The Chinese uniform was designed, so that all students could afford and wear it. The cheap pricing of these simple uniforms are friendly to all families, making sure even families with low-economic statuses are able to send their kids to school. Also, the uniform discourages discrimination, as with more fancy and high-maintenance uniforms, it costs much more to buy and maintain the quality, cleanliness, and overall performance value of the material and different layers. As with many statistics and research, it was found in China, that many students were bullied and suffered unfair treatment due to the obvious disparity in their clothing, brand, and maintenance. As people in low-class families were unable to wash their clothes of stains, or buy new clothes, their apparel, with patches and dust, and etcetera were a clear indication of their economic status, which became a prime/ideal target for other students to take advantage of. Therefore, this uniform has discouraged many cases of bullying, and at the same time allowed more families to let their kids attend school, and incentivize studying (many other comments explain this, so i will not go into detail), in addition to many other small details, such as how of comfortable it is, how much space there is for customization (one can easily wear anything they’d like underneath, wide choice of accessories, and etcetera). EDIT: I see a few people commenting about this and I just want to clarify a few things. The first point is, that I never said it completely discouraged bullying but has helped in toning down and avoiding many cases of bullying. Yes, there are still many cases of bullying everywhere, but there would definitely be much more if the uniform was more high-maintenance. The next thing is that, yes, there is not a lot of individuality, but that’s the point with uniforms. Students can choose to accessorize and/or dress differently out of school. Lastly, this is just a personal opinion, if you don’t agree, that’s fine, and up to you.
This is a public school uniform. It is the same for men and women. The fabric is comfortable and cheap. It is not easy to compare among classmates. It is not easy to shorten it. It is especially convenient for sports.
when i was a students in china i found my uniform very ugly and uncomfortable to wear. i don't think my school was that strict since i remember that i don't wear much of my uniform, and the only strict requirement is really the red neck ties for morning gathering. once that is over, everyone just tuck their tie into their bag. then again that is when i was in first grade. i saw a lot of older kids wearing them thou. everyone have a shirt inside and treated the uniform as a jacket.
I just like it because it makes it less about looks, and more about personality. Plus boys and girls are totally equal in terms of uniform which is cool
I went to school in China, our uniforms changed depending on the season, so in the summer they were white and blue and the winter we had the black and white uniform. The uniforms are created in order for everyone to afford, and so that children from families with low income will not be discriminated for not being able to buy/maintain. Actually the uniform's appearance depends on province or school too.
Right so nobody would know who the poor kids were because clothes were the only way to tell....haha. No it's more about control and teaching that control at young ages. As usual they disguise it as something noble but in fact it's purpose is much more sinister.
@@gdubsterz1238 I grew up poor in the US, and I would have loved to go to a school that didn't make the income disparity so obvious. It would have been one less thing to worry about.
It's so unusual for me. I am from Germany and besides a few examptions most schools never wore a uniform. I remember as I was in 5th grade my school was so close to make us all wear the same stuff cause they wanted to reduce people getting cirtizised by not having cool fashion. My teachers planned polo shirts in the summer and everyone would wear the same black pants and than a thick sweatshirt in the winter, but however altho the majority of my school was for it, they didn't made that (well it was cause the 10th grader said no since they said "Why should we buy that and wear it when we leave the school on 6 months?" and that sucked tho cause 90% of all students of the other grades said yes. The thing is that my school was 50% of all votes belong to the 10th grader so if nobody in 10th grade says yes, than you reduce the 90% from the other students to 45% if that makes sense and than you have a low overall number, wich is stupid.). I could allways wear whatever I wanted in school, but we still had some rules. The rules where simple 1) no sleevless shirts 2) if you wear hot pants you have to put leggings or tights underneath 3) no too short skirts if you wanted to wear skirts. That used to be the only laws for fashion so if someone said they wanted to dye their hair or wear makeup or band-shirts and punk-fashion etc. nobody was against that at all. I have a cousin who went to an international English school here in Germany and she used to wear a uniform. It was a simple one. Her skirt was as long as till her knee, she wore white tennis socks, black simple shoes, a white blouse and a dark blue jacket with her school's name on it. People stared at her of cause, because most people are not used to seeing school uniforms here, but they understood it in her hometown a bit easier since over 200 kids went to that school. As I was younger and watched a few TV-shows who got dubed into German where you saw kids in school uniforms, I was allways a bit jealous that they wore these outfits. I was also very close as a teenager and thought to wear similiar outfits that are simple and have similiarities since I liked that style and it reminded me a bit of when you see pics of very fashionable British people back like 10-15 years ago. I had some dark blue skirts that I wore with simple white sneaker and a simple pullover with a white t-shirt underneath when I want to school (I did not allways wore that, but many times during spring and summer) and I loved it, but nowadays I don't think I could pull such a style off anymore haha. I wonder sometimes how it comes that some countries use school uniforms and others don't
@루이야 내한하자 Oh wow that's expansive. I suppose that's the cost of pretty outfits (no pun intended lol). As a chinese I remember my sports style uniform costs around 30 dollars, which was the price seven years ago so Idk if they still keep the same money. It's cheap and practical, which can also be wearing in PE lessons, but clearly not that fancy compared to Korean uniform T T. I really prefer Korean and Japanese school uniforms
the one thing i wished i had was the school festival. its seems like a lot of work but it really lets students go wild with what they want to do. the fact that its mainly a class activity and not a club one can really help with students getting close to their peers.
