Henry Dyer: Pioneer of Engineering Education in Japan
Autor Nobuhiro Miyoshi Traducere de Takuji Sarada, Aiko Saradaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 sep 2004
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781901903669
ISBN-10: 1901903664
Pagini: 194
Dimensiuni: 145 x 225 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
ISBN-10: 1901903664
Pagini: 194
Dimensiuni: 145 x 225 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Cuprins
Acknowledgements to the English Edition; Acknowledgements to the Original Japanese Edition; Prologue to the Original Study; List of Plates; List of Tables; Introduction; 1 The Scene is Set for the ‘Britain of the East’; 2 Dyer’s Educational Experiment in Japan; 3 The ‘Boomerang Phenomenon’ of Educational Experimentation; 4 Dyer’s Studies on Japan: A Model of National Evolution; 5 Epilogue to the Original Study; 6 Dyer Revisited: Japan in the Twenty-first Century – On Her Way to Globalization; 7 Retrospective; Afterword; Sources of Photographs and Illustrations; Dyer’s Writings; Dyer’s Articles of Agreement; Index
Notă biografică
Nobuhiro Miyoshi is Professor Emeritus, University of Hiroshima, as well as President, Hijiyama University, Hiroshima. He was born in Oita Prefecture, Japan, in 1932 and as a graduate student began researching education in Britain, with special reference to J.Kay-Shuttleworth. He subsequently expanded his research into UK-Japan educational exchange where he found Henry Dyer the subject of greatest academic interest. Professor Miyoshi has published a number of books on the history of Japan’s industrial education, including engineering – commercial and agricultural – in relation to both comparative methods and international exchange, and is today a leading figure in the study of industrial education in Japan.
Descriere
Ignored in Britain and forgotten for generations in Japan, Henry Dyer (1848-1918), engineer, educationalist and author of two major works on Japan as well as dozens of papers and pamphlets and other works, has been the subject of ongoing research by Nobuhiro Miyoshi (Hiroshima University) for over thirty years, culminating in this updated and expanded version of his original 1989 biography, Dyer no Nippon. At the age of 24, even before he had taken his final exams at Glasgow University, Henry Dyer was appointed principal of Japan’s new Imperial College of Engineering (ICE), with a remit to set up a world-class engineering institution that would deliver the engineers with the technical know-how and expertise to build the New Japan. Dyer’s appointment by Ito Hirobumi, the then Vice-Minister for Public Works and a member of the Japanese Embassy in London (later to become Prime Minister). In the nine years Dyer was in Japan – unfettered by ancient academic traditions and protocols – he formulated an approach to engineering education that enabled the ICE to become the most advanced institution of its kind in the world, later to become part of Tokyo University. This study makes an important new contribution to o-yatoi (‘hired foreigner’) studies of the Meiji period, particularly in the field of education, and helps illuminate existing perceptions regarding the nature of Japan’s route to modernization.