Gunguly says 30,000 Japanese language students' target by 2010

By Staff
|
Google Oneindia News

New Delhi, May 18 (UNI) India will meet its target of 30,000 Japanese language students by 2010, Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Chairman Ashok Ganguly said today.

While addressing the second All India conference on promotion of Japanese language education here Mr Ganguly said, ''We are introducing Japanese language as an optional foreign language in secondary school curriculum. Out of 9,000 schools, 90 of them have implemented Japanese as an optional subject. Twenty schools implemented it last fiscal and 30 are likely to add it this financial year.'' The major hurdle being faced in is non-availability of teachers, Mr Ganguly said adding that there should be a paradigm shift in the style of teaching.

In the provisional results of the 2006 survey, it was discovered that there were 1,041 learners in primary and secondary-level school education, 1,444 in formal higher education, and 8,526 in educational institutions outside the formal education system, Yoshiyuki Nishizawa from Japan Foundation said.

The figures suggest that various private sector institutions and organisations outside the formal education system are responding to the demand for Japanese language education among professionals and across a broad cross-section of the general population, who greatly outnumber school-based learners, he added.

University Grant Commission Secretary Prof Tilak Raj Kem said initiatives were being taken to attract students for Japanese language.

UNI

For Daily Alerts
Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
X