@@plzleavemealone9660 While not quite the same as japanese school festival, sport festival is common here in Indonesia. As far as my experience go, nobody really cares about who aren't good at sports (in a good way). If you happen to be the ace player, people will recognize you of course. But if you suck, people might laugh a bit when something stupid happen but nothing more. With that being said, I suck at sport but playing on the sport festival is still fun. Or you can be on the cheering team. My class always did something unique in every sport festival that we always won the no.1 Supporter Award. If you don't even want to be cheering, students here brings their own games (card, laptop, chess, etc.) so we could still play even if there's nothing happening at the moment. I couldn't say all schools are like that, but I never heard people here bullied because sports. Other reasons? most likely yes. But sport? unlikely.
My school call it 'school foundation' that is up for a week. A lot of booths are made such as wedding booth, horror booth, gallery booth, etc. And they also held contests for pageants, singing, dancing, etc. School festival like this are done in our 'school day' where we have sports and academic activities. We got concerts, majorette band, and classroom feast after that. And at the end of the year, we held prom and school ball (it's like a party day similar to what is going on in tomorrow land with edm artist). On Christmas month, we have Christmas party of course. One of the best. Unfortunately we are still stuck at home now and face to face classes only exist on some rural areas 😭
As someone who doesn't have any friends and had zero social skill+ low self esteem, I would hate school festivals. Only kids who had friends would have fun in that kind of occasion
We had school festivals here in Germany in our schools but it was boring. Teacher gave like 10 things to do and than a hand of students helped out and the rest was free to visit or not. So let's say you have 200 students in the school, 30 Teacher. All teacher and 40 students help out. You see 60 siblings or parents of the students who help out and from the other 160 students only 50 students with their 80 family member like to show up and other people are maybe 40 people or so who come and look if the school was good enough to send their own children there or to see what school their kid will be signed in if they have to take that school. It's kinda boring. Anime/Manga for example protray school festivals as a big thing and make it look fun but here in Europe it seems to be just a waste of time. I also tried to never show up at school festivals because it was just so boring and the year I was in my school's choir nobody even showed up wich upset my teacher. She said "You had to perform. We had like 800 visitors and nobody of you showed up except 3 people. We couldn't perform since 20 of you didn't came" and we all were like: "Well..." haha
As a Chinese person, it’s interesting to see other people react to our public school culture. Due to how the Gaokao system works, it’s a norm for a students to prioritize academics over every other aspect of life, because it dictates your employment and basically your future life. So yeah comfortable clothes are good for you to focus on school and generally feel good, but also unflattering uniforms can work to stop dating, prevent comparison of appearances etc. It feels like stripping individuality away from teenagers and turning them into study machines (in giant classes/schools too). But if you value studying above all else it’s a sensible choice.
That's interesting to hear. My parents and older siblings still grew up in the era in Hungary where they all had to wear uniforms. But they said that even when the uniforms were all the same, you could still very well tell the difference between kids, based on eg hair or whatever accessories they had, or how their uniform was kept etc... So they thought it was useless in curbing differences. But I guess we never took it seriously enough or something.
