Tokyo First Middle School
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is a Japanese high school founded in 1878 as the . It was well known in the 1950s and 1960s for the large proportion of graduates who gained admission to the prestigious University of Tokyo; though it suffered a decline in the 1970s, as of 2005 it was once again being referred to as the "best public high school in Japan". Although Japanese law prohibits the hiring of non-Japanese-citizens as teachers, there's one full-time Russian native speaker teacher.


History

Tokyo First Middle School was established on 26 September 1878 in Tokyo's Hongō-ku; soon after, it moved to Kanda-ku, and moved several more times in the next two decades. Its establishment was the result of the Meiji Restoration drive to modernise the model of education in order to catch up with Western Europe and the United States. The Meiji era government and Tokyo Imperial University requested the thickened as a part route to Tokyo Imperial University though Tokyo First did not lay weight at first on the side of going on to school. See pages Item of 東京府中学校. The school came to attract students not just from within Japan, but overseas as well; in 1904, out of 50 students granted scholarships by Korea's Joseon Dynasty for overseas study, 44 of them enrolled at Tokyo First Middle School. However, they were all expelled due to a protest they organised in 1905 over the signing of the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1905, which effectively made the
Korean Empire The Korean Empire () was a Korean monarchical state proclaimed in October 1897 by Emperor Gojong of the Joseon dynasty. The empire stood until Japan's annexation of Korea in August 1910. During the Korean Empire, Emperor Gojong oversaw the Gwa ...
a protectorate of the Empire of Japan. Later, they were permitted to re-enroll the following year. By 1918, only four decades after its foundation, Tokyo First had already become the first step on the " escalator course" which students expected would lead them to Tokyo Imperial University. See page 41. After World War II, Tokyo First Middle School went through a number of changes; it officially changed its name to Hibiya High School on 26 January 1950, and began admitting female students in April of the same year. Its first coeducational class enrolled 300 boys and 100 girls. Though First Tokyo's track record for getting its students into higher schools and universities in the pre-war period was beneath that of other elite middle schools (specifically Fourth Tokyo Middle School), between 1953 and 1967, Hibiya High School consistently ranked first in the number of graduates entering the top-ranked University of Tokyo, and due to its reputation for excellence, enrolled students from as far away as
Kyūshū is the third-largest island of Japan's five main islands and the most southerly of the four largest islands ( i.e. excluding Okinawa). In the past, it has been known as , and . The historical regional name referred to Kyushu and its surround ...
. See pages 20-22. In common with the rest of the Tokyo public school system, its prestige declined during the early 1970s. Until 1976, at least 20 graduates were admitted to the University of Tokyo each year, down from the peak of 193 graduates in 1964, but according to one account, the school had "dropped out of the spotlight altogether". In 1993, a single student from Hibiya High School gained admission to the University of Tokyo. However, under the leadership of the new principal Nagasawa, appointed in 2001, the school underwent a "renaissance".In 2005, it was once again described by the '' Dong-a Ilbo'', a South Korean newspaper, as "the best public school in Japan". In 2006, 12 students gained admission to the University of Tokyo, and two years later, that figure more than doubled to 28. The current number of students in Hibiya High school goes around 1600.


Exchange programs

Hibiya High school is also known around Tokyo for its exchange programs. Hibiya high school has in facts different classes with foreign students in them. Chinese, Indonesians, Australians, Koreans, but also Germans, Americans, Canadians, Austrians, and more. The exchange programs are usually organized by the High school, and not by external associations. The programs go from 2 weeks to 1 year.


Notable students and teachers


See also

* Nishi High School


References


External links


Hibiya High School
{{authority control Educational institutions established in 1878 High schools in Tokyo Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education schools 1878 establishments in Japan