Things at my Japanese school that could send Americans into a coma…
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ก.พ. 2024
- Megan and Ben from hito.bito on TikTok describe things about Japanese schools that could surprise Americans!
Come to Japan with us in October!
br.ai/GkVXB
#hito.bito #the.hito.bito #hitobito #gingerinjapan #japandiaries #ben #megan
"KICK IN THE BALLS" they are true english speakers at heart
They're from the hood
They're English speakers right down to the punk tactics 😂
They got the essence of English tbh. LOL
“I am the LORD your God: you shall not have strange Gods before me.
“You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain.
“Remember to keep holy the LORD’s Day.
“Honor your father and mother.
“You shall not kill.
“You shall not commit adultery.
“You shall not steal.
“You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.
“You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife.
“You shall not covet your neighbor’s goods.”
@@alwaysawomanofGod someone got kicked in the balls
*Announcer voice*
KICK IN THE BALLS
Why did i imagine that with the jojo "oh that's a baseball" voice
I love how my brain went to Presentation Michael
ANNOUNCER BEEFY DIE?!??!?!?!?!
I imagined the Wii sports announcer
am i the only one who imagined it in the tf2 announcer
I once read that students cleaning the school teaches them cooperation and that if they all work together on a big job like cleaning an entire school then its not bad because they really each only have to do a little bit of the work and the team as a whole will get it done. Plus they learn cleanliness and how to clean up after themselves which is always a great skill
i mean it doesn’t take a genius to understand that, our current culture is lacking respect, basic decency and camaraderie
In my Private Christian school we always worked together to clean. It was very rewarding for the self-esteem, and it definitely brought us closer as community.
Why the masks? They don't work for a virus, so what is the point?
@@boopbooperson1654 As did mine! Not sure if they still do anymore though...
@@ActiveGamingUK well on the surface many might see it as the schools just being cheap not wanting to hire janitors when its really a lesson for the kids. I was just stating what ive heard about why it’s done.
"That was the REAL reason" hit me so hard 😂 it wasn't,admit it😂
then what’s the real reason
@@driftingdandelion the men in japan apparently get excited when school girls wear high ponys
@veemd5332 I don't know how that's exciting but like it's the equivalent to girls in America and showing their shoulders
@@veemd5332 It's not about the pony tail they have a thing for exposed back of neck.
@@driftingdandelionthe things Japanese men are attracted to
As an American - I would never correct a poster like that. I need the chaos
Same here 😂
As a Greek I also wouldn't correct them
As long as the English words are spelled right, I'd be fine with it. I work Stateside for a Japanese company, and the misspellings drive me insane. Seriously, biderectional? Just use spellcheck for god's sake!
@benwagner5089 so you are saying you can write japanese without mistakes. please take a loooong look in the mirror because you are not so smart sir.
A very American thing to do. I love it 😂
That poster is the equivalent of people getting tattoos of Japanese characters and not knowing what they say
Underrated comment
Not just posters, t shirts, stationary, so many items with English words put together only cause they like the sound of it and making English speakers stop and stare in confusion.
I think the only reason we don't see tattoos is because of how taboo they are in Japan.
You mean Chinese characters. Kanji literally means Chinese characters.
@@gdtoobno
@@gdtoobbro did not ever say Kanji
I'm a teacher from Scotland and in lots of schools here we also have to change out of outdoor shoes in to indoor slippers/plimsoles. Otherwise the classrooms would he full of rain and mud constantly!
In the USA we just let our schools be full of dirt and gross food waste and underpay minority employees to wipe it all up. It sucks. We’ve been getting kids to help us sweep the hall at the school I work in to get them more involved
Where in Scotland? I never had to change my shoes -- though we did have to wear plimsoles for PE.
In Russia we also have to change our shoes otherwise you won't be allowed inside. But unlike Japan we don't have lockers to store replacement shoes inside the school, so we carry shoes with us every day. But in the warmer months, when it's warm and dry outside the rules are not so strict, so we don't change shoes when entering the school.
And we also have some kind of "duty" when our teacher chooses students who have to clean the classroom in the end of the day. Every week it's a different group of students. It's not like we clean the school from top to bottom, we have school janitors, so all we have to do is to just clean the blackboard, put the chairs and desks straight, and also sweep the floors.
I live in Canada and my elementary school also had us change from outdoor shoes into indoor shoes. Though there wasn’t a specific type of indoor shoe used like slippers, it was just whatever you bought (usually running shoes and sneakers for most kids).
@@clawtooth35I lived in East Lothian and one primary school I attended let you wear your outdoor shoes inside unless they were wellies. In that case, you would change into your gym shoes.
The other primary school I went to was very proud of its new linoleum floors and would only allow light-soled shoes indoors, including for our gym shoes. We had to have dedicated indoor shoes in addition to our gym shoes, even though it was just the hallways that had the linoleum floor, and the classrooms were carpeted.
I don't remember any carpet at my secondary school, but I could be wrong. They certainly didn't have linoleum, lol.
