Princeton Community Japanese Language School

The Princeton Community Japanese Language School (PCJLS; プリンストン日本語学校 Purinsuton Nihongo Gakkō) is a Japanese weekend school in the Princeton, New Jersey area. It holds weekend Japanese classes for Japanese citizen children abroad to the standard of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), and it also has classes for people with Japanese as a second language.

The school offices at 14 Moore Street
Memorial Hall (now Bierenbaum Fisher Hall) at Rider University, where the school's classes are held

Courses are held at Bierenbaum Fisher Hall (formerly Memorial Hall) at Rider University in Lawrence Township, Mercer County.[1] The school offices are in Princeton, except on Sundays, when the offices are at Rider University.[2]

This is one of the Japanese weekend school systems in the New York metropolitan area.[3]

History

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Five Japanese researchers at Princeton University founded the PCJLS in 1980. It was originally at that institution but moved to Rider in 1996.[3]

In 1987 its weekend courses for children covered Kindergarten through the 7th grade.[4]

Curriculum

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The school's Japanese Ministry of Education (MEXT)-compliant classes are part of its Division 1. The principal of Division 1 is funded by MEXT.[5] In addition, the school offers Japanese heritage language courses, Japanese as a foreign language courses,[6] and courses for adults as part of Division 2, which is oriented to children attending university in the United States and other persons from English-dominant households.[5] The school's teachers developed their own kanji textbooks for use in these courses.[7] Placement into a particular division involves consultations in which the student, the parents, and/or PCJLS teachers are involved.[6]

In 1987 the school also had Japanese language courses for adults who work in businesses.[4]

Student body

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Many PCJLS students are U.S. permanent residents with at least some Japanese ancestral origin, including multilingual students with one or more parents who speak a language not English and/or not Japanese, and/or bilingual students living in English-dominant households. These students often attend heritage classes and/or Japanese as a second language courses.[6]

In 1987 students came from the states of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Some of the students came from Fort Lee and some came from South Jersey.[4]

In 187 the school had around 20-25 adult students and 100 child students.[4]

Teaching staff

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Parents, as of 2012, make up 70% of the teachers at PCJLS.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Direction & Map. Princeton Community Japanese Language School. Accessed May 9, 2014.
  2. ^ "Home." Princeton Community Japanese Language School. Retrieved on February 14, 2015. "プリンストン日本語学校オフィス 14 Moore Street, Princeton, NJ 08542" and "Sunday Office Rider University, Memorial Hall, Rm301"
  3. ^ a b Kano, p. 106. "Princeton Community Japanese Language School (PCJLS) is a weekend school[...]It is the leading Japanese school in the greater New York region[...]"
  4. ^ a b c d Parisi, Peter (1987-09-27). "Japanese culture on the rise along Central Jersey horizon". The Central Jersey Home News. New Brunswick, New Jersey. p. E1. - Clipping (Detail view 1, Detail view 2, and Detail view 3) from Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b Kano, p. 107.
  6. ^ a b c Kano, p. 108.
  7. ^ a b Kano, p. 109.
  • Kano, Naomi (加納 なおみ Kanō Naomi). "Japanese Community Schools: New Pedagogy for a Changing Population" (Chapter 6). In: García, Ofelia, Zeena Zakharia, and Bahar Otcu (editors). Bilingual Community Education and Multilingualism: Beyond Heritage Languages in a Global City (Volume 89 of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism). Multilingual Matters, 2012. ISBN 184769800X, 9781847698001. START: p. 99.
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40°21′07″N 74°39′18″W / 40.351894°N 74.654946°W / 40.351894; -74.654946