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Women make up record 45.5% of university students in Japan: Study

  (Kyodo News)
Wed, August 26, 2020

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Women make up record 45.5% of university students in Japan: Study Female university students totaled a record 1.19 million, maintaining a rising trend since 1981. (Shutterstock/KPG_Payless)

W

omen accounted for a record 45.5 percent of students enrolled in university courses in Japan as of May 1, the provisional results of a recent government study showed Tuesday.

The annual education ministry survey showed the number of students had increased by 14,752 from a year earlier to 2.62 million, marking an all-time high for the sixth year in a row.

Female university students totaled a record 1.19 million, maintaining a rising trend since 1981.

"The need for higher education has increased among both men and women," an official of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology said.

But those in the "others" category, including working adults who were nonregular students or completing designated courses, fell by 16,350 to 32,996.

Read also: UGM is Indonesia's best university of 2020, says uniRank

The drop was likely due to universities suspending classes and downsizing their acceptance of such students due to the novel coronavirus pandemic.

The response deadline for the study, which tallies educational institutions and enrolled students, was extended by around a month this year due to the pandemic.

Only a portion of the data has been released so far, with additional information, such as the rates of university enrollment and employment following graduation, to become available around December.

Meanwhile, the number of elementary school students stood at 6.31 million, and those in junior high school at 3.21 million, both the lowest on record amid a declining birth rate.

The number of high school students fell by 76,018 to 3.09 million. But students attending high school through distance learning increased to 206,994, topping 200,000 for the first time. The growth highlights demand for diversified ways of learning that are not reliant on physical attendance, the education ministry said.

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