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  2. Assistant Language Teacher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assistant_Language_Teacher

    Assistant Language Teacher. In Japan, an Assistant Language Teacher (ALT) is a foreign national serving as an assistant teacher (paraprofessional educator) in a Japanese classroom, particularly for English. The term was created by the Japanese Ministry of Education at the time of the creation of the JET Programme as a translation of the term ...

  3. JET Programme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JET_Programme

    The Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (外国語青年招致事業, Gaikokugo Seinen Shōchi Jigyō), shortly as JET Programme (JETプログラム, Jetto Puroguramu), is a teaching program sponsored by the Japanese government that brings university graduates to Japan as Assistant Language Teachers (ALTs), Sports Education Advisors (SEAs) or as Coordinators for International Relations (CIRs ...

  4. English-language education in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English-language_education...

    By the year 1874, there were 91 foreign language schools in Japan, out of which 82 of them taught English. And in 1923, Englishman Harold E. Palmer was invited to Japan by the Ministry of Education, where he would later found the Institute for Research in English Teaching in Tokyo and introduce the aural-oral approach to teaching English.

  5. ECC (eikaiwa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECC_(eikaiwa)

    ECC Foreign Language Institute (ECC外語学院, -gaigo gakuin) is one of the major private English teaching companies or eikaiwa in Japan. [1] It is part of the ECC group. [2] ECC (Education through Communication for the Community) is based in the Kansai region of Japan and also has many branches in the Chūbu and Kantō regions.

  6. Teaching English as a second or foreign language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teaching_English_as_a...

    The Japan Association for Language Teaching (JALT) is the largest nonprofit organization for language teachers (mainly native English speakers), with nearly 3,000 members. [46] Japan was praised for its first-wave reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic , and schools were able to hire instructors with business visas for a short time in the fall of 2020.

  7. Japan Association for Language Teaching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_Association_for...

    Japan's "largest convocation of language educators", JALT has 2,800 members, many of whom are non-Japanese who have settled in Japan. Each member may belong to a local chapter, and has the option of also belonging to Special Interest Groups (SIGs).

  8. Eikaiwa school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eikaiwa_school

    Eikaiwa kyōshitsu (英会話教室) or Eikaiwa gakkō (英会話学校)[1] are English conversation schools, usually privately operated, in Japan. It is a combination of the word eikaiwa (英会話, English language conversation) and gakkō (学校, school) or kyōshitsu (教室, classroom). Although the Japanese public education system ...

  9. Aeon (eikaiwa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeon_(eikaiwa)

    Aeon Corporation of Japan株式会社イーオン. Aeon (株式会社イーオン, Kabushikigaisha Īon) is a chain of English conversation teaching companies in Japan. [1] It is considered one of the historical "Big Four" eikaiwa schools. [2] The company operates 320 branch schools throughout Japan, and maintains staff recruitment offices in ...