I'm Japanese.
I'm happy to translate. this meaning is below.
kick in the balls!
クラスに新たなかがやきを!
〜みんながかがやく最高のクラスに!〜
kick in the balls!
Bring a new sparkle to the class!
~ To the best class where everyone shines!
〜
Maybe this is the class's new slogan
It might be mistaken as "kick in the ball" instead of "kick off"
It means let's go enthusiastically with this new class.
That translates to Add a new glow to your class!¬The best class where everyone shines!`¬
Being able to wear slippers in school sounds so much more comfortable
It'd be way more comfortable if you weren't forced to wear any shoes or slippers. When i was in school, we wore nothing but socks
It’s not about comfort, it’s about hygiene 🤦
@@jasonbaker2198 but it is comfier regardless! we don’t wear shoes in my house for hygiene reasons, but if i visit someone’s house and they tell me i don’t have to take mine off, i want to anyway just because it’s more comfy that way :)
@@jasonbaker2198you wash your feet when taking a bath, right...? It's never been an issue for me unless you're somehow super sweaty.
@@GalluZ everytime you walk in from outside tho ?
"K I C K I N T H E B A L L S !"
I NEED to know the context of that poster IMMEDIATELY! LMFAO
In case she replies to this, I want to hear it too, so I'm commenting so I can get that ping.
@@demZetriI’m gonna do the same bc I need context 😅
I have a feeling it has something to do with bad translation
Probably for the game kickball
クラスに新たな(かがやさち)
みんなかがやく __のくラスに
Is what the poster says, I think they're welcoming a new kid into class(my japanese sucks so forgive me if i'm wrong,) but the kick in the balls phrase seems to be out of the blue, no context
We had to change from outdoor to indoor shoes in Russia too. And I guess it's logical since we have notoriously bad roads in the majority of towns which turns into dirt pools at spring/autumn. Not to mention the terrible climate (sitting indoors in warm winter boots for hours is pretty hard).
My wife and I do this at my home in America. It's cleaner. I can't stand people who walk into a house with their dirty shoes on.
We do the same in Türkiye. It's a taboo here to enter a house with your shoes on.
In Finland we keep the shoes on. Some people changed them to inside shoes like Crocs but I never had problems with winter shoes. Just took them off after I got into class.
@@Tupsuu but what about the sweat? Sitting in classroom with +22C° temperature for 6-7 hours in high leather winter boots with fur inside - I can imagine the odor just thinking about it😅
And in Western Russia, drones randomly dropping in to blow things up. Like fireworks, but bigger and meant to remind everyone that they're never safe from repercussions.
This girl so beautiful, i really like her hair
not the poster help💀💀🪑
I see you put the char, cultured person right here
I am HIGHLY concerned about you.
you appear to be mistaken! i’m actually riki’s fav girl! 😁 riki thinks this is a little silly, as he’s sitting next to me rn! ❤️
@chaettos do you know what you're replying to?!
@@Riley-1078 yeah 😭.
Oh lord the poster😭😂
Ikr lol
I dont think they worded that very nicely…😭
Ikr😂
@@bigtoiletman77 well that poster was metaphorically written very well I think a writer would love it ‘this is a joke’
Frrrr😭😭💀
Could you imagine the wildebeests in American inner city schools keeping a facility this clean? Lmfao
I loved traveling to different countries and learning new customs. We were in the military. All those things teach respect and discipline. Something sorely needed in our country.
Imagine putting up “kick in the balls” poster in American schools.
Don’t have to imagine, I’m sure it’s been done, just on purpose instead of accident 😂
I would be much more motivated personally
Every boy in the class (America) OH FUCK I BETTER DO MY WORK
People would cry about how it's "pushing an agenda" simply because it has a tiny rainbow on it.
To be fair, put it in Japanese and no one bats an eye
Teaching the kids to clean up after themselves has to be the most beneficial life skill that we should also be teaching here in the u.s.
That was a thing back in my elementary school days!
It's insane how wasteful most people are
@@bluelightstudios6191
what the fk are you on.
@@mivvyHave you been to a modern school, they are propaganda machines.
@@ThePTBRULESyou mean religious propaganda machines, even if the school is public.
I already knew most of these but that POSTER!
This deserves all the love and recognition.
That's actually cool that students clean the classroom and serve their own meals. That's teaching independence.
Independence and also respect! You’re not going to go around making a mess of the school if you’re the one who has to clean it up.
I think a lot of Asian countries do this, even here in the Philippines (which is practically the USA of the west). In many primary and secondary schools, there are Cleaners (aka students assigned to clean the classroom at the end of each day, usually this is done by assigning each school day per row or column).
Cafeterias in a lot of elementary and high school also have CLAYGO in place - if you bought food from the cafeteria, you're expected to wash the plates/utensils you borrowed before returning it to the cafeteria staff. Not doing so incurs mocking from other students - probably why the American media cliche of bitchy teen bullies never took off here because the moment you act a single iota off Regina George, you will be mocked from sun up to sun down.
