Over 300 Pinoy nurses, caregivers to undergo Japanese language training
Over 300 Japan-bound Filipino nurses and caregivers will undergo a six-month training on Japanese language in preparation for their deployment next year.
Of the total 306 candidates, 203 will be trained at the Language Skills Institute at TESDA while the remaining 103 candidates will take it at the Nihongo Center Foundation, Inc., according to a news release from the Japanese embassy.
The group — the 7th batch of candidate nurses and caregivers to Japan under the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement (JPEPA) — will be deployed to Japan in June next year, the embassy said.
The group will still have to undergo another six months of language training in Japan, it added.
In his message to the candidates, Charge d'affaires to the Philippines Tetsuro Amano said the current number is “more than a 60% increase from last year.”
“This eloquently signifies the increasing demand and expectation for Filipino nurses and careworkers in Japan,” Amano said.
Amano attended the opening ceremony of the Preparatory Japanese Language Training for the candidates at the TESDA head office in Taguig City held Tuesday.
“I expect that more and more Filipino nurses and careworkers will work in Japan. I, myself, may be attended to by one of you in the future,” Amano said.
TESDA deputy director General Teodoro C. Pascua was also present in the ceremony.
“The collaborative efforts of the governments of Japan and the Philippines made this training possible,” the embassy said in a statement. —KBK, GMA News
Of the total 306 candidates, 203 will be trained at the Language Skills Institute at TESDA while the remaining 103 candidates will take it at the Nihongo Center Foundation, Inc., according to a news release from the Japanese embassy.
Chargés d'affaires Tetsuro Amano with the candidates. Japanese embassy photo
The group will still have to undergo another six months of language training in Japan, it added.
In his message to the candidates, Charge d'affaires to the Philippines Tetsuro Amano said the current number is “more than a 60% increase from last year.”
“This eloquently signifies the increasing demand and expectation for Filipino nurses and careworkers in Japan,” Amano said.
Amano attended the opening ceremony of the Preparatory Japanese Language Training for the candidates at the TESDA head office in Taguig City held Tuesday.
“I expect that more and more Filipino nurses and careworkers will work in Japan. I, myself, may be attended to by one of you in the future,” Amano said.
TESDA deputy director General Teodoro C. Pascua was also present in the ceremony.
“The collaborative efforts of the governments of Japan and the Philippines made this training possible,” the embassy said in a statement. —KBK, GMA News
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