All 149 textbooks in 11 subjects submitted for screening carry QR codes on their pages, according to the results of textbook screenings released by the Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Ministry on Tuesday.
COVID-19 has accelerated the shift towards digital compatibility in textbooks, causing a surge in digital device usage in elementary and junior high school classrooms.
The recent screenings, based on the ministry's current curriculum guidelines, examined revised textbooks that passed screenings in fiscal 2018.
All 149 textbooks for 11 subjects submitted by textbook publishers passed the screening, with the ministry issuing 2,149 opinions on various parts of the textbooks, such as sections with faulty descriptions.
The ministry plans to introduce digital textbooks for English classes for the fifth year of elementary school to the third year of junior high school starting in the 2024 school year, based on a belief that such textbooks will have a positive effect on listening and speaking skills.
The English textbooks for the fifth and sixth grades of elementary school that passed the recent screening can also be used as digital textbooks on a digital device.
Textbook publishers have added QR codes for easy access to digital learning materials such as videos, audio recordings and practice exercises on every textbook screened recently. Because these digital materials are not textbooks, they are not subject to screening.
In the case of Tokyo Shoseki Co., a major textbook publisher, most of the pages in its arithmetic textbooks have QR codes, allowing the use of 1,455 digital resources for the entire sixth grades of elementary school. This is 17 times more than the 85 resources in the previous round of screening. The number of digital resources they provide has been increased by other textbook publishers.
The rapid deployment of digital devices during the epidemic has resulted in an explosion in resources.
The government GIGA School Program was able to ensure nearly one device per elementary and junior high school student by the end of the 2020 school year, due to a spike in demand for online learning due to long-term school closures and other factors.
The textbooks screened recently were primarily edited during fiscal 2021, when there were a number of classroom closures, and even temporary school closures. Digital materials were improved for online learning and home study during school closures.
Teruyo Horikawa, professor of library and information science at the Open University of Japan, said that using digital materials will make learning more effective and motivate children. The time and effort required to conduct research in the library or consult a paper encyclopedia will strengthen their thinking. It is important to develop the ability to use both digital and physical materials.