@@itscharliebee2307 Also free labor.
I agree!
Teaches both independence and unquestioning compliance
Edit: this got many likes, but I was just being a bit edgy. If you disagree with my comment, other people have said what you think. Have a good day and do good things.
The fact no one steals anyone’s shoes makes it a better school than mine
I see you haven't heard of Japanese school bullying 💀
@@EroiKumathe idea of a japanese school boy trying to heat another one up is extremely cunny to me
There’s no 13% there
@@AG-yc7vt YOU'RE SOO EDGY OH EM GEE 😱😱‼️
why would anyone steal shoes
you'd need to find the right size, they probably stink, and what are you gonna do with them?? wear them to the same school you stole them from?
POV: you scrolled over 100s of replies to the context of the poster comment just to find she replied “the less you know the better”
I’m so proud of them for putting up that poster, it can make a grown human cry
The cleaning at school would help so many people learn to clean as a part of a daily routine wow
I clean my home but i dont clean my office area, we have paid cleaners for that.
@@tannagra they are helping children learn to do tasks at school to prepare them for their life, not just their career. It is important to know how to clean properly.
Yes
@@naomi.e.333they’re likely American, and so are very work-centric. Here in Europe (and indeed in other countries like Japan) it’s believed that to succeed in any career, one’s own personal life must be well developed. Hence values and skills like cleanliness being taught. For some reason people like the above believe that people should live, work, and die, with nothing to live FOR.
@@Alex-ug9wx No, it's kinda the opposite for Americans, it's free child labor that isn't being paid for. That's the problem they have. It's fine to clean up after yourself, but when you have to clean up after others? Ya should get paid for it.
could you imagine schools being safe enough to leave the doors open? 😭
That hit different when I noticed that too 😢
no gun checkpoints is already radical.
@@eggizgud What the hell is a gun checkpoint, what school even need that? 😭
I think you're the one being radical
@@crabapple.some schools have to check students bags if they don’t have clear ones bc of school shootings 😭😭for our games at our school we have to do bag checks because some rando brought a knife or gun one time
Doors open is not the norm damn you must be american :( that's really sad, I think all over the world doors open is the norm
i really do love the idea of students cleaning the school together!! there’s stuff about the japanese education system that gets me like 😨😨 (as with all education systems worldwide, tbh) but that’s one of the things i’d actually love to have implemented here in the USA. for teaching more cooperation, better respect for their environment, and so on. not to mention that being taught to clean is sadly not every child’s experience, and i’m sure that presents major challenges when they get out on their own as adults and want to do it, but don’t know where to start. learning at school would make a difference!!
“KICK IN THE BALLS” Is def google translate 😭
More like Bing
why does your comment from 1 day ago get 945 upvotes, but mine is still ignored?
@@anderstermansen130 skill issue
@@anderstermansen130cest la vie, skill issue
Haha nice
That sign measurably improved my morning.
With what instrument does one measure the quality of a morning?
@@trolley7657 feelings?
A vuvuzela?
Likewise
@@jimwormmaster Antagonistic Undecagonstring?
The lunch there is just a gigantic flex. Eating those HEALTHY meals that actually develop their children.
In America your shoes would probably be stolen if they were expensive enough
Exactly what I was thinking unless they wore uniforms
You will get your shoes stolen in some American schools even while wearing them.
my sibling's shoes were stolen recently, in the UK lmao. Gotta love PE
Not 'probably'.
Salute
Yeah, that shoe cubby thing wouldn't work in inner city schools lol. When every kid there is poor and their parents are struggling to put food on the table, you know shits gonna get stolen if it isn't behind lock and key
I'm glad to see the shoe thing somewhere else because we do that in Ontario elementary schools (most people carried the habit into highschool when it hit winter) , and when I went to the States I was blown away by people wearing their gross shoes indoors. And not taking their shoes off when entering their homes! My mother would crucify me if I walked onto her floors with shoes on.
I'm willing to pay Jeff Steitzer (halo's legendary announcer) to say "KICK IN THE BALLS"
"Kick in the balls" Im dead 😭😭😭
*ultra ded*
I even met jesus and came back to laugh again.
I spawned in a casket
The students cleaning their school is such a great idea. It teaches the importance of cleanliness as well as responsibility and respect for their surroundings. Perfect!
Until the entitled parent interferes and it becomes a huge deal esp. in the US. It teaches responsibility, respect, proper hygiene, cleansiness etc. Some of these need to be implemented in schools in other countries.
This would not work well in the US. We had a similar system in middle school where each day students were pulled from a 'raffle' to see what table they had to clean. The same group of kids would leave a huge mess and it was always another dude's job to clean it up.
It would probably be different if everyone ate their lunch in a classroom (it's obvious to find the guy who made the mess), but when everyone goes to a large cafeteria, it really doesn't work.
Here in my country, they would say that it's not work for students but for cleaning staff. I think the implementation would be legal but the richest (and the poor too) would protest saying that they were forcing children to work unduly.
