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Junior High School in Japan: Guide for Foreign Families

School Refusal (Futoukou) in Japanese Junior High Schools

Bui Le QuanBui Le QuanPublished: March 7, 2026Updated: March 21, 2026
School Refusal (Futoukou) in Japanese Junior High Schools

Learn about futoukou (school refusal) in Japanese junior high schools: causes, statistics, warning signs, and practical steps for foreign parents to support their child.

School Refusal (Futoukou) in Japanese Junior High Schools: A Guide for Foreign Parents

If your child is refusing to go to school in Japan, you are not alone. Futoukou (不登校) — Japan's term for school refusal — has reached record highs, with over 216,000 junior high students missing 30 or more school days in FY2024. As a foreign parent navigating Japan's education system, facing this challenge can feel especially overwhelming. This guide explains what futoukou is, why it happens, and what you can do to support your child.

What Is Futoukou? Understanding School Refusal in Japan

Futoukou (不登校) is the official Japanese term for school refusal. The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) defines it as:

"Students in compulsory education who are absent for 30 or more days in a school year for reasons other than illness or financial hardship, and who are judged to be psychologically, emotionally, or socially refusing or unable to attend school."

Unlike simple truancy, futoukou recognizes that a student's reluctance to attend school often stems from genuine emotional, psychological, or social distress — not laziness or defiance. In Japan's highly structured educational environment, junior high school (chugakko, grades 7–9, ages 12–15) is often the most difficult transition point.

Key distinction for foreign families: Japan legally mandates school attendance for Japanese nationals through junior high school. However, this legal obligation does not apply to children with foreign citizenship. That said, enrollment and attendance are strongly encouraged, and local boards of education can assist your family in finding solutions.

The Scale of Futoukou: Japan's School Refusal Crisis

Japan's school refusal numbers have been rising steadily for over a decade, and FY2024 set yet another record.

YearJunior High Students Refusing School% of Enrolled Students
FY2014~98,000~2.8%
FY2019~127,000~3.3%
FY2022~193,000~3.6%
FY2023~216,000~3.8%
FY2024216,2663.9% (record high)

Source: MEXT Annual Survey on School Non-Attendance, as reported by Nippon.com

Some additional alarming statistics:

  • 54.2% of school-refusing students were absent for over 90 days — more than half a school year
  • Non-attendance among junior high students has risen 2.2 times compared to a decade ago
  • 80% of parents of futoukou children reported their employment was negatively impacted
  • 1 in 4 parents of school-refusing children resigned from their jobs

For foreign families, the situation has its own dimension: a 2025 Japan Times report identified 8,432 foreign children in Japan not attending school, and a 2019 MEXT survey found that 15.8% of eligible foreign students were not enrolled in elementary or junior high schools.

Why Do Students Refuse School? Common Causes in Junior High

The transition to junior high school in Japan is a significant stress point. Students face new social hierarchies, intense club activity (bukatsu) commitments, more rigorous academics, and pressure to conform. For foreign children, the challenges can be even greater.

Top causes cited by schools in FY2024:

  1. Lack of motivation (30.1%) — feeling disengaged or purposeless at school
  2. Breakdown in daily routines (25.0%) — often linked to lifestyle disruptions or anxiety
  3. Anxiety or depression (24.3%) — mental health struggles, often undiagnosed
  4. Poor academic performance (15.6%) — falling behind and feeling unable to catch up
  5. Friendship issues (13.2%) — social difficulties, exclusion, or peer conflict

Additional causes specific to foreign children:

  • Language barriers — difficulty following lessons taught entirely in Japanese
  • Cultural adjustment — unfamiliar social norms, group dynamics, and school rules
  • Bullying (ijime) — foreign or hafu children may be targeted for being "different"
  • Cultural identity conflict — feeling caught between Japanese expectations and home culture

To understand how junior high school works in Japan and what challenges to expect, see our comprehensive guide on Junior High School in Japan for Foreign Families.

Warning Signs: How to Recognize Futoukou Before It Becomes Serious

School refusal rarely appears suddenly. It typically develops gradually, and early intervention makes a significant difference.

Physical warning signs:

  • Frequent stomachaches or headaches on school days (that disappear on weekends)
  • Difficulty sleeping the night before school
  • Loss of appetite in the morning
  • Complaints of fatigue or dizziness without clear medical cause

Emotional and behavioral warning signs:

  • Increased irritability or emotional outbursts related to school
  • Withdrawal from friends and social activities
  • Sudden drop in academic performance or homework completion
  • Excessive time playing video games or on devices to escape
  • Crying or panic attacks when preparing for school

Key red flag: Symptoms that appear specifically on school days and resolve on weekends or holidays are classic signs of school-related anxiety.

For deeper support on your child's emotional health, see Mental Health and Emotional Wellbeing for Foreign Children in Japan.

