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Old 09-08-2009, 10:01 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Post Japanese school life. (Article)

If any of you ever wonder how a Japanese boy/girl spends their school life, this will give you close details to what an average student passes by, it's quite interesting to compare it to your own country's school life. Also this gives you a greater understanding at why school is blown out of proportion in importance. :)
Quote:
GETTING TO SCHOOL
Japanese high school students do not drive cars. Many either walk or ride bicycles if the distance is not too great. In other cases, students must take public buses and trains, often changing lines several times in order to reach their destinations. It is not uncommon for students to spend two or more hours each day on public transportation. After junior high school, students attend schools based on standardized high school entrance examination scores. As a result, some students travel a great distance to attend the school determined by their test scores. The school day begins at 8:30, so students may leave home as early as 6:30. While some students sleep or study during their long commute, public transportation also provides a chance for socializing with peers. Student behavior on the way to school is regulated by school policies. These policies may prohibit certain activities in public--chewing gum, consuming snacks, reading books while walking--anything that might reflect badly on the reputation of the school. Each school has a unique uniform that makes its students easily identifiable to the public. School policies often require students to stand on buses and trains, leaving seats open for other passengers in order to demonstrate consideration. In practice, however, the behavior of students tends to relax as they move farther away from school.

AT SCHOOL
Once at school, the students usually enter an area full of small lockers in which they place their street shoes and don school slippers. These slippers may be color coded: pink for girls and blue for boys. Many schools have a weekly school-wide assembly. Then students assemble in their homeroom classes for the day's studies. The school day starts with classroom management tasks, such as taking attendance and making announcements. These activities usually are conducted by the students themselves on a rotating duty schedule called "toban." Each homeroom has an average of 40-45 students. Students stay in their homeroom classrooms for most of the school day while the teachers move from room to room, operating out of a central teachers' room. Only for physical education, laboratory classes, or other subjects requiring special facilities do students move to different parts of the school. Between classes and at lunch time, classrooms can be noisy, lively places. Some schools may have a cafeteria, but most do not. Even in schools where a lunch is prepared and provided to the students, they usually eat together in their homeroom classrooms. In most schools, students bring a box lunch from home, almost always consisting of foods prepared by the mother in the early morning hours, such as rice, fish, eggs, vegetables, and pickles.

Japanese students spend 240 days a year at school, 60 days more than their American counterparts. Although many of those days are spent preparing for annual school festivals and events such as Culture Day, Sports Day, and school excursions, Japanese students still spend considerably more time in class than American students. Traditionally, Japanese students have attended school for half a day on Saturdays; however, the number of required Saturdays each month is decreasing as the result of Japanese educational reforms. Course selection and textbooks are determined by the Japanese Ministry of Education. Schools have limited autonomy in their curriculum development. Students in academic high schools typically take three years each of the following subjects: mathematics, social studies, Japanese, science, and English. Other subjects include physical education, music, art, and moral studies. All the students in one grade level study the same subjects. Given the number of required subjects, electives are few.

At the end of the academic day, all students participate in "o soji," the cleaning of the school. They sweep the classrooms and the hallways, empty trash cans, clean restrooms, clean chalkboards and chalk erasers, and pick up trash from the school grounds. After o soji, school is dismissed and most students disperse to different parts of the school for club meetings.

EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
Club activities take place after school every day. Teachers are assigned as sponsors, but often the students themselves determine the club's daily activities. Students can join only one club, and they rarely change clubs from year to year. In most schools, clubs can be divided into two types: sports clubs (baseball, soccer, judo, kendo, track, tennis, swimming, softball, volleyball, rugby) and culture clubs (English, broadcasting, calligraphy, science, mathematics, yearbook). New students usually are encouraged to select a club shortly after the school year begins in April. Clubs meet for two hours after school each day and many clubs continue to meet during school vacations. Club activities provide one of the primary opportunities for peer group socialization. Most college bound students withdraw from club activities during their senior year to devote more time to preparation for university entrance examinations. Although visible in the general high school experience, it is in the clubs that the fundamental relationships of "senpai" (senior) and "kohai" (junior) are established most solidly. It is the responsibility of the senpai to teach, initiate, and take care of the kohai. It is the duty of the kohai to serve and defer to the senpai. For example, kohai students in the tennis club might spend one year chasing tennis balls while the upperclassmen practice. Only after the upperclassmen have finished may the underclassmen use the courts. The kohai are expected to serve their senpai and to learn from them by observing and modeling their behavior. This fundamental relationship can be seen throughout Japanese society, in business, politics, and social dealings.

"CRAM SCHOOLS"
An interesting component of Japanese education is the thriving industry of "juku" and "yobiko," after school "cram schools," where approximately 60% of Japanese high school students go for supplemental lessons. Juku may offer lessons in nonacademic subjects such as art, swimming, abacus, and calligraphy, especially for elementary school students, as well as the academic subjects that are important to preparation for entrance examinations at all levels. Juku for high school students must compete for enrollment with yobiko, which exist solely to prepare students for university entrance examinations. Some "cram schools" specialize in preparing students for the examination of a particular school. Although it would seem natural for students to dread the rigor of additional lessons that extend their school day well into the late evening hours and require additional homework, many students enjoy juku and yobiko, where the teachers often are more animated and more interesting than some of the teachers in their regular schools. Also, in many cases, the lessons studied in "cram schools" provide an intellectual challenge for students bored with the standardized curriculum of their regular schools.

