Plan to teach English classes in English prompts worries among educators in Japan

New high school curriculum guidelines calling for English lessons to be taught in English have sparked worries among teachers in Japan, with some doubting that teachers and students will be able to handle the classes.

The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology has explained that “teachers should first display an attitude of actively using English themselves,” in order to boost English conversation ability.

However, concerns have been raised over large disparities in both teachers’ English ability and students’ level of understanding — at some schools there are reportedly students who can’t tell the difference between the letters “b” and “d.” In addition, university entrance exams are likely to remain unchanged, raising questions from educators about how effective the move will be.

“The Education Ministry doesn’t understand the teaching scene,” one English teacher at a Chiba prefectural high school says with a forced smile. “Teaching lessons in English would be impossible.”

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20081224p2a00m0na002000c.html

Masukawa concedes importance of English-speaking ability

Toshihide Masukawa, winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physics, delivered a speech in Japanese at the Nobel Lectures 2008 held in Stockholm on Monday, but later admitted the importance of English speaking ability.

Apparently frustrated at being unable to communicate with other Nobel Prize-winners, Masukawa, 68, said ruefully: “As a scientist, I want to communicate with people around the world. I could have done that [in my lecture] if I was able to speak English.”

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20081210TDY02302.htm

Nova refugees: Where are they now?

‘All the schools are closed.’

That’s the text message I received on the morning of Oct. 26, 2007, from a fellow Nova teacher. I went to my school later that day to find the lights off, the doors locked and no one around. Like most of Nova Corp.’s hundreds of language centers, it was never to re-open. Japan’s largest conversation school chain filed for protection from creditors the same day. The company was declared legally bankrupt a month later.

In the period leading up to that fateful day, there had been plenty of signs that things weren’t right, says Briton Marc Davies, a former area manager. “The hardest part for me at first was dealing with a delayed paycheck. It was delayed by about four or five days in July. Then in August, because I was a senior supervisor, my pay was delayed again. The crunch really came in September when I was not paid at all. That was very scary. I was living off a credit card. I had no idea when and if I would get paid again.”

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fl20081111zg.html

Japan’s “working poor” at risk as recession hits

When Miwa Takeuchi found out her part-time clerical job had been outsourced to a Japanese temp staffing agency and she’d have to work longer hours for lower pay, she was relieved. At least she was still employed.

Three years later, Takeuchi, a single mother and one of Japan’s growing ranks of “working poor” who struggle to get by on annual income of $20,000 or less, takes a darker view.

“When I thought about it, I realized that the more I worked, the less I got,” she said. “I started out as a regular worker, but … over the past decade, I have just gotten poorer.”

Takeuchi is not alone.

A decade of corporate cost-cutting and labor market deregulation has transformed Japan’s employment landscape. More than a third of all employees are non-regular workers without job security — part-timers, contract workers and temps — and more than 10 million are “working poor.”

That’s a sharp contrast from the 1980s, when more than 80 percent of workers had job security and most felt middle class.

Now, as the global financial crisis sweeps over the economy, non-regular workers risk being hit fast and hard, raising concerns the slump will be steeper and the impact more concentrated on the most vulnerable compared to past downturns.

The number of fixed-term workers at Toyota Motor Corp, for example, fell to 6,800 last month from around 9,000 in July-September last year in response to weaker demand, a spokesman for Japan’s leading car maker said.

“In countries with a high level of atypical work conditions, in many cases precarious working conditions, there is a much greater risk that in times of recession these groups are hit first and most,” said Michael Forster, a social policy analyst at the Paris-based Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

POLITICAL AGENDA

A 2006 report showing poverty in Japan had risen to one of the highest levels among the OECD’s 30 member countries, largely because of the gap between regular and non-regular workers, shocked many and helped put the topic on the political agenda.

“Japan already has the fourth-largest ‘inequality’ levels of all major countries. Who would have predicted this just 10 years ago?” Ichiro Ozawa, the leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, said in a speech at a recent party convention.

