The school has been part of the network of establishments of the Agency for French Education Abroad (AEFE, according to its French name)[2] since its creation in 1990.
History
In May 1967, a grant from the French government lead to the creation of a new building in the Gyosei School in order to teach French. In 1973, the building was bought by France, and in January 1975 became the Lycée franco-japonais (日仏学園 Nichifutsu Gakuen).[3] Since 1997, the student body has increased by nearly 50 students per year, leading to the relocation of some students to two other sites: the Meisho School and the Franco-Japanese Institute. At the start of the 2003 school year, the Primary students were grouped together on the Fujimi site. Secondary students and their teachers moved to the campus of the former Japanese school of Ryuhoku (Taito-Ku). On 7 May 2012, the school officially changed their name from the Lycée franco-japonais to lycée français international de Tokyo and moved to their new campus in Takinogawa.
Academics
The majority of the classes are taught in French.[2] The school follows the French National Curriculum and prepares students for Brevet and French Baccalaureate. In 2023, 97.3% of the students received the Baccalaureat diploma, 88.8% obtained honors.
There is a bilingual French/English section in primary school and a Section européenne for Social Studies section in junior high (lower secondary) school.[2] High school (upper secondary) students who speak Japanese may enroll in the Option international du Baccalauréat (OIB).[2]
^ abcd"Presentation of the LFIT" (Archive). lycée français international de Tokyo. Retrieved on May 14, 2014. "Address : lycée français international de Tokyo, 5-57-37 Takinogawa Kita-ku, 114-0023 Tokyo"
^"Welcome" (). Lycée Franco-Japonais de Tokyo. Retrieved on 14 May 2014. "1-2-43 Fujimi Chiyoda-ku / 1-2-43 富士見 千代田区 102-0071 Tokyo / 東京 102-0071 "
This list does not include schools on French soil including the collectivities of French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna, and the area of New Caledonia