Juku and yobiko are primarily private, for profit schools that attract students from a wide geographical area. They often are located near train stations, enabling students to transport themselves easily to juku directly from school. Juku and yobiko thrive in Japan, where it is believed that all people possess the same innate intellectual capacity, and it is only the effort of individuals, or lack thereof, that determines their achievement above or below their fellows. In Japanese schools, there is the tendency to pass students with their grade cohort. Therefore, without the supplemental juku lessons, some students could fall well behind their classmates. Yobiko also exist to serve "ronin," "masterless samurai," students who have failed an entrance examination, but who want to try again. It is possible for students to spend a year or two as ronin after graduating from high school, studying at yobiko until they can pass a university entrance examination or until they give up. "Cram school" tuition is expensive, but most parents are eager to pay in order to ensure acceptance into a selective junior high school, high school, or university, and thus, a good future for their children.

ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS
In addition to university admission, entrance to high school also is determined by examination, and the subjects tested are Japanese, mathematics, science, social studies, and English. Private high schools create their own examinations, while those for public high schools are standardized within each prefecture. Students (and their parents) consider each school's college placement record when deciding which examinations to take. Success or failure on an entrance examination can influence a student's entire future, since the prospect of finding a good job depends on the school attended. Thus, students experience the pressure of this examination system at a relatively early age. But, practice tests at school and juku help teachers to direct students toward institutions whose examinations they are most likely to pass.

FREE TIME. Japanese students devote approximately two hours per weekday on homework, and about three hours on Sunday. They spend an average of two hours per day watching television, half an hour listening to the radio, an hour reading casually, and less than half an hour in social relations with peers outside of school. Japanese adults tend to perceive high school students in many ways as large children instead of young adults. And, while opposite sexes are interested in each other, parents and teachers strongly discourage teenage dating. Most young people do not begin to date until after high school. Finally, for a variety of reasons, there are few drug problems among Japanese adolescents.
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Last edited by danielmer; 09-16-2009 at 07:48 AM. Reason: adding quote
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Old 09-13-2009, 04:55 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

god in one way its cool in other sucks
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Old 09-13-2009, 06:57 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

but hey ....no pressure .
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Old 09-14-2009, 03:35 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

hmmm... sounds like my kinda deal, I love school and learning buuut... I'm past that stage in my life. Maybe in my next life ^^
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Old 09-15-2009, 08:15 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

it looks over whelming to me but i understand that it is just the way things are in japan so the kids probably don't think much about it ....unlike someone who might be placed in that system from another country...
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Old 09-15-2009, 08:24 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

Quote:
Originally Posted by leonasenshi View Post
FREE TIME. Japanese students devote approximately two hours per weekday on homework, and about three hours on Sunday. They spend an average of two hours per day watching television, half an hour listening to the radio, an hour reading casually, and less than half an hour in social relations with peers outside of school. Japanese adults tend to perceive high school students in many ways as large children instead of young adults. And, while opposite sexes are interested in each other, parents and teachers strongly discourage teenage dating. Most young people do not begin to date until after high school. Finally, for a variety of reasons, there are few drug problems among Japanese adolescents.
Wow I kinda feel lazy, I spent an average of about 4 hours a month on homework.( and that's like rounding up on the hour) -_-
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Old 09-15-2009, 12:42 PM   #7 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

the two colleges I went to and completed I almost never had homework, but that's because I always got it done in class. It was too easy for me... and I never understood how so many people would fail... it was a piece of cake (no pun intended...). Maybe if I had been living in Japan instead of the US I might have learned more, and it would have been more challenging. If I ever went back to college again, it would probably be for language arts.
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Old 09-16-2009, 07:16 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

I wrote a 2,000 word essay comparing the Japanese and Australian education systems not two weeks ago.

Looks like you the author left out the part about youth suicide rates going up around entrance-exam time.
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Old 09-16-2009, 08:00 AM   #9 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

Quote:
Originally Posted by mussolini View Post
I wrote a 2,000 word essay comparing the Japanese and Australian education systems not two weeks ago.

Looks like you left out the part about youth suicide rates going up around entrance-exam time.
I just found this article, I never said I wrote it. this is not my work or investigation, I just thought it was interesting to share.
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Old 09-18-2009, 01:17 AM   #10 (permalink)
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Default Re: Japanese school life. (Article)

If you're interested in the darker side of school (i.e bullying) feel free to give one of my theses "The Emergence of Bullying among Adolescents in Japanese and Western Cultures: A cause and impact study", a read (got it in Japanese too if anyone's up for it..)

http://w3.crimsonsakura.net/sites/th...llying2007.pdf
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