In Sweden we have no uniforms and no particular rules about clothing. Everyone is allowed to look however they want. Food for us is free. There's always several types of vegetables and salads available (including pasta salads sometimes), and then the main dish of the day. And there's also always a vegetarian option available, as well as bread and butter (and my school always had a soup option too, and milk or yogurt with corn flakes and sugar as well, but this isn't something all schools offer). Drinks available are water and milk (and my school had apple juice as well, but again, not all schools had that). The way it works is you just grab a plate (or more), stand in line and then when it's your turn you just fill up however much you like of whatever you want. Schools also offer breakfast buffet for those who arrive early. So you can have cereal or muesli with milk or yogurt, or make a sandwich (with butter, cheese, ham and cut up vegetables), or just have a fruit. Drinks are water, tea, milk or (in my school) hot chocolate. We don't have a festival unfortunately, we just have a prom type of thing last year. Ps. I went to public school, not a private one (in case anyone wonders).
@@user-qm7jw Very good point, yes I imagine it must be a lot of food waste compared to countries with a different system. It's a problem that is talked about here.
3:04, when she said that people tend to buy larger size becuz it looks cute ... Meanwhile my Indian mom: buys an oversized sweater or coat so that I can wear it for more years.😂😅
Chinese one is honestly just more economical and more focus for general use and the purpose to ensure gender equality and focus on studies rather than puberty driven romance and crushes. I understand the need for formal school uniforms like that in Japan and Korea, it honestly helps to groom students to become accustomed to work attire, after all alot of office environments require shirt and neat trousers or skirts. Or their uniforms (Usually women from what I see in Japanese and Korean Drama's) Have uniforms for female OL's
It's so interesting to look at the difference. In Indonesian high school, at least we have 3-4 uniforms; the white and grey uniform, scout uniform, school identity/batik uniform, and the gym clothes; so we change our uniform almost everyday. Sometimes we also use traditional clothes in a special day. We are not allowed to use our skirt very short for anyone who didn't wear hijab, below the knee is the standard. Back in my school, we are allowed to use jacket or hoodie only when it was raining and cold. 😊😊 I edited my comment again so I can share more information, hihi. About food or lunch, in my high school, because it is a public school, they didn't provide school lunch. We must buy it in the canteen, usually not managed by the school, and restaurant or street food around the school. Sometimes we bring our own lunch to save money 🤣
@@sambatra6162 Yeess. So usually the skirt is pretty wide not tight. And we don't used a layered uniform, only shirt and skirt/pants, no vest or blazer. And for who don't wear hijab or boys, the shirt also can be made short sleeve. 😊
I mean if you count all those then China, Korea, and Japan all have 3-5 various uniforms they would need to wear, this is strictly looking at the day to day classroom uniform.
In India, all schools have their unique uniforms and schools are pretty strict about uniforms. Maximum times, the shirt is white and the tunic/skirt is of a different colour (although there are schools which have colourful shirts). Mid-day meal is provided free of cost. Although at my school almost 50% of students bring their own tiffin. We need to pay once a year. In Indian schools, instead of graduation party, we call it "farewell function". Here we don't have any restrictions about one's looks
Chinese school uniforms prevent girls from caring about their figure and appearance (we are not allowed to make up in high school), everything the school does to students is to make the students only focus on study. Actually after graduating from university, my favorite is sports clothes. I believe many girls feel the same with me. I love comfortable sweaters and trousers, only when I need to go outside I would consider wearing a dress and making up. I miss the days when I only have to focus on my grades
I think that's a good idea. In Aus there's been constant battle with girls that wants to wear pants especially for winter but some school policy said no they have to wear their skirts.... It's stupid. It's most Catholic schools that have this stupid rule. I went to a private Catholic school for primary and it's so bad... The girls get cold all the time. My parents finally let me choose my own school when I got to High School, I picked a school where there is no uniform and no one cared about what I wore. I know not having a uniform may have it's own issues but for my school the students was very progressive and accepting. Some boys in the art area even wore very feminine clothing, like skirts with pants and everyone was cool. No bullying whatsoever.
Yeah the China uniform is perfect for ugly girls so they don't feel so insecure. It's well thought out and will make girls more focused on grades instead of looks or fitting in. You can tell a guy definitely designed it LOL.
this was awesome! the prestige inn Chinese high school's for looking like a track suit was the writing put into your suit. This would actually signify which school you went to in terms of prestige (as in the academically rigorous). This is because you were not specifically limited to your district/county school zone, you had to take the 中考 (HS entrance exam). Based on your score -result meant you could unluck only certain HS within your area.. Of course this would add more travel time to your commute as a student. Example: two of the most famous high schools in Beijing (there were several others) are probably 北四中 (beijing #4) and 北京101 (beijing 101). Being accepted into these two schools meant you were academically formidable and had a very good chance of going to top tier universities in China. Their school uniforms would have that imprinted and when you walked and saw others in their school uniforms it was a status symbol. hopefully that was informative for all.
