Japanese online virtual high school students can get graduation certificates online.
according to the daily news, remote education high school in the Central District of Chiba, Japan - Ming Sheng high school opened the first network high school in Japan. Students can finish high school learning through the Internet without having to go to school. On the 23 day, the online high school held the opening ceremony and officially began the class after the golden week of May. The teachers who participated in the lecture said: "we will continue to explore and enrich our high school life with our students." It is reported that the high school enrolled 204 new students this year (including grade two or three students).
the network high school students can set their own image on the Internet, with more than 200 hairstyles, clothing and other combinations, which will be the incarnation of the students in the network school. Students can choose their favorite time, go to school "school", in the classroom of the network school, the campus, can also communicate with the students through the dialogue. The teacher will also come and go to the virtual campus. Before the "teacher's office", there is a question box, where you can talk freely with your teacher about learning and life.
, according to the school, students sit in the classroom and watch 20-30 minutes of video teaching and then test their understanding by quizzes. The class, including the test, is usually 50 minutes. In order to improve students' learning enthusiasm, students will get "learning points" in every class. Some Chinese character games or English word games can also add points, while using integral points can buy the clothes and furniture of virtual characters. In addition, schools require students to submit four essays each year. After studying here for three years, enough credits will be enough to qualify for high school.
dialogue with students in virtual high school
the school was founded in 2000, the first private distance education high school in Chiba County, mainly for students who want to go to school but are unable to go to school for some reason. In view of the distance learning process, middle school students can learn only by themselves, without students, easy to feel lonely, the school five years ago produced the idea, the use of the network, to connect these students to distance education. When discussing the idea,
some people questioned: "will this way exacerbate students' dependence on the Internet and their autism?" In this regard, the school also strongly urged students to experience the picking activities and cultural festivals held in the agricultural garden of the school. "We don't just let students study on the Internet," said Shimoda Masaki, the teacher. "We want to provide a new choice for students who do not want to go to school and at home. If it is a chance for them to come to their own school, it will be better."