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In Taiwan, the elementary schools would be established
to introduce Japanese culture to a broad population of young
Taiwanese. A smaller number of institutions for higher learning
would emerge as well.
Education in the elementary schools
had two primary objectives. The Taiwanese children would be
taught the Japanese language, and they would learn "ethics and
practical knowledge, in order to cultivate them in qualities
of Japanese citizenship." In this way, the Japanese hoped to
unite the population in their loyalty to the state, as well
as provide them with the "discipline, skills, and attitudes
Japan's version of modernization required of its people." Mastering
the Japanese language was the key to educating these children
in the Japanese way, and the first schools established in Taiwan
were primarily for language training. By separating the students
from their native language, the Japanese hoped to encourage
identification with Japan.
Through
the vernacular the child, to begin with, enters into the
thought and feeling of those with whom he is most closely
linked both in the home and in the village; through the
vernacular he also enters into the minds of those who,
in song and story, have given voice to their deepest and
inmost thoughts; through the vernacular he becomes heir
to the social customs and ceremonies of his people. Thus
the child comes to value his mother tongue not only as
a medium for self expression, but also as the means whereby
he can secure for himself all that is worthy of his loyalty
and devotion to his cultured past... |
The Japanese language was substituted
for the vernacular in elementary schools. Little did the Japanese
know their Taiwanese students would eventually use their knowledge
of Japanese as an important tool during the literary resistance
movement against Japanese rule.
After the completion of elementary school,
options for pursuing higher education were severely limited
for the Taiwanese. The Japanese intent was to win support for
the administrative and clerical needs of the government. Institutions
for higher learning open to the Taiwanese included only normal
schools (for training teachers) and medical schools.
At
this point, the general population of Taiwan was clearly divided.
The urban centers were largely populated by Japanese citizens.
Japanese citizens had been encouraged (by the offer of government
subsides) to immigrate to Taiwan in early stages of colonial
development.
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