Here in my country, they would say that it's not work for students but for cleaning staff. I think the implementation would be cool but the richest (and the poor too) would protest saying that they were forcing children to work unduly.
@@sophia-annsmith9277You haven't seen french public schools 😭
She Is so beautiful seriously
when I was younger I'd normally stay after school just cleaning my teachers classrooms for them, It was fun and simple, plus I love using vacuums lol
While stationed in Japan with the military, we enrolled our kids in the local Japanese elementary school. It was beyond fantastic. The teachers visit each student's home to be sure they have a place to sleep and a place to study! They also change in the classroom to get into their swimsuits for their tiny kiddie pool. THAT was the hardest thing for my boys. After 3rd grade I think they separate the boys and girls to change. I loved walking to the train station and having a random child yell "Benjamin's mama" always made me smile!
Nice pun you made there haha 🤣. And Japan is so funny. Don't look at the back of my neck, but you can see me naked as we change for swim class together 🤣. What a place.
fun fact, the shared public nudity isn’t just a kids thing, in japan they have public saunas where both men and women can share, and i’m pretty sure u have to be fully naked in there, not even towels
Which base if you don't mind my asking?
The teachers don’t care enough to stop the insane amount of bullying and suicide that happens in young children
@@euclid4703 The sauna thing is Finnish, I think you meant Japanese onsen where they bathe naked and can have mixed baths aka women and men in same onsen.
It would be nice if more countries started making students clean after themselves. I think it would teach them to be more respectful.
Pretty sure it's like that in most countries
In the US it would never work because parents will hear their kid tell them that and then ask “why are you making my child do that? One child labor is illegal and two you have janitors for a reason so might as well make them work”
@@For-get-me-notsAndRosespersonally my mom would be all for cleaning up after yourselves. It's the kids who would complain because they are used to leaving trash everywhere. I think it's a great idea tbh.
@@hueningpie It is a great idea I would love if this was implemented I think it would also help with people littering too but most parents these days would hate it and complain.
In my school, we have students assigned for every day to clean the classroom, but it still ends up messy in the middle of the day
There are still janitors, but their jobs are all outside the classrooms
As a Canadian, it’s very normal to change from indoor to outdoor shoes, but that’s because it snows so much here and then the 6 feet of snow melts and then there’s puddles so big and deep that people have brought bathing suits and swam in them which also brings mud. But then it gets super dusty and smoky and then outside is just gross 🤷♀️
out of this world gorgeous. Sometimes i have to watch 2-3 times just to comprehend the content
shoot even the way you annunciate your words is beautiful ......God bless
I once had a letter with my shoes. "Meet me on the roof after school." ... no name, no nothing. Well, our second wedding anniversary is in April. 😂😂😂
Aren't you glad you went? Congratulations...
*alternate universe where it was a trap and you got pushed off* 😈😈😈
@@colerobin7708 Then it would have been a trap. And further? then I would have found another man. Here in Japan, dating is big business.
Seriously?
I once had a letter with my shoes. “Meet me on the roof after school” … no name, no nothing. Well 5 men got boomed last April 😭😭😭
I actually like the changing the shoes from outdoors to indoors😭
I do this in my own home lol. I hate mud and dirt etc being tracked in
U WEAR SHOES IN UR HOME ??!?@@gryphnwnggrl
It's ya'all that are weird with not changing the shoes. Everywhere else you do change shoes at school
Where I live we skip the shoes in the house part in total, for the most part. Sure stairs can be slippery but great practice for winter lol...
FYI, most people in Japan afaik still change into slippers for their home so it's not just at schools.
We do that in Polish schools too
am love ur content SO MUCH AAAA, and ur makeup looks relly good :0
The beauty of this lady is surreal (I know Im out of topic but...)
I think that cleaning the school is actually a good way for kids to always keep things clean that way you don’t gotta clean nasty things later at the end of the day hahah
In Ghana, delinquent students (like myself😅) had to stay after school and sweep the class, arrange the messy chairs and tables. But it was fun, cause you're never alone, lol😂😂
Imagine if one of your friend puked in the area that you’re in charge of cleaning 😭
Fr😂🎉
it also keeps expenses low and teaches children how to clean properly
@@macncheese2986 they are cleaning their puke jk xD
I’ve had several Japanese students stay with me while studying in Australia. I found them all to be super clean, respectful, friendly and quiet. Always a pleasure to meet.
Ikr I’m an Aussie and we are a lil…crazy and they r so peaceful like what
I’m not saying every Aussie is crazy
@@HeartstopperTaylorsVersion28 true honestly i was called gay for sticking with my frinds who were girls but i was just a controllable maniac while the other boys were just maniacs
Why would Japanese people in Japan feel the need to ask your permission to put up English signs in their Japanese school, in Japan
@@KINKAZWELL because of what they say
@@KINKAZWELLThe Japanese teachers likely don't know that the poster says something inappropriate in English. "Kick in the balls" if they knew what it meant they probably wouldn't allow it. So its a good idea to run the English by the English teacher first
Reminds me of montessori schools. They clean their own things and clean the schools themselves to teach responsibility
I live in Canada, and at the middle school I went to, we had to take off our outdoor shoes as well, but we had more of a shoe rack than a cubby so you just had to remember where you put your shoes.