I’m from hk (city in China) and in my school (I’m 6th grade) our uniforms are just like normal ones but the actual uniform is just like the Korean one. The teachers really don’t care about if you wear uniform or sweatpants (unless there’s P.E.) the sweatpants where like really ugly it’s green with a bunch of like orange teal and the school badge on it
the japanese and korean uniform are soo cute but i think the chinese uniform is just a lot more comfortable esp taking into account youre gonna be wearing it everyday plus the insanely long school days east asian contries have !
I agree I think the uniforms look nice and comfy but that’s still not enough to make me wanna go to a Chinese high school bc u heard the lady: “we can’t date in school, you would get arrested.” 💀
This was great and informative. I love hearing the comparisons, and that they were shocked by each other's differences. I didn't know Japan High school was optional
madness, while there are third world South Asian Countries that make 12 years of education as mandatory it's so surprising that an Asian first world country is even lower than that
@@takuyamatsuda7214 I was also shocked that high school isn't mandatory over there. Is that because of the Japanese tradition of working in their family business? I heard Japanese hand their family business down generations, and that's just the way it is over there.
from Czech Republic. from elementary to high school - Almost all schools don´t have any uniforms, we did not have any particular Rule/s about clothing. Everyone was allowed to wear anything what they wanted, how they wanted, this also applies to hair,piercing, tattoos etc. We are free to experiment with our looks. Food was not free, of course lunches were provided, but we needed to pay monthly, meaning our parents received an invoice for the next month, they paid it and the student could eat for this whole month. It was not expensive. But honestly, Lunches were not the best meals, we had soup (it was mostly a veggie soup, or some leftover soup make from ingredient from the previous day), and the main dish, for drinks we got some juice, and that was it. WE did not have any options, what was served, we had to eat. In High School we have a so called "graduation party" - which is basically an event for the last year high school student (or seniors), you can also imagine it as a prom (like in the american movies). Those "proms" are prepared by the students themselves, from finding a place, drink, food, enterntainment etc.
@@zuzia5725 (I'm from Poland but I will write in English to make it easier for others to understand) I sincerely don't understand why we don't have lunches provided in high school like- in primary school lunches were mostly in every school but then you go to high school and it disappears :(( When I was in my first year in high school a little shop was at the end of hallway on 1st floor where we could buy French fries, toasts, different types of sandwiches, etc., but after the whole coronavirus thing the owner closed the shop and it was hard for students who forgot to take or buy snacks for school, especially when our lessons start at 7:20AM now school bought two vending machines for students to make it easier for us to buy food if needed (because we can't go out to e.g grocery shops near the school 'cause of the virus) but it still can't replace warm, handmade food :((
@@animex2515 I have similar situation, before covid we had some kind of school café, where we easily could get lunch when waiting for the bus after the lessons, but when the virus started they closed and since 2 years we don't even have vending machines with snacks and the nearest shop is 1 km away from our school.... it's impossible to go there, come back and eat even during the long break:(
I'm from Hungary. It was the exact same thing for is as well, including the food. Older generations did have uniforms, but it was abolished right when I went to school. My mom was very relieved, she thought uniforms were useless, and that it was a lot of work to keep them in shape. Food, though.... I remember refusing to eat school food at first, it was so different form the homemade meals. But then I eventually warmed up to it. It's still better than like mcdonalds or whatever. It's just basically the same 20 kind of meals on rotation. Or 15? I don't know, there wasn't a wide range of recipes. The way we got by is we exchanged a lot of food between us, depending on which classmate liked which food better. So a lot of sharing. We did get food from kindergarten to end of high school. Honestly I think we could have signed up for communal lunch at university as well, it's just not popular.
@Miles Bennett Dyson which is exactly the point of it... you don't need to be thinking of high schoolers in that way lmao unless you're a complete weirdo
Damn if they knew about Indian school life.......they will be sad. I envy them for their school life. Average School life in Indian is very sad and dull(not talking about the rich kid's school) 🤣🤣🤣 I bet no one can survive Indian school life except for Indians. The most daring or exciting thing i could do was to climb up my school's wall because I was late to school 🤣🤣🤣🤣 . Btw loved the video quite informative and fun. If possible we would love an Indian guest in an interview like this.
