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2 More Medical Schools in Japan Have Admitted to Discriminating Against Women 2 minute read The entrance to the Tokyo Medical University is seen in Tokyo on Aug. 8, 2018.
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Reuters reporter Elaine Lies about how a Japan medical school deliberately manipulated entrance test scores to decrease the amount of women who attended.
Tokyo Medical University is looking to investigate an allegation that the school lowered the entrance-exam results of female applicants to ensure that most of the entrants were men.
One of Japan’s top medical universities has been systematically blocking female applicants from entering the school for at least eight years, local news agencies reported on Thursday. Tokyo ...
The discriminatory policy at Tokyo Medical University surfaced earlier this year, triggering national outrage. University President Yukiko Hayashi apologized for the school's discriminatory policy.
TOKYO — A Japanese medical university has systematically discriminated against female applicants because women tend to quit as doctors after starting families, causing hospital staffing ...
It comes as no surprise that a prestigious school rigged results to favor men—or that the #MeToo movement isn't catching on in Japan ...
A Tokyo medical school apologized Tuesday after an internal investigation confirmed that it altered entrance exam scores for years to limit the number of female students and ensure more men became ...
Executives at a prominent Japanese medical school programmed a computer to subtract points from the entrance exams of female applicants, an investigation found, part of an effort to limit the ...
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