LOve how clean everything is. And teaches them a great sense of responsibilty
And they continue to be that way into adulthood just look at the previous World Cup after every Japan game win or lose they cleaned the entire Stadium there is no way you cannot respect that😊
and all it costs them is mental health degradation due to raised expectations limited self expression.
@@Verchiel_How does keeping your environment clean degrade mental health 😭
@@mafukun not directly
But japanese education and workforce is brutal, and parents do tend to hold quite high expectations of their kids.
Things like good grades are a huge deal, many schools even displaying exam scores of all students for all to see.
I probably worded it quite poorly but it's not really the self-serving tasks like preparing meals or cleaning the school that I'm referring to, more so the competitiveness of being a student can be, or the draining workforce by extent.
@Verchiel_ but that's a society problem not a "cleaning up after yourself" problem
This teaches kids good basic home keeping skills, tidying up after themselves and being self reliant. Fantastic.
and by extension -> teaches to be tidy & neat alk around.. so you have less cleaning to do later.. 😉👍🤷♂️
I love that. I wish American schools would adopt that.
Yeah better not teach kids that in Western schools.
They might become competent adults
They also have one of the highest suicide rates among school aged kids in the world.
@@Nerobyrne
Please man, the West is so far gone it needs an Autocracy for 50 years to right the whole thing before the people are sufficiently self reliant and COMPLIANT/OBEDIENT (Westerners loathe these concepts unlike East Asia) before they are comfortable enough to do this. Last time the West had this was 90 years ago.
In elementary school in Canada we had indoor and outdoor shoes too
I remember living in Japan for most of my life, and I remember how clean the schools were and the shoe cubbies… they were great.
Bro the jawline filter at the start💀
Bruh youre so observant how tf did you notice that?? 😭😭
HELP LMFAOOO
Caught her lacking 🤣🤣
😂😂😂
Dude yes that was the first thing I saw 😅
Been here 30 years and the Janglish posters still crack me up.
Your comment is most heroically correct with many sunshine.
I live in Puerto Rico with lots of Spanglish. I've never heard Janglish, but I love it!
Engrish is what I've always known it as.
One I saw was "Pace and love"
So why are you behind an American flag?
In my elementary school in Canada we also had to change our shoes from outdoor to indoor shoes and had separate gym shoes and obviously in the extreme winters we must change into snow boots when we go out and take them off and change into indoor shoes when we come back in
We used to remove our outdoor shoes and put them in our our cubbies and we would have indoor shoes with us or in our cubbies already but that only year before 4 or 5th grade or as you call it here before primary 4 or 5
Biking to school, daily cleaning, and having lots of windows open for fresh air honestly sounds amazing.
fr my school's air is like dead fish
In the US plenty of parents would call it abusive. They can't even be bothered to assure their children dress appropriately or make sure they get a proper lunch.
@@bcaye making sure your child dresses properly and gets a good lunch shouldn't be an issue past the age of 10. At least my parents got me to sort my lunch at 10 and I was coddled. How do us parents make simple parenting seem like a monster of a task.
@@user-ox9ez8rd2x, teenage females are infamous for rejecting dress codes.
You can't pack your own lunch if there is nothing to pack, which happens in homes where parents can't be arsed. They eat fast food for lunch and take out for dinner. There's nothing in the fridge to take for lunch. They assume the kid can buy lunch but that food is crap. It happens.
I would say tiring and time consuming. They could throw the food waste off the dishes and the people at the dining room can wash them. I guess very few people use the bus. But I see no problem about it either. In many places around the world the bike is not an alternative, it can be legitimately dangerous for kids. Cleaning the classroom, well, yeah, that suits well, but open doors in winter, c'mon!
honerstly the kids cleaning is a good thing teaches responsibility and home skills, I wish they'd do it in the UK even if like 2-3 days a week
I've seen this in Germany too. I don't know how often it happens but I helped with kids and parents cleaning the school.
Latvian schools do this to some extent as well. We had a rotation for who cleans the classroom as well as having to spend a day helping in the kitchen with dishes, serving food, cleanup, etc. I think it gives students a sense of ownership and community.
I've heard that some Ukrainian schools do cleaning jobs, but I never have been to such a school.
@@SavalioDoesCodingStuff-dd5ybwe all have this in the former ussr countries 😅
They don't do it because they don't respect the education system and rightfully so. The education system is an embarrassment which kids hate because of how bad it is
My high school had us clean our own classrooms. We did it on a rotation because there were more students than tasks but it was fun and taught me how to actually sweep a room.
Miss being over there helping with the schools and how they treated their disabled or homeless!
