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  1. Tashiro Furukawa (古河太四郎, Furukawa Tashirō, March 27, 1845 – December 26, 1907) was a Japanese educator. He was a pioneer of education for visual and hearing-impaired people in modern Japan, and has been called "the De l'Épée and Gallaudet of Japan". [1]

  2. Dec 28, 2019 · In late 19th century Tashiro Furukawa who was an elementary schoolteacher in Kyoto looked after the deaf children, he taught characters and names by his own gesture. Since the children excelled in the ability to understand and memorize them he felt confident in his...

    • Takao Imanishi
    • 2004
  3. Tashiro Furukawa was a pioneer in blind and deaf education in Japan. He was a schoolteacher whose many contributions to education included opening the Blind and Deaf School in 1878, which is still opened to students to this day.

  4. Mar 27, 2024 · Tashiro Furukawa (27 March 1845 – 26 December 1907) was a Japanese educator and pioneer in support hearing-impaired people in modern Japan.

  5. In late 19th century Tashiro Furukawa who was an elementary schoolteacher in Kyoto looked after the deaf children, he taught characters and names by his own gesture and opened a school for the blind and the dumb in 1878.

  6. Nov 6, 2018 · In 1878, the very first school for deaf was built in Kyoto where they established the fundamentals of JSL by the lead of Tashiro Furukawa (古河太四郎), the pioneer of the deaf community in Japan.

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  8. Furukawa Tashiro was an educator of the blind and deaf. Background. Furukawa Tashiro was born in Kyoto in 1895. Career. When Furukawa Tashiro was a teacher at the Taikenmon Elementary School, he took care of two deaf-mute children. Thereafter he devoted himself to the education of thus handicapped children.