Colegio Japonés de Las Palmas
Colegio Japonés de Las Palmas ラス・パルマス日本人学校 | |
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Location | |
Carretera Del Centro 47, Tafira Alta, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Espana | |
Coordinates | 28°05′44″N 15°25′24″W / 28.0954394°N 15.423389499999985°W |
Information | |
Type | Japanese International school |
Established | 1973 |
Website | Colegio Japonés de Las Palmas at the Wayback Machine (archive index) |
Colegio Japonés de Las Palmas (ラス・パルマス日本人学校, Rasu Parumasu Nihonjin Gakkō) was a Japanese international school in Tafira Alta, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain.[1]
History
[edit]It opened in October 1973, making it the first Japanese school in Spain and the third-oldest in Europe if the Canary Islands are counted as being in Europe.[2] A Japanese teacher arrived to the island as it opened.[3] The school served members of the Japanese community involved in the fishing industry. Due to regulations, the business decreased in size, and accordingly the school decreased in size.[4]
In 2001, the Japanese fleet was moved from Las Palmas, leading to a reduction in the area's Japanese community. The number of students fell below the minimum number supported by the Japanese government.[3] It was closed in March 2001,[5] and was replaced by the Escuela Complementaria Japonesa de Las Palmas (ラスパルマス日本語学校), a part-time school.[3] The decline of the Japanese community of Las Palmas led many institutions catering to the Japanese community, including the day school, to close.[2] The closure of the day school resulted in the demise of the island's Japanese cultural exchange programme.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "欧州の日本人学校一覧" (Archive). MEXT. Retrieved on 6 April 2015. "ラス・パルマス Japanese School of Las Palmas Carretera Del Centro 47, Tafira Alta, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Espana "
- ^ a b Ávila Tàpies, Rosalía (University of Kyoto) and Josefina Domínguez Mujica (Universidad de Las Palmas). "The Canary Islands in the Japanese Imaginary: The Analysis of Three Contemporary Narratives Archived 2015-11-26 at the Wayback Machine" (Spanish: Canarias en el imaginario japonés: el análisis de tres narrativas contemporáneas;, PDF archive). Anuario de Estudios Atlánticos ISSN 0570-4065, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (2011), no. 57, pp. 525-56. Received 26 May 2010. Accepted 30 June 2010. English abstract available. CITATION, p. 528 (PDF 4/38): "El descenso de japoneses afectó a estas instituciones y a la asistencia prestada. Así,[...]El colegio japonés «rasuparumasu nihonjin gakko-» en Tafira Baja, abierto en el año 1973 (octubre) como el tercer colegio japonés más antiguo de Europa y el primero de España, se cerró definitivamente en el 2000 (marzo)."
- ^ a b c "Historia" (Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine). Escuela Complementaria Japonesa de Las Palmas.
- ^ "ラスパルマス日本人学校の概要" (Las Palmas Japanese School profile). Las Palmas Japanese School. June 10, 2000. Retrieved on January 13, 2019. "企業も目立ち、児童・生徒数も多かった。しかし、近年アフリカ西海岸のタコ・イカ漁に対する規制が厳しくなり、企業の事務所移転や人員削減があり、本校の児童・生徒数も減少の傾向にある。こうした中で、小規模・少人数学級の特性を生かして、基礎・基本の徹底はもちろん、「創造活動」と「情緒・体力養成の活動」の2本立で、"
- ^ "関係機関へのリンク" (). The Japan School of Doha. Retrieved on 31 March 2015. "アテネ日本人学校(2007年3月休校)" and "ラス・パルマス日本人学校(2001年3月閉校)"
- ^ "INTERCAMBIOS CULTURALES CON LA CULTURA JAPONESA EN EL CEIP "MANOLO ORTEGA"". Intercambio de experiencias (Revista 4). Tamadab (Centros de Profesorado de Gran Canaria), Government of the Canary Islands. 2001-04-25. Retrieved 2019-01-13.
Pero lamentablemente todo tiene un final, en este caso se trata del cierre definitivo del colegio japonés de Las Palmas, [...] Siempre es triste que un centro deba cerrar sus puertas,
External links
[edit]- Colegio Japonés de Las Palmas at the Wayback Machine (archive index) (in Japanese)
- 坂東省次 (2003). "カナリア諸島 たびたびの旅" (PDF). スペイン語圏を知る本(その31). Kyoto University of Foreign Studies.
- International schools in Spain
- Japanese international schools in Spain
- Nihonjin gakkō in Europe
- Japanese international schools in Africa
- Private schools in Spain
- 1973 establishments in Spain
- Educational institutions established in 1973
- 2001 disestablishments in Spain
- Educational institutions disestablished in 2001
- Defunct Japanese international schools
- Spanish school stubs
- Japanese school stubs