The student who wrote "kick in the balls!" on that big ass poster is a menace to society 💀
"menace to society" is a weird way to spell "genius who is going places in life" but okay
@@wilkin38🤣🤣
Dramaqueen !
I think cleaning and serving themselves are super helpful things for kids to learn and help keep them busy and out of trouble! And definitely doable tasks for most kids!
It's a great way to teach them responsibility. America definitely needs to adopt some of these practices. These kids today are absolute atrocity.
How in the hell do they find time for that in a school day? Are all the kids going home later than a 9-5 office worker?
Here in the US a great deal of high school students are thugs who can't take a request or instruction from the teacher without calling his parents to complain to the director that he got harassed and assaulted by the teacher 😂
In lower grade levels, they'll also cook part/all of their school lunches in Home Ec if the timing is right
@@DGneoseeker1in my country cleaning is often after the last class of the day. You clean before you go home so you'll probably leave 30 minutes after last class
Glad I went to school in 90s america it was so much fun
My school in Canada had outdoor and indoor shoes too
The ponytail thing is probably the weirdest thing I've seen in a while. From what i found it said " ponytails were banned because the hairstyle exposes the nape of a girl's neck. School officials feared the sight of the female neck would sexually excite male students. "
I'm not Japanese but I dont think I've ever starred at a girl's nape with any ill thoughts. Don't know how they even came to that conclusion.
Many years ago, I had a teacher talk about how many things that we don't even consider to be cultural really are. He talked about sexual attraction. In the west, breasts were a big thing but in some African nations they weren't thought of sexually. He then mentioned that in Japan the back of the female neck was considered very sexual and most older outfits would cover it completely. He did say that due to Western media being everywhere our culture's sexual preferences were being pushed on the rest of the world.
@@brentw6533I also noticed that short skirts are very acceptable for girls, and are allowed in offices. They are considered cute and feminine, along with bows, furry sweaters, etc. It’s not necessarily a sexual thing; it’s a cute feminine thing. In America, you’d never be allowed to wears skirts that short to the office.
I mean, americans have the "no bare shoulders" rule for the same (unjustified) reason, I guess these illogical rules are everywhere haha
@@BP-yd9vn it was the opposite until decades ago, the expected size of skirts were very much enforced. but girls would use shorter and shorter skirts anyway because of some pop star or something, but it was more comfortable too, specially during summer. so eventually they were forced to lax the rules because they couldn't exactly expel all the girls shortening their skirts.
this rule is bonkers but I think I can explain the neck thing.
Historically a womens neck was seen to be very sensual as it was one of the few areas that werent exposed in traditional clothing. Its almost like ankles on a Victorian women. I still think its bullshit. Strangley I also read that in some parts of India school girls werent allowed to wear thier hair down because that was too ‘exiting’. its always something with these types of
As a chinese american who happened taking japanese for 4 years, "kick in the balls" was translated from ボールを蹴込む, which means kick the balls into the soccer net. lol
Same boat here! I’m a Chinese American. My girlfriend is Japanese though.
isn’t china enemies with japan and america?
Ohhhhh that's what happeneddddd
...
OH.
Thank you! I came to the comments because I just had to know, and hoped someone had explained.
I love it xD
The differences in the approaches in childhood leads to and explains so many of the differences in attitude and behavior in both cultures in adulthood. It starts young. "I do my part to help out, because it's the right and polite thing to do" vs "That's not my job, I don't get paid to do that. Not my problem."
I remember my husband about 5 years ago complaining about the fresh out of college techs and nurses he had to deal with at the hospital and how they were always trying to get out of responsibilities and always asking if they could leave early. Now he says its even worse. He had someone call in and not show up to work at all the whole day cause they "had a flat tire" 😅 Nobody was buying it lol
Yeah, though this mentality infestation is recent in America. People used to go the extra mile because they knew it was the community they are doing for and the community will return the favour. Not sure what happened along the way.
On the flip side, how time consuming is it for the students to do this? On top of deleting jobs and money making opportunities for people who need them.
I'm just saying, I do put my shopping cart back, when I go to a store, but that behavior shouldn't be applied to everything, especially when someone is literally paid to do something, and are just sitting idle, contributing nothing, not earning their money.
And it's bad when people are laud off for not enough work available, and other end of the scale, remaining employees are overworked, given too much to do.
Economies & cultures are complicated.
Okay fantastic, but why is nobody here questioning why they leave the doors open in the winter??
@@frododododo haha, totally forgot about that, but good point, yes. Japan has a lot of spectacularly awesome things. However, they just as equally have so many spectacularly weird and awful things too. Would love to know the reason for the door thing.
You're so fucking lucky just living there 😢 visiting Japan is my dream, I wish I studied there, I'm 26 and this made me want to go back to school
I love that the kids are made to clean up after themselves.
In my middle school we did have to clean the lunch room and our home rooms everyday. But thats the only one i can relate to here. Its pretty cool that you change your shoes.