To be fair upto class 5 we had fun and then the rat race started (ICSE board pass out 2009). We had our fun moments as well but got ruined especially in class 10. The hell on earth is from 10-12 and then college
@@taetaethv9704 dude even our school had canteens and girls wore skirt, in our school it was a rule for skirts to be knee length but none of the girls used to follow them. but my point was not about uniforms and cantene its just we were supposed to be very discipline. forst it was an indian school second thing a missionary.
As an Australian, I’m genuinely jealous over the uniforms the asians have. Because our climate here is dry and hot, our uniforms are designed to be a “summer” type all year round (including our 2° mornings in winter), they are styled with a top short sleeve shirt with our logo along with a pair of shorts in whatever colour the school preferably wanted you in (in this case navy blue for me). We also have these baggy jackets we wear. I love the style of the uniforms they showed us. It looks very simple and well made
I've been teaching senior high school students in Japan for almost 5 years, and loose socks are so out of fashion right now! XD lol It's like the old gyaru style... Those fashion styles are more from the 90's and early 2000's. The rest of the uniform sounds about right, but again, it depends on the school. Some of my high schools had a polo shirt top instead of a shirt and blazer. Some other schools have a jumper/ more conservative style dress for girls. And only in the past 2 years, some of my schools allowed girls to wear pants instead of skirts, but I've only seen 3 or 4 girls wearing them... Also, no school would allow students to roll their skirt up that high! XD lol The actual length of the uniform skirts in Japan is below the knee, but most girls will roll it up to the knee or just above the knee not to get in trouble with the teachers. I've seen Japanese teachers asking girls to roll down their skirts when they look too short. Also, at my 8 senior high schools, no hair dye, no makeup, nail polish or jewelry allowed. They keep wet wipes in the teachers room as well as black hair spray.
@@sabreenasnow119 bruh it’s so annoying how late the west is 🤧 I remember when gyarus were out here with the longest nails and it only started popping like a year ago and now people are getting into the gyaru style 🥲
In Mexico ,when you choose a high school, you can go in the morning (7am-2pm), in the afternoon (3:20 pm-8:20 pm) or on saturdays, but it's difficult to later change schechual because the number of students is limited. It's a really different experience depending on what you choose, and i'ts usually known that the students who go in the mornings are better (normally students who go in the afternoon is because they couldn't pass the school exam to go in the morning or have a job besides school). Our uniform normally consist of a skirt/pants, a short sleeved shirt, a vest and a sweater, we also have a formal version for special events which is just a long sleeved shirt and a tie, my school doesn't have gym class so we don't have that uniform. My school don't have lunch time, we have to eat in class if the teacher allow us, and you have to carry it yourself from home or buy something in the school (although they don't sell very healthy things). We have small events for special dates like dia de muertos or Christmas, but the biggest one is for "student day" and it's like a festival but I couldn't experience it because of the pandemic :(
In india, atleast for the school i come from, we're very strict about out uniforms. we aren't allowed to wear colored dress for our birthdays. it differs from school to school though. our uniform is just checked shirt and skirt for the girls and the same shirt & pant. we have a canteen / mess idk what you call it but you have to pay for the food. we have some restrictions, we aren't allowed to wear much jewelery like bracelets, we aren't allowed to wear smart watches or bring phones to school. most teens don't really have phones here either way. The schools are realy strict when it comes to studying, you do anything else, you get notices to your parents. its fun sometimes but ig they prioritize studying a lot here.
For birthday it is allowed to wear makeup , dress . In India Parents don't buy phone for children , tennagers . They're using their parents phone . Aah only rich people buy phone for their children at tennage age . I have watched an English TH-cam family channel name the royalty. They buyed a brand iPhone 13 for their son and he is only 13 year old. I am 15 and still I don't have my own phone and I am using my mom phone now.
Same. My miserable school was run by Hitler.. we didn't have any sports or any fun activities. It was always mugging up some BS and tones of tests and exams. We had to oil our hair everyday and wear big bindi to make ourselves look as ugly as possible. No colour dress for birthday, we were no even allowed to talk during lunch breaks or talk to boys. They even monitored what we did after school. We were banned from hanging out with friends after school hours in school uniform. My school was straight up hell.. They never had the same discipline when it came to teaching.. the education was garbage. It completely destroyed our self esteem and confidence.
