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Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to: OVERVIEW This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles. POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE! Please visit our Film Library to find other films suitable for classroom use or to make this film a part of your school's permanent collection.
OBJECTIVES By the end of this lesson students will: GRADE LEVEL: 6-12 SUBJECT AREA: Global Education, Geography, World History, Civics   MATERIALS: ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class. SUGGESTED VIDEO CLIPS up arrowTop of Page
BACKGROUND Japan adopted a democratic government for the first time in 1947, as required by allied nations at the end of World War II. The country is now governed by the two houses of parliament, known as the Diet, with a prime minister elected by the majority party. The two houses of the Diet are the House of Councillors, or Sangi-in, which has 242 members; and the House of Representatives, or Shugi-in, with 480 members. In the past, Japanese voters cast their ballots for specific candidates, but since 1982 voters select a party, which then receives proportional representation in the legislature. Japan's main political parties are the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). Several smaller parties also maintain a presence in the legislature. The LDP, generally considered the more conservative of the two major parties, held power from 1955 until 1993. Since 1994, the LDP has governed by forming a coalition government. The city of Kawasaki, where Kazuhiko Yamauchi campaigns on the LDP ticket for a city council seat in 2005 — the process that is captured in Campaign — is sandwiched between Tokyo and Yokohama. Kawasaki is home to about 1.4 million people. The city is governed by a mayor and a 63-member council. Yamauchi sold stamps and coins before the LDP recruited him to be their candidate. A political amateur, Yamauchi pays close attention as his LDP handlers direct his campaign and teach him typical Japanese campaign strategies, which students will see in the film excerpts. A Japanese campaign lasts for 12 days. up arrowTop of Page
ACTIVITY
  1. Show students where Japan is on a world map. Explain that Japan is a democratic country and that it has the world's second-largest economy. Provide a brief overview of the Japanese political system, drawing information from the "Background" and "Resources" sections of this lesson plan.
  2. Ask several students to share their descriptions of the person who wrote the letters. Have them identify clues in the text that informed their thinking. On the board, capture student ideas to create a more complete profile of the letters' author.
  3. Divide the class into six groups and assign group members the roles of Reporter (to the class), Reader (to the group), Recorder (of group responses) and Summarizers (of key points, which the Recorder then writes down). Assign each group one of the following excerpts from the book Election Campaigning Japanese Style by Gerald L. Curtis (PDF file), available on the POV website. Each group should read its assigned excerpt and summarize the main points on a large sheet of paper.  
  4. Have each group present its summary of main points from the reading. Ask students what their reactions are to the Japanese regulations for political campaigns. Would any of these restrictions discourage you from running for office? If so, which ones and why?
  5. Tell the class that they are going to watch two video clips that show the types of campaign strategies that are permitted in Japan. They will be watching candidate Kazuhiko Yamauchi, a first-time politician running for a seat on a suburban city council. As they watch the clips, ask students to think about how the campaign strategies they see shown contribute or detract from the election process.
  6. After watching the clips, discuss the advantages and disadvantages students see in this particular system. How well do students think Japanese campaign strategies contribute to free and fair elections and a strong democracy? For homework, have each student write a one-page position paper that addresses that question.
up arrowTop of Page
ASSESSMENT Students can be assessed on: up arrowTop of Page
EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS up arrowTop of Page
RESOURCES Basic Information on the Japanese Government Japan-guide.com provides a brief overview of Japanese politics and provides a list of links to Japanese government-related websites with information in English. CIA World Factbook: Japan This overview of Japan includes information on geography, government, the people and so on. For additional resources related to Japanese politics, please see the Delve Deeper reading list (PDF) for this film, produced in collaboration with the American Library Association for this film. up arrowTop of Page
STANDARDS These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning). Civics Standard 7: Understands alternative forms of representation and how they serve the purposes of constitutional government. Geography Standard 10: Understands the nature and complexity of Earth's cultural mosaics. Language Arts Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's Director of Education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and Northern Virginia. Background Sources "A Comparison with the United States," Asia for Educators, Project on Asia in the Core Curriculum, Columbia University "Country Profiles: Japan," BBC." ["post_title"]=> string(51) "Campaign: Lesson Plan: Political Campaigns in Japan" ["post_excerpt"]=> string(446) "This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles." ["post_status"]=> string(7) "publish" ["comment_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["ping_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["post_password"]=> string(0) "" ["post_name"]=> string(11) "lesson-plan" ["to_ping"]=> string(0) "" ["pinged"]=> string(0) "" ["post_modified"]=> string(19) "2016-07-13 11:21:25" ["post_modified_gmt"]=> string(19) "2016-07-13 15:21:25" ["post_content_filtered"]=> string(0) "" ["post_parent"]=> int(0) ["guid"]=> string(56) "http://www.pbs.org/pov/index.php/2008/07/22/lesson-plan/" ["menu_order"]=> int(0) ["post_type"]=> string(4) "post" ["post_mime_type"]=> string(0) "" ["comment_count"]=> string(1) "0" ["filter"]=> string(3) "raw" } ["queried_object_id"]=> int(3141) ["request"]=> string(473) "SELECT wp_posts.* FROM wp_posts JOIN wp_term_relationships ON wp_posts.ID = wp_term_relationships.object_id JOIN wp_term_taxonomy ON wp_term_relationships.term_taxonomy_id = wp_term_taxonomy.term_taxonomy_id AND wp_term_taxonomy.taxonomy = 'pov_film' JOIN wp_terms ON wp_term_taxonomy.term_id = wp_terms.term_id WHERE 1=1 AND wp_posts.post_name = 'lesson-plan' AND wp_posts.post_type = 'post' AND wp_terms.slug = 'campaign' ORDER BY wp_posts.post_date DESC " ["posts"]=> &array(1) { [0]=> object(WP_Post)#7138 (24) { ["ID"]=> int(3141) ["post_author"]=> string(1) "1" ["post_date"]=> string(19) "2008-01-02 16:56:26" ["post_date_gmt"]=> string(19) "2008-01-02 21:56:26" ["post_content"]=> string(15389) "

Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to: OVERVIEW This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles. POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE! Please visit our Film Library to find other films suitable for classroom use or to make this film a part of your school's permanent collection.
OBJECTIVES By the end of this lesson students will: GRADE LEVEL: 6-12 SUBJECT AREA: Global Education, Geography, World History, Civics   MATERIALS: ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class. SUGGESTED VIDEO CLIPS up arrowTop of Page
BACKGROUND Japan adopted a democratic government for the first time in 1947, as required by allied nations at the end of World War II. The country is now governed by the two houses of parliament, known as the Diet, with a prime minister elected by the majority party. The two houses of the Diet are the House of Councillors, or Sangi-in, which has 242 members; and the House of Representatives, or Shugi-in, with 480 members. In the past, Japanese voters cast their ballots for specific candidates, but since 1982 voters select a party, which then receives proportional representation in the legislature. Japan's main political parties are the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). Several smaller parties also maintain a presence in the legislature. The LDP, generally considered the more conservative of the two major parties, held power from 1955 until 1993. Since 1994, the LDP has governed by forming a coalition government. The city of Kawasaki, where Kazuhiko Yamauchi campaigns on the LDP ticket for a city council seat in 2005 — the process that is captured in Campaign — is sandwiched between Tokyo and Yokohama. Kawasaki is home to about 1.4 million people. The city is governed by a mayor and a 63-member council. Yamauchi sold stamps and coins before the LDP recruited him to be their candidate. A political amateur, Yamauchi pays close attention as his LDP handlers direct his campaign and teach him typical Japanese campaign strategies, which students will see in the film excerpts. A Japanese campaign lasts for 12 days. up arrowTop of Page
ACTIVITY
  1. Show students where Japan is on a world map. Explain that Japan is a democratic country and that it has the world's second-largest economy. Provide a brief overview of the Japanese political system, drawing information from the "Background" and "Resources" sections of this lesson plan.
  2. Ask several students to share their descriptions of the person who wrote the letters. Have them identify clues in the text that informed their thinking. On the board, capture student ideas to create a more complete profile of the letters' author.
  3. Divide the class into six groups and assign group members the roles of Reporter (to the class), Reader (to the group), Recorder (of group responses) and Summarizers (of key points, which the Recorder then writes down). Assign each group one of the following excerpts from the book Election Campaigning Japanese Style by Gerald L. Curtis (PDF file), available on the POV website. Each group should read its assigned excerpt and summarize the main points on a large sheet of paper.  
  4. Have each group present its summary of main points from the reading. Ask students what their reactions are to the Japanese regulations for political campaigns. Would any of these restrictions discourage you from running for office? If so, which ones and why?
  5. Tell the class that they are going to watch two video clips that show the types of campaign strategies that are permitted in Japan. They will be watching candidate Kazuhiko Yamauchi, a first-time politician running for a seat on a suburban city council. As they watch the clips, ask students to think about how the campaign strategies they see shown contribute or detract from the election process.
  6. After watching the clips, discuss the advantages and disadvantages students see in this particular system. How well do students think Japanese campaign strategies contribute to free and fair elections and a strong democracy? For homework, have each student write a one-page position paper that addresses that question.
up arrowTop of Page
ASSESSMENT Students can be assessed on: up arrowTop of Page
EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS up arrowTop of Page
RESOURCES Basic Information on the Japanese Government Japan-guide.com provides a brief overview of Japanese politics and provides a list of links to Japanese government-related websites with information in English. CIA World Factbook: Japan This overview of Japan includes information on geography, government, the people and so on. For additional resources related to Japanese politics, please see the Delve Deeper reading list (PDF) for this film, produced in collaboration with the American Library Association for this film. up arrowTop of Page
STANDARDS These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning). Civics Standard 7: Understands alternative forms of representation and how they serve the purposes of constitutional government. Geography Standard 10: Understands the nature and complexity of Earth's cultural mosaics. Language Arts Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's Director of Education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and Northern Virginia. Background Sources "A Comparison with the United States," Asia for Educators, Project on Asia in the Core Curriculum, Columbia University "Country Profiles: Japan," BBC." ["post_title"]=> string(51) "Campaign: Lesson Plan: Political Campaigns in Japan" ["post_excerpt"]=> string(446) "This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles." ["post_status"]=> string(7) "publish" ["comment_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["ping_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["post_password"]=> string(0) "" ["post_name"]=> string(11) "lesson-plan" ["to_ping"]=> string(0) "" ["pinged"]=> string(0) "" ["post_modified"]=> string(19) "2016-07-13 11:21:25" ["post_modified_gmt"]=> string(19) "2016-07-13 15:21:25" ["post_content_filtered"]=> string(0) "" ["post_parent"]=> int(0) ["guid"]=> string(56) "http://www.pbs.org/pov/index.php/2008/07/22/lesson-plan/" ["menu_order"]=> int(0) ["post_type"]=> string(4) "post" ["post_mime_type"]=> string(0) "" ["comment_count"]=> string(1) "0" ["filter"]=> string(3) "raw" } } ["post_count"]=> int(1) ["current_post"]=> int(-1) ["in_the_loop"]=> bool(false) ["post"]=> object(WP_Post)#7138 (24) { ["ID"]=> int(3141) ["post_author"]=> string(1) "1" ["post_date"]=> string(19) "2008-01-02 16:56:26" ["post_date_gmt"]=> string(19) "2008-01-02 21:56:26" ["post_content"]=> string(15389) "

Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to: OVERVIEW This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles. POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE! Please visit our Film Library to find other films suitable for classroom use or to make this film a part of your school's permanent collection.
OBJECTIVES By the end of this lesson students will: GRADE LEVEL: 6-12 SUBJECT AREA: Global Education, Geography, World History, Civics   MATERIALS: ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class. SUGGESTED VIDEO CLIPS up arrowTop of Page
BACKGROUND Japan adopted a democratic government for the first time in 1947, as required by allied nations at the end of World War II. The country is now governed by the two houses of parliament, known as the Diet, with a prime minister elected by the majority party. The two houses of the Diet are the House of Councillors, or Sangi-in, which has 242 members; and the House of Representatives, or Shugi-in, with 480 members. In the past, Japanese voters cast their ballots for specific candidates, but since 1982 voters select a party, which then receives proportional representation in the legislature. Japan's main political parties are the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). Several smaller parties also maintain a presence in the legislature. The LDP, generally considered the more conservative of the two major parties, held power from 1955 until 1993. Since 1994, the LDP has governed by forming a coalition government. The city of Kawasaki, where Kazuhiko Yamauchi campaigns on the LDP ticket for a city council seat in 2005 — the process that is captured in Campaign — is sandwiched between Tokyo and Yokohama. Kawasaki is home to about 1.4 million people. The city is governed by a mayor and a 63-member council. Yamauchi sold stamps and coins before the LDP recruited him to be their candidate. A political amateur, Yamauchi pays close attention as his LDP handlers direct his campaign and teach him typical Japanese campaign strategies, which students will see in the film excerpts. A Japanese campaign lasts for 12 days. up arrowTop of Page
ACTIVITY
  1. Show students where Japan is on a world map. Explain that Japan is a democratic country and that it has the world's second-largest economy. Provide a brief overview of the Japanese political system, drawing information from the "Background" and "Resources" sections of this lesson plan.
  2. Ask several students to share their descriptions of the person who wrote the letters. Have them identify clues in the text that informed their thinking. On the board, capture student ideas to create a more complete profile of the letters' author.
  3. Divide the class into six groups and assign group members the roles of Reporter (to the class), Reader (to the group), Recorder (of group responses) and Summarizers (of key points, which the Recorder then writes down). Assign each group one of the following excerpts from the book Election Campaigning Japanese Style by Gerald L. Curtis (PDF file), available on the POV website. Each group should read its assigned excerpt and summarize the main points on a large sheet of paper.  
  4. Have each group present its summary of main points from the reading. Ask students what their reactions are to the Japanese regulations for political campaigns. Would any of these restrictions discourage you from running for office? If so, which ones and why?
  5. Tell the class that they are going to watch two video clips that show the types of campaign strategies that are permitted in Japan. They will be watching candidate Kazuhiko Yamauchi, a first-time politician running for a seat on a suburban city council. As they watch the clips, ask students to think about how the campaign strategies they see shown contribute or detract from the election process.