What To Do: Practical Steps for Foreign Parents

Step 1: Talk to Your Child Without Pressure

Begin with open-ended, non-judgmental conversations. Avoid phrases like "You have to go to school" or "What will people think?" Instead:

  • Ask: "What feels hardest about school right now?"
  • Listen without immediately trying to fix things
  • Validate their feelings: "It sounds really difficult"

Many children who refuse school feel misunderstood — especially foreign children who may struggle to articulate social or cultural difficulties even to their own parents.

Step 2: Contact the School Early

In Japan, schools take attendance seriously and have designated staff to assist families facing futoukou:

  • Homeroom teacher (tanninsei) — your first point of contact for attendance concerns
  • School counselor (sukuuru kaunseraa) — a trained mental health professional available at most junior high schools
  • Yogo teacher (yogo kyouin) — the school nurse/welfare teacher who handles health and wellbeing

Request a meeting and share what your child has told you. Schools are legally required to report futoukou cases and provide support plans.

Step 3: Visit the Local Education Support Center

Every city or ward in Japan has a Futoukou Tokubetsu Shien Shitsu (不登校特別支援室) or similar educational support center. These are alternative learning spaces where students can:

  • Study at a slower pace
  • Receive counseling
  • Gradually re-engage with school life without the pressure of a full classroom

Ask your local Board of Education (Kyouiku Iinkai) for information. Most have staff who can communicate in your language or arrange interpretation services.

Step 4: Explore Alternative Education Options

Japan now officially recognizes multiple alternative pathways for students experiencing futoukou:

OptionDescriptionBest For
Futoukou support room (tokubetsu shien shitsu)In-school separate room with counselorsStudents with mild anxiety
Free school (furiisukuuru)NPO-run alternative schools with flexible learningStudents needing a fresh environment
Home learning with tutorsPrivate tutors, correspondence coursesStudents with severe anxiety or health issues
Online/metaverse schoolVirtual classrooms and digital learning programsTech-comfortable students
International schoolFull switch to English-language curriculumStudents struggling with Japanese language

For more information on alternative education options, visit International Schools in Japan: The Definitive Guide and consult our guide to Japanese education for foreign families.

For financial support considerations when changing schools, the Living in Nihon education planning guide provides useful context on school costs and available subsidies.

Support Resources for Foreign Families in Japan

Navigating futoukou support systems as a foreigner can be confusing. Here are key resources:

Government and official channels:

  • MEXT (文部科学省) — Japan's Ministry of Education publishes guidelines on futoukou support
  • Local Board of Education (教育委員会) — Contact your city/ward office for local support center locations
  • Child Guidance Center (Jidou Soudan-jo) — Offers free counseling for children under 18

English-language resources and communities:

Online expat communities:

  • Facebook groups such as "Expats in Japan" and "Foreign Parents in Japan" often have parents who have navigated futoukou firsthand

Special Considerations: When Language Is the Core Issue

For children who are struggling primarily because of Japanese language difficulties, futoukou may not be a mental health issue at all — it may be a language access problem.

What you can do:

  • Request a Japanese language support teacher (JSL support) through your school or board of education
  • Enroll in after-school Japanese language programs (many are free through local governments)
  • Consider part-time enrollment in both a Japanese school and an international school
  • Use Japanese language learning resources specifically designed for children — see Teaching Japanese to Foreign Children: Methods and Resources

Important: If your child's school is not providing adequate Japanese language support, you can escalate to the local Board of Education. Japan's educational guidelines require reasonable accommodation for non-Japanese speaking students.

Long-Term Outlook: Recovery and Moving Forward

Most children who experience futoukou do eventually return to school or find alternative paths. Research and anecdotal evidence from Japan's education community suggests:

  • Early intervention dramatically improves outcomes — acting within the first few weeks matters
  • Avoiding pressure to return immediately often leads to faster recovery than forced attendance
  • Building daily structure at home during the refusal period supports gradual re-engagement
  • Peer reconnection — even one good friendship can be enough to draw a child back to school

Japan's society and school system are slowly evolving. Free schools, metaverse classrooms, and official recognition of alternative education pathways show that Japan is beginning to acknowledge that the traditional school environment does not work for every child.

For further reading on raising children through Japan's education system, explore our guides on raising bilingual children in Japan and healthcare and medical care for children in Japan.

Conclusion

School refusal (futoukou) is one of the most stressful challenges a parent can face, and for foreign families in Japan it comes with the added complexity of language barriers, cultural differences, and unfamiliar support systems. The most important things to remember are:

  1. You are not alone — over 216,000 junior high students in Japan face this every year
  2. Act early — the sooner you engage with school staff and counselors, the better
  3. Listen to your child — their experience, not school attendance metrics, is what matters most
  4. Explore all options — Japan now offers more alternative pathways than ever before

With patience, persistence, and the right support, your child can find their way through this difficult period.

Bui Le Quan
Bui Le Quan

Originally from Vietnam, living in Japan for 16+ years. Graduated from Nagoya University, with 11 years of professional experience at Japanese and international companies. Sharing practical information for foreign parents raising children in Japan.

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