I have a Japanese friend. She said they don't have uniforms!^^ she also said a lot of students break the "piercing" rule Edit: i know not every jaoanese school is like this! I just said it becauss i'm pretty sure lot of people think everyone wears uniforms there
Ahhh, I feel privileged. In my country nobody is required to wear uniform in school or university. We don't have a dress code either, everyone would just wear whatever they like. Edit: I live in Romania
@@bj079 not all western school is more fun and I went to an international school in china so we have a lot of foreign students and we dont wear uniform but traditional Japanese, Chinese, and korean school have really harsh classes and they have tutor class after class even some of the classes ends at 9PM -10PM
3 Idiots is the most famous Bollywood film in Korea and a lot of them watch it in high school because they relate to the struggles in the education system. If you want to do well you have to go to cram school after normal school and it's not uncommon for students to stay there until 11pm everyday.
So, I am an American student who went to a private Christian Catholic school from 3rd grade up to high school and here is how it was like: *Middle School* - Uniform: Polo shirt, skirt (jumper skirts for girls under 5th grade), knee socks, whatever school shoes. - Gym Uniform: T-shirt and sweatpants (shorts that were especially worn by the elementary kids) *High School* - Uniform: Button down shirt, skirt, knee socks or tights, brown oxford shoes everyone wore. - Gym Uniform: whatever you want as long as the shirt had sleeves and shorts were not too short (no jeans, no skirt, etc.) *School life in America overall* - School Schedule: 7:00 AM to 3:00 PM; 5 days a week from Monday to Friday - School lunch: You have to pay for lunch, random menu item each day - Homework depended on what classes you have. Usually becomes a lot in late middle school or start of high school. - Grades consists of A, B, C, D, and F along with numbers from 0-100. - Dating was pretty common and not restricted - Other rebellious things are not allowed but common (drugs, alcohol, sex, fights, swearing, etc.) - School events: pep rally, spirit week, school play/musical, guest speakers, prom, homecoming - Sports in America are very emphasized, especially football and basketball - School is required for everyone up to 10th grade or second/sophmore year of high school. -College/University is not required but *highly* recommended Anything I missed or I am wrong on, please let me know.
In Hungary: We don't have uniforms, some schools has rules like not having short hair if you're a girl, no piercings, no dyed hair But that's not that common i think In my school you can have dyed hair, you can shave your hair if you want, you can have piercings and tattoos.. and you can wear any clothes! You need to pay for lunch, i personally just bring some sandwiches and if i get hungry i can just buy food in school (which is usually expensive lol) I personally did all my piercings during high school and no one said a thing about it.. tbh it's pretty normal here, because lot of students study art here
@@tobacco118 I dunno actually. They're my most favourite countries. The cultural diversity in these countries are genuinely mind blowing and I'm from a South Asian country so I love my fellow East Asians a lot. I don't even have a single friend from these three countries 🤧
I am from Romania. In my highschool years we had to were uniform only in the first two years when it was obligatory. The uniform was office type suits in black with white shirts in variante for boys and girls. Since I always had a androgynous face I looked good in both variants according to my classmates.😃 But in my third year of highschool the school rules changed and everyone was free to were the clothes they wanted as long as it didn't expose skin (no exposing the chest area for both boys and girls, shirts were banned for both boys and girls, skirts and dresses for girls were allowed but no exposing skin in delicate places (breasts and butt). Therefore since rules were relaxed I mostly dressed sports because it was my favorite style since way back then. Thouse days most of highschools don't have uniforms but most of them still have a few normal standard rules against revealing to much skin for both boys and girls.
As a Chinese, when I was a child, I was very envious and fond of Korean and Japanese school uniforms, because Chinese school uniforms are big and loose, but now I don't feel it, in fact, I think Korean and Japanese school uniforms need beauty and figure to ensure visual comfort, so it takes a lot of time and trouble for me.
Korean school uniforms are the most beautiful and trendy. Japanese ones are innocent and youthful. Chinese ones are practical and comfortable. As an American, I like the Korean ones myself as the Japanese ones give off "too young" vibe and the Chinese ones are ... tracksuits lol.
same. the korean one is just pretty overall. the details/coloring is so trendy the japanese uniform is youthful and cute, manga vibes the chinese ones are just regular gym clothes. I personally never liked wearing PJs or sweats to school.. Something about being in clothes that are too comfortable, would make me relax and un-focused.
