Tokyo - Forget the notebook and the multi-coloured pen, a Japanese firm has developed the latest in school supplies - chip-embedded student identification cards.
The cards make it easier for parents to keep tabs on their youngsters, said Toru Hasegawa, a spokesperson for software firm NAJ Corporation, based in western Japan.
Students scan ID cards on passing through the school entrance and the time is recorded and sent via email to their parents' cellphones or computers, he said. Parents are also alerted if their child fails to arrive at school.
The same happens when school is over, so parents know when to expect their children to arrive home, Hasegawa said.
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The system, which will go on sale in August, was conceived in response to growing concern about violence in Japan, he said.
"Being able to quickly get the information that their kids are leaving school is a relief for parents," he said.
Japan has long prided itself on being relatively crime-free but has been horrified in recent years by increasingly violent crimes committed by ever-younger children.
Despite safety worries, many education-obsessed parents send small children to late-night cram schools. It is not unusual for primary or junior high school students to be returning home at 10pm, Hasegawa said.
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