Business World

Tokyo med school altered test scores to keep women out

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TOKYO — A Tokyo medical school for years altered the admission test results of female applicants to keep the number of women in the student body low, a Japanese newspaper reported Thursday.

The Yomiuri Shimbun daily said the manipulati­on came to light while prosecutor­s were investigat­ing a separate scandal in which the Tokyo Medical University is accused of illicitly admitting the son of an education ministry bureaucrat.

“Following the report this morning, we asked a law firm to launch an internal investigat­ion into the reported issue,” Fumio Azuma, a spokesman for the university told AFP, adding that it hopes to announce the result of the probe later this month.

The law firm that will investigat­e the report already has an advisory contract with the university but its usual consulting lawyer will not be part of the investigat­ing team, Azuma said.

The Yomiuri, citing unnamed sources, said the university began lowering the admission test scores of female applicants to its medical school in 2011, after the 2010 results showed an increasing number of women were winning places.

In 2010, around 40% of successful applicants were women, double the previous year.

After that, the university began trying to keep the percentage of women admitted each year to around 30% of the incoming class.

“Women often quit after graduating and becoming a doctor, when they get married and have a child,” one source told the Yomiuri, in justifying the blanket alteration­s of admission scores.

“There is a consensus inside the university that male doctors support the university hospital,” which often requires emergency duties and long shifts, the source told the daily.

The newspaper said the test scores of female applicants had been lowered across the board by administra­tors who applied a fixed coefficien­t to women’s results.

In 2018, the ratio of women accepted after the first round of tests was 14.5%, compared with 18.9% for men.

In the second and final test stage, just 2.9% of female applicants were admitted, compared with 8.8% of male applicants.

The newspaper did not give figures for the current gender breakdown of the school’s student body.

The university was reportedly already under investigat­ion by the Tokyo District Prosecutor’s Office over claims the privately- run school wrongly admitted the son of an education ministry official.

Japanese women are highly educated in general but the country’s notoriousl­y long work hours force many out of the workplace when they start families.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made “womenomics” — or boosting women’s participat­ion in the workplace and promoting women to senior positions — a priority, but the pace of progress has been slow. —

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