Japanese-language schools fail accreditation test

70% fall short of status because of 'inadequate' curricula and excess debt

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Students attend a Japanese-language school in Tokyo. (Photo by Satoko Kawasaki)

EUGENE LANG, Nikkei staff writer

TOKYO -- Japan has accredited just 22 Japanese-language schools that serve immigrants, the government said Wednesday, meaning 70% of the first wave of applicants were not approved under newly established standards.

In April, Japan put in place an accreditation process for Japanese-language schools. Seventy-two schools, including those that had yet to open, applied by the mid-May deadline to be screened.

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