6:00 I'm not sure about now, but in the UK the uniform tends to be knee length skirts with wide pleats, a shirt, and a jumper for girls (or blazer, depending on your school) with a tie; in my experience the summer time allowed students to wear polo tshirts. However, there were a few girls who wore skirts like that, and somehow got a way with it - I genuinely think how much you alter your uniform if you have teachers that pay attention will be guided by your social standing hahaha i.e. if you're well liked, you won't get in trouble.
my daughter wore trousers for the first four years of UK secondary school but the final year ( 2020, until covid struck) she talked me in to letting her wear a skirt. Big mistake-they all roll them up so it looks like they aren't even wearing one if their blazer is long enough. I think the school did try to correct them but it was low on the list after dealing with all the other day to day low-level disruptions the kids came up with, She still got good grades though.
In my school teachers don't say anything about people wearing very short skirts. Girls are allowed to wear trousers as well. We're allowed to wear black or grey hoodies, jumpers, and vests underneath our blazers. Your shoes must be completely black, but they don't care about what you wear for P.E. as long as you have one piece of the P.E. uniform. In my school, even if the teachers like you, you still get into trouble if you deserve it.
my school didn't even allow us to take our blazers off we had to ask permission, we were except from the rule only during bad heatwaves or when it's break. as if the heatstroke will put itself on hold inside out hot classrooms. yup seemed 'reasonable'. majority of my school doesn't even have air con. the ones that did were either not switched on cuz the teachers are cruel, or it was because the students would use the ceiling fans to make the glue sticks accelerate in speed by throwing them at the fans. or pencils, those hurt.
During the summertime, students in international schools in China (that I am aware of) normally wear the school shirt and their own whatever colored trousers. During the winter, they'd wear a random sweatshirt or hoodie with a school overcoat and a school skirt/or any pants (depending on comfort ukwim). short skirts, shorts, jeans, are all allowed to be worn.
In the Philippines, our uniforms are long (usually under the knee length) skirt and a short sleeve blouse with a ribbon (for elementary or middle school) or neck tie (for highschool). This is the traditional uniform we have and the only difference was that in every school there is a different pattern or color in the skirt and the ribbon and tie (as it usually matches). About the school lunch, I only experienced having a cafeteria on my school when I studied in a private one. They have chairs and tables and also stalls where you can buy them. However, in most public schools they don't have cafeteria. We also bring pack lunch made by our parents as we always prefer home made dishes and, ofcourse, to save money instead of buying from the school.
Chinese uniform is way better in my opinion because it covers the body. Japan skirt is waaaay to short. Also Koreas tight short skirt trend is very provocative.
here in Singapore, schools are extremely strict about uniforms. for girls hair has to be tied up in either a ponytail or braids at all times and no accessories like bracelets and rings are allowed. even our shoes have to be white (some schools have black) and socks are ankle socks. for school lunches we don’t have a fixed lunch and our canteens are basically food courts with different stalls that sell different food. also we don’t really have any festivals but in 2019 my school threw this huge carnival to celebrate 120 years. we do have prom but it’s only in secondary 4 after we finish our o levels (national exams)
I'm also SG, back then guys cannot have certain hair styles as well, no side burn, bangs should not touch eyebrows, back hair cannot touch the collar, no center parting, side shave, mohawk etc., items like glasses, bags, wallets must be certain colour or material etc.
The chinese uniform reminds me of the publics school from my country (Argentina)wich is a black/blue/grey(it depends of the school) sports pants and a white shirt And it's very basic and affordable 👍🏽
I love the high school life of Japan, we also have something like the festivals but we call it a fete. The kids all make their own stalls and prepare food and sell it, each class has their own theme and we made haunted house, someone made history themed museum. It really encourages students to learn how to create things together, what it takes to run a small business, how to make profits and build social skills.
Wow... this is so different from French high schools ! We don't wear uniforms, but some schools have rules like "no mini-skirts" or "no jeans with holes". There is a self-restaurant but you also can eat out of the school if you want. The price of lunch depends on the family's earnings but it's usually between 2 and 5 euros (between 2 744 and 6 860 Korean wons). In some schools you have what we call a "carnival" but it's usually just a costume competition. There is absolutely no rules about dating, couples are just required to "don't have in indecent behavior" inside the school
@@SairoGirl Comme tu as dit ça dépend de l'établissement. Par exemple nous au collège on pouvait faire sport en brassière de sport y'avais aucun problème. Il ne me semble pas que les croc tops étaient interdits dans mon lycée
So you can just walk out of the school during lunch?? That's amazing cuz here in india 2 security personnel guard the gate and no one is allowed to leave lol
@@avikarathore850 Actually you can walk in or out the school every time the bells ring. So every hour. When the bells ring they open the portal, check the fact you're a student of this school and then you're free to walk out. When we had around 2h or 3h for lunch, my friends and I used to go to the fast-food or to the downtown and buy something. And the school isn't responsible of us as soon as we walk out the school. Hope this answers your question 😁
It depends on the school. My old school's winter uniform was this kind of sports suits, but made of crappy materials and no one wanted to do sports in those, summer uniform was Japanese-like shirts and skirts also of poor quality. In the end, only the socks were somewhat wearable.
