In Japan, teachers rebel against “work without limits”

by time news

They have some of the longest working hours in the world, packed with tasks ranging from cleaning to supervising transportation from school to extracurricular activities.

In one of the last notes in his diary, the Japanese professor Yoshio Kudo lamented working days that started early and could last until almost midnight. Two months later, suffered a “karoshi”, a death from overwork.

Kudo’s grueling schedule is no exception in Japan, where teachers have some of the longest working hours in the world, packed with tasks ranging from cleaning to supervising transfers from school to extracurricular activities.

A 2018 OECD study found that a middle school teacher in Japan works 56 hours a weekagainst an average of 38 hours in most developed countries.

But the figure does not even include the surprising amount of overtime.

An investigation by a union-linked think tank showed that teachers they work an average of 123 overtime hours per monthtaking his workload beyond the so-called “karoshi line” of 80 hours.

Teachers say they are reaching the limit and some have rebelled against this culture through lawsuits. This year, the Japanese ruling party commissioned a task force study the issue.



The Japanese professor Yoshio Kudo lamented working hours that started early and could last until almost midnight. AFP photo

the hard work

For Kudo it comes too late. This middle school teacher died of a brain hemorrhage in 2007, only 40 years old.

At his funeral, his wife Sachiko was told by his shocked students that the spirited physical education teacher was “the furthest person from death you could imagine.”

“He just loved working with children”says Sachiko, 55, to AFP.

But in his last weeks he suffered with the days. “Towards the end, he told me that the teachers had to stop working like this and that he wanted to lead that change in the future,” says the widow.

The Japanese authorities have mandated improvements such as outsourcing and the digitization of some tasks.

“Our measures to reform teachers’ working conditions are making steady progress,” Education Minister Keiko Nagaoka told parliament in October.

But he admitted that many “continue to work long hours” and “These efforts need to be accelerated.”

Data from the ministry shows a gradual decline in overtime, but experts don’t see many fundamental changes.

From piles of paperwork to distributing meals, cleaning or supervising the transfer of children to school, Japanese teachers “they somehow became jack-of-all-trades”says the school management consultant, Masatoshi Senoo.

“What should really be the responsibility of parents falls to teachers, who may even be sent to apologize to neighbors when students misbehave in parks or in stores,” he explains.

One of the most exhausting tasks is supervise sports activities and cultural activities in student clubs, usually held after school or on weekends.

The responsibilities

“Being assigned as a supervisor for one of these clubs usually means saying goodbye to your weekends,” says Takeshi Nishimoto, a history teacher at a high school in Osaka.

In June, this 34-year-old teacher won a lawsuit asking for compensation due to the stress generated by the work overload.

He filed the lawsuit after being on the verge of a nervous breakdown in 2017, when he was a supervisor of a rugby club, he worked 144 overtime hours in a single month.

Experts indicate that teachers are particularly vulnerable to overwork because of a decades-old law that prevents them from charging for extra hours.

In return, the law adds the payment of eight hours of overtime per month to their monthly salaries, a system that Nishimoto says results in “making teachers work without limits for a fixed payment.”

Masako Shimonomura, a physical education teacher in Tokyo, explains that it’s hard to really take a break during the day.

“Not everything is black in this jobhowever,” he adds.

“There are some moments I live for, like seeing the students in my softball club shine and smile at tournaments,” says the 56-year-old, who fears this pessimistic image will be imposed on young people.

An investigation by the Mainichi newspaper in 2016 indicated that in the last decade 63 teacher deaths were classified as due to overwork.

But it took Kudo’s widow five years for “karoshi” to be officially recognized as the cause of her husband’s death.

For her, since teaching is seen as a “sacred work” of delivery to children, attitudes such as writing down the extra hours worked are considered selfish.

“So many teachers regret having lived their lives without stopping to enjoy the growth of their own children,” says the woman, a former teacher who now heads an anti-karoshi group.

“I feel like my husband and I worked together to follow his last words: that wants to change teachers’ work practices“.

AFP agency

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