Lots of parents here in the US don't want their precious treasures cleaning anything. But it would really teach students responsibility and ownership.
it's honestly so irresponsible of parents not to pass on these necessary skills... life skills unto their children, while they're still young. realistically, will these kids have cleaners cleaning up after them when they're older? highly unlikely! so, better train them up now
Really? Why would US parents want to deprive their children of the experience and responsibility of cleaning? Are they deliberately trying to ruin their upbringing?
Yeah because professionals who can do it better, faster, and get paid for their work exist. Kids can learn the very same skills at home too.
Yeah it’s for them to teach tho, not the schools.
My mom never trusted me to do it correctly so instead of teaching me HOW to do it correctly, she just didn’t let me do it
I tell you the real reason for a low pony tail. In Japan, they believe that high pony tail shows too much of a neck line at the back which "seduces" men. That's why girls have to do it low.
I think 'emon wo nuku' is the term you want to look for
Wow. Do they think girl's shoulders are too distracting too?
Makes more sense than the helmet thing. My Japanese university was right next to a high school and I don't think I saw a single bicycle helmet the entire time I was there
Sounds like a personal problem.
I'm an Anarchist, born and raised; don't @me.
@@AmyraCarter you can’t tell me what to do @AmyraCarter @AmyraCarter
I wish I could’ve gone to school in Japan, especially with the indoor shoes the floors are so muddy during the rainy season at my school.
i love the cold so the doors being open 24/7 sounds awesome
The sense of humor in “Kick in the balls” 😂
My theory is that the kid I'm charge of it knows it's wrong, but he's trying to get her to come over and talk to him by begging him to take it down. It's the highlight of his day to talk to the hot exchange student.
shes a teacher@@Poodle_Gun
@@unknownentiti2351Think that'll stop him?
@@unknownentiti2351 And the kind of teacher that all the schoolboys in every school ever fantasized about.
Aka the good looking young one.
And before you ask, I never had one like that, our teachers were all old, except one and she was married with a kid...
I love how the kids clean thw school! It helps them learn ownership of the state of the space thsy inhabit. Really lovely
I disagree. Children should have significant free time to develop. They shouldn't be in school longer than neccessary (also not less than reasonable).
@@brinkipinki you say that, but including cleaning duties kids our out of the class room by 2-3 pm. hella lot of free time if you ask me.
Well minus the military-esque baseball and football training sports clubs have. Japs really love them baseball and football...
@@brinkipinkitaking ownership and keeping a space clean is far more important. Also, it wouldn’t take long to clean a school if every student pitched in and maintained it. Easy to maintain, hard to clean. Additionally, it’s a good bonding experience and allows kids to work together.
@@brinkipinkithey could just make sure to limit classes and homework to factor in time for cleaning. I remember the cleaning song from preschool and elementary school, so it should be fine if there’s time in the schedule (it’s also a nice break)
@@kawaiidere1023 lowering the education in favour of cleaning seems pretty unintuitive when the purpose of school is proper education.
the first one is the same in croatia you have to change shoes when you enter
How you create strong citizens, and clean, safe communities.
The doors being open definitely makes Americans go "Yikes" for a totally different reason than tempurature LOL
That got a good chuckle out of me
For me it’s the fact that it gets down to -40F here but that also makes sense
ok but america does gets down in the negatives dude😭
@@kazzle_dazzle6 Yes, this is a joke about school sh00tings and instead of the doors being locked like in America due to safety, they're just wide open which is a big yikes to anyone living here LOL. I know it's safer over there when it comes to that, but my American brain still says "oh no"
@@RavenIsAnArtist I never really learned what's behind these issues in America but that just sounds traumatizing, I'm glad that I'm out of those situations.
i went to a private montessori school in america briefly after being subjected to the public school system and it was wonderful, just like this. the learning styles were probably different, but keeping the area clean was the same. i found it really fostered a sense of responsibility within the students, we cleaned our own dishes, swept, did laundry, cleaned the class pet's tanks, and did upkeep on the outside yard and trails behind school. i really grew to love school, i felt like the teachers really respected us, they understood we were intelligent but also took into fact that we may have been naive and didn't get upset at us when we did things wrong. it truly was amazing, a safe space for us to practice being normal responsible humans and have one on one learning and education. going back to public school afterwards was a nightmare, i have never been the same since and i truly feel for everyone in the public school system, the teachers, the janitors, the students, the faculty.
EDIT: jesus everyone is fighting
Sounds like a very cool experience!
I LOVE the Montessori system
I'm a Montessori teacher 😊 I went to public school and it sent me into a spiral with how needy everyone was 😅
Too bad not everyone can go to private school because newsflash! Not everyone makes good money or just has good money! So good on u😊.
@@aiyanajackson1090They never suggested otherwise..? They were literally just talking about their personal experience
No mention of "oh everyone should do this!" or anything like that, they just said they felt bad for people stuck in public school
thank god i’m only british so i only experienced a seizure. My heart goes out the the Americans who have lost family members to this video.