“If we continue to ignore inequality, our economy will eventually stop functioning and Japanese society will collapse.”

The Democrats have made improving job security and shrinking income gaps a key part of their platform ahead of an election that must be held by September 2009 and could come sooner.

An OECD report this month showed income gaps shrank somewhat between 1999 and 2004, mainly because the rich became less wealthy. Yet the report still ranked Japan fourth among its member countries in terms of poverty, defined as those living on less than half the median income.

Not to be outdone, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) is promising subsidies for firms that hire so-called “senior freeters” — part-time job hoppers aged 25-39, many of whom graduated during Japan’s 1994-2004 “Employment Ice Age,” when firms struggling with economic stagnation shied away from hiring.

“Companies can’t just invest in capital goods. They have to invest in workers too or they won’t buy things,” said LDP lawmaker Masazumi Gotoda, who helped draft his party’s proposals.

Such older “freeters,” estimated to total nearly 1 million last year, have become what media call a “Lost Generation,” trapped in unstable, low-paying jobs lacking unemployment benefits or health insurance.

“We have had a very rigid employment scheme in which recruits to large companies are limited to those who just graduated … so those who graduated during the ‘Ice Age’ cannot get good jobs even when the economy recovers,” said Naohiro Yashiro, an economics professor at International Christian University.

“LOST GENERATION”

Among the most vulnerable are daily temps who find employment through staffing agencies and earn about 7,000 yen ($70) a day at factories, construction sites and in other low-skilled jobs.

“I never know whether I’ll have a job until the evening before,” one 36-year-old man who works as a daily temp, mostly on delivery trucks, told a recent symposium on the topic.

“A job might last a week, or there might be no work at all, so I don’t have a fixed monthly income,” the man said, adding that he survives only because he lives at home with his parents.

Activists and labor lawyers argue that while the system helps companies fine-tune employment in response to ups and downs in the economy, the cost to society as a whole is heavy.

“At a micro-level, companies may feel that this is good for them to be able to adjust employment easily, but if large numbers of people cannot support themselves, social uncertainty will rise,” said Shuichiro Sekine, secretary-general of a temp union.

“Many workers will have to rely on welfare, and that’s a big loss for society overall.”

And though politicians talk of remedies, activists such as Chieki Akaishi of support group Single Mothers’ Forum are wary.

“They’ve realized they must listen to such people or they can’t get votes, but they aren’t trying to change the fundamental social framework to include equal pay for equal work and equal treatment for regular and non-regular workers,” she said.

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE49T03A20081030?sp=true

1 year on, Nova’s failure leaves scars

Even though it has been a year since Nova applied for court protection under the Corporate Rehabilitation Law, the central government has done little to ensure the private language school industry improves its operations.

The failure of Nova, which was the largest language school in the nation, has sowed public distrust in the industry.

Moreover, many former Nova students have not been compensated for tuition fees paid in advance, even though the school’s operations have been taken over by Nagoya-based G.communication Co.

On Thursday, a group set up by former Nova students submitted a petition to Seiko Noda, state minister in charge of consumer affairs, requesting stronger measures to protect language school students.

“I’d like the authorities to investigate [the matter] in depth so similar problems don’t happen,” a 35-year-old female former Nova student said.

Although there are no regulations on the establishment of language schools, the law that covers such businesses was revised in 1999 to regulate them to some extent, allowing students to cancel contracts with the schools, for example.

Although Nova had many contract issues before it failed, the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry supervising the law was slow to take punitive measures against Nova, such as banning it from entering into contracts with new students.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20081027TDY07301.htm

Ex-Nova students sue management for compensation

A group of 24 former students of failed language school operator Nova Corp. lodged a suit for damages Friday against former Nova management and two audit companies, seeking a total of 16 million yen in compensation to cover prepaid tuition.

It was the first time that former Nova students have filed a class action suit since the company went bankrupt last year, lawyers for the plaintiffs said after filing the suit with the Osaka District Court.