  6. After watching the clips, discuss the advantages and disadvantages students see in this particular system. How well do students think Japanese campaign strategies contribute to free and fair elections and a strong democracy? For homework, have each student write a one-page position paper that addresses that question.
up arrowTop of Page
ASSESSMENT Students can be assessed on: up arrowTop of Page
EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS up arrowTop of Page
RESOURCES Basic Information on the Japanese Government Japan-guide.com provides a brief overview of Japanese politics and provides a list of links to Japanese government-related websites with information in English. CIA World Factbook: Japan This overview of Japan includes information on geography, government, the people and so on. For additional resources related to Japanese politics, please see the Delve Deeper reading list (PDF) for this film, produced in collaboration with the American Library Association for this film. up arrowTop of Page
STANDARDS These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning). Civics Standard 7: Understands alternative forms of representation and how they serve the purposes of constitutional government. Geography Standard 10: Understands the nature and complexity of Earth's cultural mosaics. Language Arts Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's Director of Education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and Northern Virginia. Background Sources "A Comparison with the United States," Asia for Educators, Project on Asia in the Core Curriculum, Columbia University "Country Profiles: Japan," BBC." ["post_title"]=> string(51) "Campaign: Lesson Plan: Political Campaigns in Japan" ["post_excerpt"]=> string(446) "This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles." ["post_status"]=> string(7) "publish" ["comment_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["ping_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["post_password"]=> string(0) "" ["post_name"]=> string(11) "lesson-plan" ["to_ping"]=> string(0) "" ["pinged"]=> string(0) "" ["post_modified"]=> string(19) "2016-07-13 11:21:25" ["post_modified_gmt"]=> string(19) "2016-07-13 15:21:25" ["post_content_filtered"]=> string(0) "" ["post_parent"]=> int(0) ["guid"]=> string(56) "http://www.pbs.org/pov/index.php/2008/07/22/lesson-plan/" ["menu_order"]=> int(0) ["post_type"]=> string(4) "post" ["post_mime_type"]=> string(0) "" ["comment_count"]=> string(1) "0" ["filter"]=> string(3) "raw" } ["comment_count"]=> int(0) ["current_comment"]=> int(-1) ["found_posts"]=> int(1) ["max_num_pages"]=> int(0) ["max_num_comment_pages"]=> int(0) ["is_single"]=> bool(true) ["is_preview"]=> bool(false) ["is_page"]=> bool(false) ["is_archive"]=> bool(false) ["is_date"]=> bool(false) ["is_year"]=> bool(false) ["is_month"]=> bool(false) ["is_day"]=> bool(false) ["is_time"]=> bool(false) ["is_author"]=> bool(false) ["is_category"]=> bool(false) ["is_tag"]=> bool(false) ["is_tax"]=> bool(false) ["is_search"]=> bool(false) ["is_feed"]=> bool(false) ["is_comment_feed"]=> bool(false) ["is_trackback"]=> bool(false) ["is_home"]=> bool(false) ["is_404"]=> bool(false) ["is_embed"]=> bool(false) ["is_paged"]=> bool(false) ["is_admin"]=> bool(false) ["is_attachment"]=> bool(false) ["is_singular"]=> bool(true) ["is_robots"]=> bool(false) ["is_posts_page"]=> bool(false) ["is_post_type_archive"]=> bool(false) ["query_vars_hash":"WP_Query":private]=> string(32) "f703f66b6428a9f778e0697e32e0c5b2" ["query_vars_changed":"WP_Query":private]=> bool(false) ["thumbnails_cached"]=> bool(false) ["stopwords":"WP_Query":private]=> NULL ["compat_fields":"WP_Query":private]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(15) "query_vars_hash" [1]=> string(18) "query_vars_changed" } ["compat_methods":"WP_Query":private]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(16) "init_query_flags" [1]=> string(15) "parse_tax_query" } }

