2006-2008, Eiko Ikui of Kyoritsu Women's University was an Executive Director of the Japanese Association for American Studies.[5]

Notable alumni

Notes

References

  • De Mejía, Anne-Marie. (2002). Power, Prestige, and Bilingualism: International Perspectives on Elite Bilingual Education. Buffalo, New York: Multilingual Matters. 10-ISBN 185359590X; 13-ISBN 9781853595905; OCLC 123123518
  • Kobayashi, Kei, Tetsurō Kitamura, Noriyuki Ito and Maki Tamada. (1992). American antique quilt collection (アメリカン・アンティークキルトコレクション, Amerikan anteikū kiruto korekuskiyon). Tokyo : Nihon Vogue. OCLC 28872477