They claimed that former President Nozomu Sahashi and other Nova management led the company to bankruptcy after employing illicit accounting procedures and business practices to expand its operations. Sahashi, 57, was indicted in July on charges of embezzlement.

The plaintiffs — including students and company employees in Osaka, Kyoto, Hyogo, Nara, Ehime and Miyazaki prefectures — also accused the audit companies of allowing the Nova management to continue such unlawful practices, according to the complaint.

Some condemned the management for failing to reimburse tuition fees even after canceling their contracts.

“We would like to help former students by pressing charges against Nova over its reckless business practices,” lawyer Takanori Ozaki said at a news conference.

http://caas.tmcnet.com/news/2008/10/17/3711039.htm

Berlitz strike grows despite naysayers

Historic six-month action is starting to reap dividends

Despite scabs, naysayers and second-guessing pundits in the English-language media, Berlitz teachers are making history. With more than 100 teachers striking at dozens of schools around the Kanto region for over six months, the industrial action at Berlitz is now the largest sustained strike in Japan’s language school history.

Begunto demands a 4.6 percent base pay hike and a one-off bonus of one month’s salary. Berlitz Japan has not raised teachers’ base pay for 16 years. Three years ago, the language school lowered starting pay by over 10 percent per lesson, a cut only partially mitigated by a performance-based raise this year.

These demands are carried over from last year and are the two key demands of Begunto’s 2008 “shunto.”

Shunto is the traditional labor offensive that unions around the country wage each spring. It literally means “spring battle.” In Japan, even labor disputes invoke seasonal change.

Although management’s two proposals have thus far fallen short of Begunto’s demands, members are showing extraordinary energy and commitment to building momentum in the strike until the demands are met. Two language centers that have had particularly effective walkouts are the powerful Akasaka and Ikebukuro “shops.” More than half of all Berlitz schools in Kanto have participated in the strike.

In order to realize the strike demands, the union has organized and coordinated sophisticated surgical strikes, including bait-and-switch and strike feints. This keeps bosses on their toes.

Due to logistic issues, Begunto often can give written notice to the company only several minutes before the start of a particular strike. So management has had to scramble to cover lessons. They sometimes send and pay replacement teachers to cover lessons that end up not being struck, so nonstrikes can be as costly to the company as strikes. On other occasions, management sets up a team of replacement teachers at a nearby cafe, ready to rush over at a moment’s notice in case a strike occurs. The union calls these scabs-in-waiting “caffeine cowboys.” The company also assigns teachers to special “scab-watch” periods, meaning they get paid to wait in case a strike might happen.

Berlitz apparently prefers to spend a great deal of money and energy breaking the strike rather than resolving it by meeting the union’s reasonable demands. Their reasonableness becomes evident in light of Japan’s rising consumer price index (up 2.1 percent year-on-year in August), the slashing of starting pay in 2005 and the 16-year pay hike drought.

In addition to striking nearly every day, Begunto has held demonstrations at various schools around the Kanto Plain nearly every week and has toured Tokyo several times in a sound truck, announcing over a loud speaker, to make sure that the public knows why Berlitz teachers are fighting.

Begunto recently posted on the bulletin board of many Berlitz schools a document entitled “Definition of a Scab,” which caused some controversy. The definition actually belongs to author Jack London and includes such colorful hyperbole as:

“After God had finished the rattlesnake, the toad, the vampire, He had some awful substance left with which He made a scab.

“A scab is a two-legged animal with a cork-screw soul, a water-logged brain, a combination backbone of jelly and glue. Where others have hearts, he carries a tumor of rotten principles.

“When a scab comes down the street, men turn their backs and angels weep in heaven, and the Devil shuts the gates of Hell to keep him out.”

That neither London nor Begunto meant the above definition in a literal way hardly needs mention. That union members are frustrated every time a fellow teacher chooses to help break the strike is why the document went up.

Union members never insist that every single Berlitz employee strike alongside his or her coworkers. They have only asked that teachers refrain from covering struck lessons when it is optional, as it often is. Scabs undermine the hard work, sacrifice and dedication of striking teachers and prolong resolution of the dispute.

