Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education (東京都教育委員会 Tōkyō-to Kyōiku Iinkai) is the board of education in Tokyo, Japan. The board directly manages most of the public high schools in all 23 special wards, the Western Tokyo, and all islands under Tokyo's jurisdiction.

In 2019, policies requiring students who do not naturally have black hair to dye it as such were struck down.[1] In 2017, as stated by survey results, 57% of the state-operated schools in the metropolis required students who did not have hair naturally colored black to submit documents proving so.[2] The Japanese Communist Party criticized measures requiring parents to prove hair color.[3]

The 23 Wards[edit]

Adachi[edit]

High schools[edit]

Arakawa[edit]

High schools[edit]

Bunkyō[edit]

High schools[edit]

Chiyoda[edit]

High schools[edit]

Hibiya High School

Chūō[edit]

High schools[edit]

Edogawa[edit]

High schools[edit]

Itabashi[edit]

High schools[edit]

Katsushika[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kita[edit]

High schools[edit]

Koto[edit]

High schools[edit]

Meguro[edit]

High schools[edit]

Minato[edit]

High schools[edit]

Nakano[edit]

High schools[edit]

Nerima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Ōta[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kamata High School
Ōmori High School

Setagaya[edit]

High schools[edit]

Shibuya[edit]

High schools[edit]

Shinagawa[edit]

High schools[edit]

Shinjuku[edit]

High schools[edit]

Suginami[edit]

High schools[edit]

Sumida[edit]

junior high schools[edit]

High schools[edit]

Taitō[edit]

junior high schools[edit]

High schools[edit]

Toshima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Western Tokyo (incorporated cities)[edit]

Akiruno[edit]

High schools[edit]

Akishima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Chōfu[edit]

High schools[edit]

Fuchū[edit]

High schools[edit]

Fussa[edit]

High schools[edit]

Hachiōji[edit]

High schools[edit]

Hamura[edit]

High schools[edit]

Higashikurume[edit]

High schools[edit]

Higashimurayama[edit]

High schools[edit]

Higashiyamato[edit]

High schools[edit]

Hino[edit]

High schools[edit]

Inagi[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kiyose[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kodaira[edit]

High schools[edit]

Koganei[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kokubunji[edit]

High schools[edit]

Komae[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kunitachi[edit]

High schools[edit]

Machida[edit]

High schools[edit]

Mitaka[edit]

High schools[edit]

Mushashimurayama[edit]

High schools[edit]

Musashino[edit]

junior high schools[edit]

High schools[edit]

Nishitōkyō[edit]

High schools[edit]

Ōme[edit]

High schools[edit]

Tachikawa[edit]

High schools[edit]

Tama[edit]

High schools[edit]

Nishitama District[edit]

High schools[edit]

Mizuho Nōgei High School

Tokyo-Administered Islands[edit]

Hachijō[edit]

High schools[edit]

Kōzu-shima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Miyakejima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Niijima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Ogasawara[edit]

High schools[edit]

Izu Ōshima[edit]

High schools[edit]

Specialized schools[edit]

Technical schools[edit]

23 special wards[edit]

Schools for the blind[edit]

23 special wards[edit]

Western Tokyo (incorporated cities)[edit]

Schools for the deaf[edit]

23 special wards[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Tokyo bans forced hair-dyeing at metropolitan junior, senior high schools". Mainichi Shimbun. 2019-09-07. Retrieved 2019-09-09. - Japanese: "黒染め指導禁止通知 都教委、都立中高に文書で示す /東京"
  2. ^ "Survey: 57% of Tokyo high schools demand hair-color proof". Asahi Shimbun. 2017-05-01. Archived from the original on 2017-05-02. Retrieved 2019-09-09.
  3. ^ Ikegami, Momomo (2021-02-27). "Hair color code at Tokyo high schools raises JCP hackles". Asahi Shimbun. Retrieved 2021-02-28.

External links[edit]