Love note in shoess is great 😂
ngl when i went to japan the streets were literally cleaner than your bathroom floor
streets are always cleaner than mouldy wet bathroom floors.
I really can't tell if you're trying to say they're extreme clean or just like... Baseline? Lol. I feel like a bathroom floor is one of the dirtier floors in an average house?
my bathroom floor is mopped and steamed every night. so i doubt its cleaner than that. but i understand the point you're drying to make.
@@TonyBombardoNot in my house.
Their streets is like crispy clean 🥰 it’s so peaceful to walk
Tbh, students cleaning their classroom sounds like a good idea. And it's not that time-consuming with an entire classroom of people
In the Philippines from Grade 1 through high school, we clean our classrooms everyday before going home. Everyone is assigned into groups to clean from blackboards to sweeping the floor. Nobody gets a pass.
American school don't actually do this? I thought it was a pretty universal thing. Even just sweeping some dust and trash or cleaning the white/black board.
Learn something new every day I guess.
@tweetug3697 I'm not american nor do I live in America but I don't think they do this. Neither do we in Finland.
@@tweetug3697 Canadian elementary/highschool didn't do this from my experience because students go from class to class (so there is no concept of designated classroom from my experience), unlike in Korea where teachers go from class to class (so students had a classroom that is assigned to them).
@@ddot1007We had home room classes in my high school. And we would have to do some cleaning which was basically just throwing away any garbage left out on or inside the desks and stacking chairs in the corner. The janitor would do the rest.
I also go to a japanese school, we were in a field trip, the teacher made sure we cleaned every SINGLE thing, i mean it, like she even used tape to make sure there weren't any dusts
We have indoor and out door shoes in my school too.
If a school in America said the kids were going to be cleaning, the parents would have a meltdown. As an American mom who is already teaching her 4 year old autistic son life skills (some call them chores) I would be thrilled if it was my sons responsibility along with his peers to keep their school clean
My high school in Florida made students who stayed after for detention weed and maintain the garden out front. We had such lovely landscaping. The teacher who ran detention also had a rule that if you were caught chewing gum, he’d give you gloves, a scraper, and a bag. You owed him 5 pieces of gum you found somewhere in the building.
I don't know a single parent alive who wouldn't support their kids cleaning the school in the US. Absolutely no meltdown. But my kids also don't hang out with the type of kids that those types of parents produce, so I may have just never met them
@@regina68139unfortunately I know quite a few parents who would be PISSED their kid had to lift a finger and do something themselves
@@regina68139I unfortunately know several parents who would have meltdowns.
Are you fucking kidding id be thrilled to send my kids somewhere like that
NO LOVE LETTER IN THE SHOE RACK!!??
I've been lied to by all the school romance dramas😢
Right!? The school anime's are a lie!!! 😂
I’m Japanese. I’ve received a crank letter😂 My friend’s shoe was hidden by mean senpai (bullying girl)
The bullying thing in anime is true
@@user-in4zd6um1dwhy's that the one thing that should never be true.
Growing up in Nova Scotia we had to change to indoor shoes in school too. Only for the first 7 years and after that we didnt have to.
This is exactly like my school aside from the fashion restrictions (I'm in the us)
The cleaning needs to be introduced every where
They could start with healthy food first instead of the garbage they serve.
No, a school is a place of academic education, not another way for parents to dump off responsibilities.
No it shouldn't, the school is a place for chidlren to learn, not to do chores. Should employees clean their offices too now?
Well schools USED to be for learning, but I think some of us realize that it's used for indoctrination now at least in the west.....anyway I'd rather be learning sanitation than have tyrannical beliefs spouted lol
@@razahassan8755employees cleaning offices is different. Cleaning in schools is nice as it would teach the kids about cleanliness at a proper age. Although I don't think they should be made to clean everyday, cuz that's not why you go to school. But they could make the kids clean once a week( probably on Friday as it's the last working day), as it would teach them about cleanliness and how to properly clean. I mean, school is a place to learn and cleaning properly is also something that should be learnt.
The level of education, discipline and humbleness is amazing
Or level of control. Seems a bit much
@@webguy943yeah fr, a lot of people praise the Japanese for their "discipline" but it seems a little authoritarian at times.
you're glazing hard buddy
so is the level of suicide
Nah, they're just strict and hate when people try to stand out and be themselves
In primary we had to wear indoor shoes aswell
In my elementary school, we also had outdoor and indoor shoes.
Not the English poster 💀
Yeah, leaving all the doors and windows open in an American school would be an a duly no 🙅♀️ cause of… obvious reasons
Sad reality
Wait why? I dont understand
@@fierypickle4823 Safety reasons. Nefarious people could come inside quite easily, and dangerous things like shootings could happen.
@@pearlescenteaoh shi.. I just understand it when saw ur comments 😢
In Germany we call it Stoßlüften
The poster rlly caught me off guard 💀😭😭
me who was home schooled and dose not knows anything abought American schools as an American
The thousand yard stare 💀