Job Recruitment Website - Zhaopincom - What are the minimum requirements for Japanese majors to be Japanese teachers in secondary schools in the future?

What are the minimum requirements for Japanese majors to be Japanese teachers in secondary schools in the future?

At present, you must be at least an excellent Japanese master or doctor who graduated from top foreign language universities such as Shanghai International Studies University, Beijing Foreign Studies University, Peking University and Nanjing University. Teacher qualification certificate and Putonghua certificate are the basic conditions for being a teacher. Without these two, it is impossible to be a teacher. Have a Japanese professional certificate of Grade 8.

The qualification certificate of middle school teachers is no different from that of other schools (vocational high schools and technical schools). Ordinary teachers must have a bachelor's degree or above, and practice instructors can have a technical secondary school degree or above (focusing on practical ability). Non-normal graduates must take an examination of teaching pedagogy and psychology in middle schools and reach the standard of Putonghua (generally second-class B). After an interview (usually in class), you can go to the education department to apply for the qualification certificate of middle school teachers.

Japanese (Japanese: Japanese; English: Japanese), whose language family is unknown, is used as the first language by more than12.6 million people.

Academically, Japanese can be divided into four dialects: Kyushu Japanese, Kansai Japanese, Kanto Japanese and Bazhang Japanese. It can be subdivided into thirteen dialects: Yu Sa dialect, Zhu Fei dialect and Fengri dialect belonging to Kyushu Japanese, Chinese dialect, Yunbo dialect, Shikoku dialect, Feng Jingen dialect and Hokuriku dialect belonging to Kanto Japanese, and Dongshan dialect, Kanto dialect, inland Hokkaido dialect, Northeast dialect and coastal Hokkaido dialect belonging to Kanto Japanese.

The origin of Japanese has always been a controversial issue. Modern Japanese are nearly 35% literati, 32% yayoi and 20% Han Chinese, which shows the complexity of Japanese origin. Japanese in Meiji era classified Japanese as "Altaic language family", which was later denied. Americans Homer Hulbert (1863-1949) and Konojin (1919-2008) believe that Japanese belongs to the Dravidian language family, Nishida Takashi (1928-20/). Bai Guisi (1945-), an American, thinks that Japanese belongs to the Japanese-Koguryo language family, that is, Japanese is homologous to Koguryo language distributed on the Korean peninsula during the Sui and Tang Dynasties, while Alexander Wowen (196 1-), a Russian, thinks that Yayoi people speak South Asian or Dong-Tai languages.

During the Three Kingdoms period, Chinese characters were introduced into Japan. In the Tang Dynasty, I invented a pen name that was popular among women. The official language is classical Chinese, so modern Japanese is greatly influenced by ancient Chinese. Take Showa 3 1 (1956) as an example. In Japanese vocabulary, Japanese accounts for 36.6% and Chinese accounts for 53.6%. In the 39th year of Showa (1964), the National Institute of Japan conducted a survey on 90 magazine terms and obtained Japanese.