Taiwan, Taichung
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The Taichung Japanese School was established in 1976 as Taichung Japanese Language School, with approval from the Japanese government and Taiwan's Ministry of Education. It later operated as a private Taichung City Japanese School serving as the Taipei Japanese School's Taichung branch, and in 1981 the campus moved to Taiping (now Taiping District) with the Chinese name changed to Taichung County Japanese School. The 1999 Jiji earthquake severely damaged the buildings, and classes were held in borrowed space before relocating to temporary facilities. A new campus was completed in February 2001 in Taichung County's DaYa area (now Taichung City's Daya District), and the school moved there; following the 2011 county-city merger the institution adopted the name Taichung City Japanese School. The current campus is at Pinghe South Road 33, Daya District, Taichung City. The school temporarily closed in February 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resumed in-person instruction in August 2021.
The Taichung Japanese School serves the children of Japanese expatriate families in central Taiwan; enrollment is around 100 students. The school community engages with the broader Taichung area through local cultural activities and municipal exchanges. The school participates in exchanges with local schools, including visits to the Chinese International Department and other joint activities. The Taichung City government has hosted school groups, illustrating formal city-level engagement with the school.
The school's PTA activities are organized through the Taiwan Japanese Association's Japanese School Committee, which coordinates parent involvement across Taiwan's Japanese-language schools. The association includes corporate members and individual members—about 271 corporate members and 1,788 individual members as of 2021—and runs several committees. Its committees include a News/Newsletter group that publishes a monthly Coral magazine and an occasional Treasure Island publication, a Golf section with multiple groups, and other activity groups. Annual events include a New Year party held each January in collaboration with the Taipei Japanese Chamber of Commerce, and late-year memorial services for Japanese residents in Taiwan held in Taipei, Taichung, and Kaohsiung. Parent volunteers support school life through these activities and communications.