One thing I learned from this strike is that there is no way to stay out of it. Each employee is forced by the circumstances of the strike to make a personal decision, which is either: 1) to join the strike; 2) to stay on the sidelines but refuse to cover lessons when it is optional; 3) to help break the strike by choosing to cover struck lessons.

Demonstrating its moderation in comparison with many labor unions, Begunto members have decided to consider only members of the third group as full-fledged “scabs.” In my opinion, it is a difference between courage and cowardice, principle versus pusillanimity.

It is easy to criticize the strike or the union, especially from the sidelines. What is hard is to get up and do something, to make a difference, fight for justice, take action right at the front lines. Begunto members do more than talk ? they act. The small number of teachers and staff who oppose the strike and/or the union will themselves benefit when the union wins higher pay for all.

In fact, thanks to the solidarity, dedication and hard work of union members – and a strike entails quite a bit of hard work – management has already made two pay hike offers, the latest on Sept. 26. At the time of writing, the union was widely expected to reject the second offer as far short of demands. Yet even this offer would never have happened without the efforts of the Begunto strikers.

Most surprisingly, the strike has been very successful as a union-building tool, drawing in many new members impressed that the union is taking positive action.

The right to strike is guaranteed by the Japanese Constitution, the Trade Union Law and international law. An individual has precious little negotiation strength vis-a-vis a big company (or even a small one). A union acting out of solidarity multiplies the negotiating position of its members exponentially. It also turns the workplace from an effective dictatorship into something approaching a democracy.

Teachers at Simul International – like Berlitz Japan a subsidiary of Benesse Corp. – are also striking, “simultaneously,” as it were. In their case, they are fighting for enrollment in Japan’s “shakai hoken” pension and health scheme. The union argues that Simul management is violating both the Health Insurance Law and Pension Insurance Law by failing to enroll its full-time employees.

So Benesse Group has its hands full with big strikes at two of its member companies at the same time.

It’s ironic that some employees, such as the teacher in the recent article in Tokyo’s Metropolis magazine (“Banding Together”), complain that the strike has not yet led to total victory when they themselves are part of the problem. I would say to them that we have not won yet because you have not joined the strike. Strength in numbers – again it hardly needs mentioning.

When more teachers join the strike rather than grumble that it “hasn’t worked yet,” the union will win.

Louis Carlet is Berlitz General Union’s Tokyo Representative, National Union of General Workers Tokyo Nambu.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fl20080930zg.html

Nova head avoids fresh indictment

The Osaka District Public Prosecutor’s Office announced Tuesday it will not indict the former president of Nova Corp. for failing to pay the salaries of non-Japanese teachers and Japanese personnel.

Nozomu Sahashi, 56, is already under indictment for embezzling ¥320 million from reserve funds for corporate workers at the failed foreign-language school chain.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20080730b1.html

Nova chief indicted for embezzling firm’s funds

Nozomu Sahashi, former president of the bankrupt Nova Corp. language-school chain, was indicted Tuesday for embezzling corporate funds, prosecutors said.

Sahashi, 56, allegedly diverted around ¥320 million from an employment benefit fund last July 20 to reimburse tuition fees for people who canceled their contracts for language courses.

Sahashi has admitted to the allegations, changing his previous stance that he had believed that part of the funds could be used for the company’s operations, according to investigative sources.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20080716a8.html

Nova’s Sahashi indicted over fund

Nozomu Sahashi, former president of failed language school chain Nova Corp., was indicted Tuesday by the Osaka District Public Prosecutors Office, on charges of misusing 320 million yen from an employees’ mutual aid group fund to refund student fees.

The prosecutors decided to stop pursuing attempts to indict Toshihiko Murata, who was the president of Nova affiliate Nova Kikaku at the time of the alleged offense, after concluding his involvement was purely on a subordinate level.

According to sources close to the investigation, Sahashi was the chairman of Shayukai, a mutual aid group of Nova employees that deducted money from members’ salaries to create an employee welfare fund.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20080716TDY02307.htm