Tohoku Korean Primary and Junior High School (東北朝鮮初中級学校, Tōhoku Chōsen Shochūkyūgakko?, Korean: 도호꾸 조선 초중급학교) is a North Korean international school in Taihaku-ku, Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture.[1] As of 2012[update] Yun Jong-chol is the principal.[2]
The school formerly had a senior high school division.[3]
History
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The school was established on April 25, 1965. Construction of the dormitory was completed on October 4, 1967. On April 1, 1970 the senior high school division opened. The first high school class graduated on March 10, 1971. The senior high school building was expanded by four classrooms on April 5, 1973. The Kindergarten section was established on April 5, 1977.[4] Historically the school used a five story classroom building.[2]
The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami destroyed the classroom building, forcing the school to use the cafeteria and dormitories as classrooms. The school began asking for financial assistance from the Japanese government in rebuilding its classroom facilities: Yun requested about 100 million yen to 200 million yen while the Japanese government stated it provided 1.5 million yen ($18,000 US dollars) in 2011.[2]
References
- ↑ "アクセス." Tohoku Korean Primary and Junior High School. Retrieved on 13 October 2015. "住所 〒 982-0837 宮城県仙台市太白区長町越路19-558(仙台駅よりバスで約25分)"
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Won, Jiyoon. "(Yonhap Feature) School battles stigma as it tries to rebuild after tsunami" (Archive). Yonhap. March 28, 2012. Retrieved on October 13, 2015.
- ↑ Home page (Archive). Tohoku Korean Elementary, Middle, and High School. June 20, 2003. Retrieved on October 13, 2015.
- ↑ "学校沿革" (Archive). Tohoku Korean Primary and Junior High School. Retrieved on 13 October 2015. "1965. 4.25 東北朝鮮初中級学校創立 (<学校法人宮城朝鮮学園>として認可) 1967.10 鉄筋4階建て寄宿舎 竣工 1970. 4. 1 高級部 併設 1971. 3.10 高級部第1期生 卒業 1973. 4. 5 高級部校舎 増設(特別教室4教室) 1975. 4.25 学校創立10周年 記念行事 1977. 4. 5 幼稚班 併設"
External links
Korean international schools in Japan
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Some international schools in Japan are classified as " miscellaneous schools", others as ordinary private schools
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North Korea (DPRK)-
oriented schools |
Elementary, junior high,
and senior high schools |
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Junior and senior high schools |
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Senior high schools |
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Primary and
junior high schools |
- Amagasaki Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Chiba Korean Primary and Junior High School
- Fukushima Korean School (JA/KO)
- Gifu Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Gunma Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Hokuriku Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Kobe Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Nagano Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Niigata Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- North Osaka Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Okayama Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Saitama Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Seiban North Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Shikoku Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Shizuoka Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Tochigi Korean Primary and Junior High School (JA)
- Tohoku Korean Primary and Junior High School
- Tokyo Korean 1st Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Tokyo Korean 4th Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Tokyo Korean 5th Elementary and Junior High School
- West Tokyo Korean No. 1. Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- West Tokyo Korean No. 2. Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Wakayama Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
- Yamaguchi Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Yokkaichi Korean Elementary and Middle School (JA)
Closed or merged
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- Maizuru Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Shimonoseki Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Tokuyama Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
- Ube Korean Elementary and Junior High School (JA)
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Junior high/Middle schools |
- East Osaka Korean Middle School (JA)
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Primary/Elementary schools |
- Aichi No. 7 Korean Primary School (JA)
- Fukuoka Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Higashi Osaka Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Ikuno Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Itami Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Johoku Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Kitakyushu Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Kyoto Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Kyoto Korean No. 2 Elementary School (JA)
- Nagoya Korean Primary School (JA)
- Osaka Korean No. 4 Elementary School (JA)
- Osaka Fukushima Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Middle Osaka Korean Elementary School (JA)
- South Osaka Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Shiga Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Tokyo Korean 2nd Elementary School (JA)
- Tokyo Korean 3rd Elementary School (JA)
- Tokyo Korean 6th Elementary School (JA)
- Tokyo Korean 9th Elementary School
- Toshun Korean Elementary School & Kindergarten (JA)
- Toyohashi Korean Primary School (JA)
- Tsurumi Korean Primary School (JA)
- West Kobe Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Yokohama Korean Primary School (JA)
Closed/Merged
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- Akashi Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Amagasaki East Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Chikuho Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Kyoto Korean No. 1 Elementary School (JA)
- Kyoto Korean No. 3 Elementary School (JA) which may now be Kyoto Korean ES[citation needed]
- Nara Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Sakai Korean Elementary School (堺朝鮮初級学校)
- Senshu Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Takarazuka Korean Elementary School (JA)
- Tokyo No. 8 Korean Elementary School (東京朝鮮第八初級学校)
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Kindergartens
not attached
to other schools |
- Kokura Korean Kindergarten (小倉朝鮮幼稚園)
- Okayama Korean Kindergarten (岡山朝鮮幼稚園)
- Saitama Korean Kindergarten (JA)
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South Korea (ROK)-
oriented schools |
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This list is not complete. There are about 60 or so North Korean schools and five or so South Korean schools.
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