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ID169213
Title ProperAssumptions and Distortions
Other Title InformationDore on Equality in Japanese Schooling
LanguageENG
AuthorWhite, Merry
Summary / Abstract (Note)Ronald Dore’s work on education in Japan centred on themes of selection and equality. In his work on Tokugawa education, Dore presaged some of the emphasis he gave in his later work on quality and social and moral content in modern education. The argument of The Diploma Disease concerned the “late development effect” as a tool in understanding the emphasis on qualification and selection that led to Japan’s postwar examination hypertrophy, and in understanding the distortions and inequities that ensued. “Late ascription”—tracking and determining one’s life chances with a single examination—was one such distortion, narrowing the gate to educational and occupational success, belying the notion that Japan demonstrates a pure “meritocracy.”
`In' analytical NotePacific Affairs Vol. 92, No.4; Dec 2019: p.701-714
Journal SourcePacific Affairs Vol: 92 No 4
Key WordsDemocracy ;  Modernization ;  Inequality ;  Selection ;  Credentials ;  Late Development Effec ;  Qualification


 
 
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