Takamine Hideo

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Takamine Hideo (高嶺秀夫?) (1854-1910) was an administrator and educator in Meiji period Japan.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Takamine was born to a samurai family in Aizu-Wakamatsu domain (present day Fukushima Prefecture) in 1854. After completing his studies in the feudal domain's school, Nisshinkan, he became a page to the daimyo Matsudaira Katamori from April of 1868 to the surrender of the domain to imperial forces in the Boshin War in November that same year.

He was sentenced to confinement for a time in Tokyo, and was placed in the care of the Matsudaira clan of the Tanba-Kameyama domain, Tamba Province. As part of his studies, he entered the private school of Numa Morikazu, where he began to learn English. He soon attended Keio-gijyuku (present day Keio University founded by Fukuzawa Yukichi) and received a scholarship to attend Oswego Normal School (present day SUNY Oswego), in New York in the United States from 1875-1878. He was fortunate to attend Oswego during the very height of its fame as a progressive and innovative institution for teacher education. Takamine interacted with E. A. Sheldon (the director of the school) and lived in the house of famed educator Johann Heinrich Hermann Krüsi (1817-1903).

During his time in the United States he also attended Anderson School of Natural History on Penikese Island during the summer of 1877 and spent one semester studying under Burt Wilder, a famous zoologist at Cornell University. He was the first Japanese (some believe to be the first Asian) to have a teaching credential.

[edit] Later career

After returning to Japan, Takamine worked as an assistant to American scientist Edward Sylvester Morse and accompanied him on a trek to the rugged areas of Hokkaidō which were occupied by the Ainu.

He eventually became the Vice Principal and Principal of the Tokyo Normal School/ Tokyo Higher Normal School (same school but the name was changed), Principal of the Tokyo Art School, and Tokyo Music School. He was also deeply involved in women's education and became the Principal of Tokyo Women's Higher Normal School.

Generally, he is remembered as the man who introduced Pestallozian teaching methods and philosophy to Japan due to his translation of James Johonnot's Principles and Practice of Teaching into Japanese as Kyoiku Shinron [the new theory of education] 1885. Other projects he focused on included Japan's Exhibit in the Columbian Exposition of 1893 and he was involved in the Japan-British Exhibition (1910). His legacy is mixed, as despite his attempts to implement the American model of education in Japan, in the end, the government adopted the more conservative, German model.

[edit] Some of Takamine's Publications

  • Takamine Hideo, trans Kyoiku Shinron [The New Theory of Education] 1885
  • Takamine Hideo and Iwakawa Tomotaro Dobutsu Hikaku Kaibozu [Anatomical Charts of Comparative Zoology 4 vol] Tokyo: Fukyusha 1885
  • Ministry of Education Beikoku Gakkoho [the American School Systems] 1878 (In a letter to his mother Takamine mentions that he translated over 200 pages for this manual. His name does not appear in the text).
  • Hideo Takamine "Address at Tokyo Normal School, " Tokyo Meikeikai zasshi No. 14 (March 1884) p 9-21 recorded by Torasaburo Wakabayashi faithful student and colleague

[edit] References

  • Ahagon, Chokusei. "The Influence of the Oswego Movement upon Japanese education, through Hideo Takamine in Early Meiji Japan 1860s-1880s" Phd Diss. State University of New York, Buffalo 1995
  • Ishikawa, H. (1902). Joshi Koto Shihan Gakko Kocho Takamine Hideo Kun (The Principal of the Woman’s Senior Normal School, Mr Takamine Hideo). Kyoiku Kai, 1(11), 73. (In Japanese)
  • Japan's Modern Educational System: A History of the First Hundred Years Ministry of Education, Science and Culture
  • Anderson, Ronald S. Education in Japan: A Century of Modern Development Washington: U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (U.S. Government Printing Office), 1975.
  • Beauchamp, Edward R. and Akira Iriye, ed. Foreign Employees in Nineteenth-Century Japan. London: Westview Press, 1990.
  • Johonnot, James. Principles and Practice of Teaching. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1878.
  • Kaigo, Tokiomi . "The American Influence on the Education in Japan" Journal of Educational Sociology Vol. 26, No. 1 (Sep., 1952), pp. 9-15
  • Krüsi, Hermann. Recollections of my life, by Hermann Kru¨si. An autobiographical sketch supplemented by extracts from his personal records and a review of his literary productions together with selected essays, arranged and ed. by Elizabeth Sheldon Alling. New York, The Grafton press [c1907]
  • Kuno, Akiko. translated by Kirsten McIvor. Unexpected Destinations: The Poignant Story of Japan's First Vassar Graduate. New York: Kodansha International, 1993.
  • Lincicome, Mark. Principle, Praxis, and the Politics of Educational Reform in Meiji Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1995.
  • Mihara, Shigeyoshi. "Ukiyoe. Some Aspects of Japanese Classical Picture Prints" Monumenta Nipponica. Vol. 6, No. 1/2 (1943), pp. 245-261
  • Morse, Edward Sylvester Japan day by day, 1877, 1878-79, 1882-83. Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin company, 1917.
  • Nishihira, Isao. Western Influences of the Modernization of Japanese Education, 1868-1912. Phd Diss. 1972. Oswego State Normal School, e. HISTORICAL SKETCHES RELATING TO THE FIRST QUARTER CENTURY OF THE STATE NORMAL SCHOOL AND TRAINING SCHOOL AT OSWEGO NY B.J. Oliphant and Printer 1888.
  • _____. History of the First Half Century of the Oswego State Normal and Training School at Oswego, NY The Radcliffe Press, 1913.
  • Rogers, Dorothy. Oswego: fountainhead of teacher education; a century in the Sheldon tradition. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts [1961]
  • Straight, Willard Dickerman, 1880-1918. The Willard Straight papers at Cornell University. Ithaca, N.Y. : Photo Science of Cornell University, 1973. 12 reels ; 35 mm. (REEL 1,8,9 and 12)
  • Wayman, Dorothy G. Edward Sylvester Morse: A Biography Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard Univ. Press 1942

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