Campaign: Lesson Plan: Political Campaigns in Japan

Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to:

OVERVIEW

This lesson plan is designed to be used with the film Campaign, a peek into political campaigning in Japan as experienced by a man running for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Classrooms can use this lesson to examine Japanese campaign strategies that are restricted and permitted by law, and then discuss how these activities could affect the strength of the country's democracy. Note: This film is in Japanese with English subtitles.

POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year -- FOR FREE! Please visit our Film Library to find other films suitable for classroom use or to make this film a part of your school's permanent collection.


OBJECTIVES

By the end of this lesson students will:

GRADE LEVEL: 6-12

SUBJECT AREA: Global Education, Geography, World History, Civics

 

MATERIALS:

ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class.

SUGGESTED VIDEO CLIPS

Top of Page


BACKGROUND

Japan adopted a democratic government for the first time in 1947, as required by allied nations at the end of World War II. The country is now governed by the two houses of parliament, known as the Diet, with a prime minister elected by the majority party. The two houses of the Diet are the House of Councillors, or Sangi-in, which has 242 members; and the House of Representatives, or Shugi-in, with 480 members. In the past, Japanese voters cast their ballots for specific candidates, but since 1982 voters select a party, which then receives proportional representation in the legislature.

Japan's main political parties are the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). Several smaller parties also maintain a presence in the legislature. The LDP, generally considered the more conservative of the two major parties, held power from 1955 until 1993. Since 1994, the LDP has governed by forming a coalition government.

