0
|
1 <html>
|
|
2
|
|
3 <!-- Mirrored from users.eniinternet.com/bradleym/JapEd.html by HTTrack Website Copier/3.x [XR&CO'2014], Sun, 06 Nov 2022 06:49:33 GMT -->
|
|
4 <head>
|
|
5 <title></title>
|
|
6 </head>
|
|
7 <body text="#000000" link="#0000ff" vlink="#551a8b" alink="#ff0000" bgcolor="#c0c0c0">
|
|
8 <a name="Go In Japanese Education">
|
|
9 <p><hr>
|
|
10
|
|
11 <br wp="br1"><br wp="br2">
|
|
12 <p><strong>Go In Japanese Education</strong>
|
|
13
|
|
14 <p><strong>© 2002 Milton N. Bradley</a></strong>
|
|
15
|
|
16 <p>To understand the Japanese experience and assess its relevance to the US, some historical
|
|
17 background is helpful. Go was brought to Japan from China in the 8<sup>th </sup>century A.D. and quickly
|
|
18 became the favorite intellectual pastime of the nobility and Samurai. In 1612, only a few years
|
|
19 after he became Shogun in 1603, Tokugawa Ieyasu institutionalized Go by establishing the Go
|
|
20 Academy, and this exalted and specially privileged position for Go in Japanese society remained
|
|
21 intact for over 250 years until the fall of the Shogunate in the 1868 revolution. Although in
|
|
22 today's Japan Go masters are "only" respected and wealthy professionals (like those in Sumo,
|
|
23 Tennis or Golf), Go still occupies a unique position of honor in Japanese cultural life on a par
|
|
24 with that of art, literature and music. An estimated 10,000,000 million Japanese (almost 10% of
|
|
25 the entire population!) are ardent Go players, including many of their business executives and 4
|
|
26 of their 6 Nobel Prize winners, and its popularity is so great that tutorial programs and
|
|
27 championship matches are routinely broadcast on national TV.
|
|
28
|
|
29 <p>Mr.Kazuaki Minami, author of a book called "Go and Education", says <em><strong>"One of the most
|
|
30 important things that Go gives a child is the ability to concentrate"</strong></em>. Richard Bozulich of
|
|
31 Tokyo's Ishi Press reports that Dr.Akira Tano, a Japanese educational researcher and head of the
|
|
32 Child Psychology department at Chiba National University, has done extensive testing of young
|
|
33 Japanese children and has concluded that <strong><em>"studying GO is the best way to develop a child's
|
|
34 innate intellectual abilities"</strong>.</em> He also points out that <em>"the younger a child learns to play GO, the
|
|
35 better the results"</em>, and considers the age of 4 or 5 to be the best at which to begin. (At this early
|
|
36 age, most children typically learn Go <em>informally</em> by the same method of "osmosis" used in
|
|
37 acquiring language - just by being immersed in a milieu in which it is being practiced, in this
|
|
38 case simply by watching the excellent play of their parents and the experts shown on TV.)
|
|
39
|
|
40 <p><a href="ChildGo.html"><Font Color="#0033FF"><strong>Continue</strong></Font></a>
|
|
41
|
|
42 <p>Click Here To Return To<a href="index.html"><Font Color="#0033FF"><strong> Milt's Go
|
|
43 Page</strong></Font></a>
|
|
44
|
|
45 <p><hr>
|
|
46
|
|
47 <br wp="br1"><br wp="br2">
|
|
48 </body>
|
|
49
|
|
50 <!-- Mirrored from users.eniinternet.com/bradleym/JapEd.html by HTTrack Website Copier/3.x [XR&CO'2014], Sun, 06 Nov 2022 06:49:33 GMT -->
|
|
51 </html>
|