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・ Institut national de recherche et de sécurité
・ Institut national de recherche pédagogique
・ Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals
・ Institut Biblique VIE
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・ Institut canadien de Montréal
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・ Institut Choiseul for International Politics and Geoeconomics
・ Institut collegial Vincent Massey Collegiate
・ Institut Colonial de Marseille
・ Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature
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Institut Culturel Franco-Japonais – École Japonaise de Paris
・ Institut d'Administration des Entreprises
・ Institut d'astrophysique de Paris
・ Institut d'Estudis Catalans
・ Institut d'Estudis Ilerdencs
・ Institut d'Estudis Occitans
・ Institut d'Égypte
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・ Institut d'émission d'outre-mer
・ Institut d'études politiques de Bordeaux
・ Institut d'études politiques de Lyon
・ Institut d'études politiques de Rennes
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Institut Culturel Franco-Japonais – École Japonaise de Paris : ウィキペディア英語版
Institut Culturel Franco-Japonais – École Japonaise de Paris

The Institut Culturel Franco-Japonais – École Japonaise de Paris ("French-Japanese Cultural Institute - Japanese School of Paris" - Japanese: 日仏文化学院パリ日本人学校 ''Nichifutsu Bunka Gakuin Pari Nihonjin Gakkō'') is a Japanese international school located in Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France, in the Paris Metropolitan Area.〔(Home page ). ((Archive )) ''Institut culturel franco-japonais''. Retrieved on 2 January 2014. "7 rue Jean-Pierre Timbaud 78180 Montigny-le-Bretonneux FRANCE"〕 The school is located in proximity to Versailles.〔Conte-Helm, p. (84 ).〕 Japanese is the primary language of instruction while students also take French classes.〔''Look Japan, Volume 37, Issues 421-432''. Look Japan, Limited, 1991. p. (42 ). "Last year at the Ecole Japonaise in Paris, 563 elementary through junior high school students spent most of the school day speaking their mother tongue, with three hours of classes in French."〕
The school serves ages 6 through 15. Marie Conte-Holm, author of ''The Japanese and Europe: Economic and Cultural Encounters'', wrote that the bus route to and from the school "essentially determines" where Japanese families with children settle in Greater Paris.〔 She also wrote that "While some Japanese children attend local schools for a proportion of their time in France, even the more internationally minded Japanese parents will transfer their offspring to the Japanese School for reorientation during the latter part of their stay."〔
==History==
The Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry established the Japanese School in 1973. It was located in Trocadéro in the 16th arrondissement of Paris and it had opened with 100 students. In the 1980s the school expanded rapidly. In 1990 it moved to a building that had been erected to serve as the Japanese school. Japanese companies had funded the new school building.〔 That year, the school had 563 students in elementary school and junior high school.〔 In 1991 it had 500 students, around the time of its peak enrollment and the time of peak investment from Japanese companies. Since then a Japanese recession occurred. In 2013 the school had 380 students.〔

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