The city of Kawasaki, where Kazuhiko Yamauchi campaigns on the LDP ticket for a city council seat in 2005 -- the process that is captured in Campaign -- is sandwiched between Tokyo and Yokohama. Kawasaki is home to about 1.4 million people. The city is governed by a mayor and a 63-member council. Yamauchi sold stamps and coins before the LDP recruited him to be their candidate. A political amateur, Yamauchi pays close attention as his LDP handlers direct his campaign and teach him typical Japanese campaign strategies, which students will see in the film excerpts. A Japanese campaign lasts for 12 days.

Top of Page


ACTIVITY

  1. Show students where Japan is on a world map. Explain that Japan is a democratic country and that it has the world's second-largest economy. Provide a brief overview of the Japanese political system, drawing information from the "Background" and "Resources" sections of this lesson plan.
  2. Ask several students to share their descriptions of the person who wrote the letters. Have them identify clues in the text that informed their thinking. On the board, capture student ideas to create a more complete profile of the letters' author.
  3. Divide the class into six groups and assign group members the roles of Reporter (to the class), Reader (to the group), Recorder (of group responses) and Summarizers (of key points, which the Recorder then writes down). Assign each group one of the following excerpts from the book Election Campaigning Japanese Style by Gerald L. Curtis (PDF file), available on the POV website. Each group should read its assigned excerpt and summarize the main points on a large sheet of paper.
    • Group 1: General restrictions
      - Begin on p. 214, 2nd paragraph, "Certain campaign practices...
      End on p. 215, after 2nd paragraph, "...headquarters must be removed."
    • Group 2: Restrictions on written materials
      Begin on p. 215, 3rd paragraph, "The Election Law..."
      End on p. 216 after the 1st paragraph, "...purpose of campaigning or not"
    • Group 3: Restrictions on speeches
      Begin on p. 216, "The speech-making activities..."
      End on p. 217 after 2nd paragraph, "...help private speech meetings."
    • Group 4: Use of the media
      Begin on p. 217, last paragraph, "The advent of television..."
      End on p. 218 after first paragraph, "...are nonexistent in Japan."
    • Group 5: Campaign finances
      Begin on p. 218, "Over and above these..."
      End on p. 219 after first paragraph, "...approximately 7,200 dollars."
    • Group 6: Purpose and consequences of restrictions
      Begin on p. 219, "The purpose of the restrictions..."
      End on p. 220, partway through the 2nd paragraph, "...should be a major
      function of election campaigns."

     

  4. Have each group present its summary of main points from the reading. Ask students what their reactions are to the Japanese regulations for political campaigns. Would any of these restrictions discourage you from running for office? If so, which ones and why?
  5. Tell the class that they are going to watch two video clips that show the types of campaign strategies that are permitted in Japan. They will be watching candidate Kazuhiko Yamauchi, a first-time politician running for a seat on a suburban city council. As they watch the clips, ask students to think about how the campaign strategies they see shown contribute or detract from the election process.
  6. After watching the clips, discuss the advantages and disadvantages students see in this particular system. How well do students think Japanese campaign strategies contribute to free and fair elections and a strong democracy? For homework, have each student write a one-page position paper that addresses that question.

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ASSESSMENT

Students can be assessed on:

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EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS

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RESOURCES

Basic Information on the Japanese Government
Japan-guide.com provides a brief overview of Japanese politics and provides a list of links to Japanese government-related websites with information in English.

CIA World Factbook: Japan

This overview of Japan includes information on geography, government, the people and so on.

For additional resources related to Japanese politics, please see the Delve Deeper reading list (PDF) for this film, produced in collaboration with the American Library Association for this film.

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STANDARDS

These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning).

Civics
Standard 7: Understands alternative forms of representation and how they serve the purposes of constitutional government.

Geography
Standard 10: Understands the nature and complexity of Earth's cultural mosaics.

Language Arts
Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's Director of Education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and Northern Virginia.

Background Sources
"A Comparison with the United States," Asia for Educators, Project on Asia in the Core Curriculum, Columbia University

"Country Profiles: Japan," BBC.