In India😀😀 most student wear an black coloured legis l(like pants ) under the skrit 👗👗and some girls wear kurtas we don't have canteen beause we bring lunch 🍟🍕🌮🍔🌭🥪from home their are two uniform in school one is white uniform we have to make two ponys 🙆🤷 we have to tei our hair tightly 🙆 we have to cut our nails 🙅 and dating is not present in school 👫but may be in higher school 👩❤️💋👩 we have to say good morning every time we see a teacher 🧓👩🦳 I think only government school students enjoy the good school life 🕺🕺 but in my opinion you can have a 🌺🌺good school life while under disciplines 😉😉
These types of videos are the reason I love TH-cam so much. I love these ladies. This was very fun and interesting to watch. I learned so much. It's funny to me that I was once never interested in the world....my whole world was Jamaica now I'm in the U.S exposed to multiple cultures and I want to see more. Thank you. I love Japan from anime. And I really enjoy everyone in the comments sharing what school is like in their country so here is mine: In Jamaica 🇯🇲 schools have devotion in the mornings ( prayer to God, singing of worship songs and reading of a Bible verse) as Jamaica is a Christian country. It is either you are a Christian or not a Christian. Schools are strict, no 'dating' and we wear uniforms. No jewelry except watches are allowed and we have to wear the appropriate socks and shoes to go with our uniforms. We take notes in notebooks, phones are not allowed. Children are children so they cannot or are not allowed to behave like adults. The food varies by school. We eat regular Jamaican food- rice and peas ( not beans - red peas) and chicken ( fried, brown stewed or curried), we have white rice, dumplings, steamed or raw vegetables ( specifically cabbage and carrot) and stuff like that- for lunch. For break time (before lunch) we usually just buy snacks, juices, water, cheese or beef patties, meatloaf, biscuits, at a little tuck shop on campus. Other high schools may buy from vendors. I went to a top 3 all girls high school- Westwood High which is very strict as we are trained to be lady-like. I went to a CoEd primary school ( grades 1-6, ages 6-12)though and I finished high-school in the U.S ( boys and girls). Meals are covered in our school fee so it's not a separate bill unless people don't eat from the school canteen and prefer to buy lunch from the shop or take their own. Our uniforms are dresses for the girls, some schools do skirt and blouse or girls wear regular dress uniform up until 10th-11th grade where they wear skirt and blouse as seniors. The boys wear Khaki pants and shirt and this may change in higher grade levels for some schools. Some schools boys don't wear the khaki material at all. We have celebrations at school like Jeans day where we get the day to wear jeans and t-shirt instead of uniform to school. We also have Jamaica day where we wear decent casual clothes representing the Jamaican flag- usually a Jamaican T-shirt or blouse with the flag and jeans. We may have talent shows at specific times in the year and fundraiser events. At my highschool there was or is this big Christmas party event at the end of the year where ( all girls school) we get to wear formal clothing like fancy dresses and heals and nice hairstyles to a dance and dinner. At the party we also have a pageant / talent show where we announce the queen of the year until the next pageant the queen gives her crown to the next winner. We sometimes invite our brother school Cornwall college or the other one don't remember (Top 3 all boys school). We also had another major event in April or May at Westwood it's called Barbeque where we dress in our Westwood Tshirt and Jeans and come to the big William Webb auditorium and listen to music and dance - high school boys are allowed here. Teachers always watch you to make sure you don't sneak off into some corner with a boy as it's night - up to like 11:00pm. So yeah.
When i came into k-drama world the thing that pissed me off was whyyy such cute uniforms are not there in our schools!? My school life could have been exciting just wearing those uniform.
If they listen to Indian school life they would be shocked the most .... If possible do try to make an Indian school life comparassion also because there is no dating , no lunches , full discipline, no canteens in 70 per cent school, no school lunches and so on
U r right 😂😂 those 7-8 hours are like ....but u know its really necessary for us bcz we all know about competition in India , but for positive we celebrate so many festival and holidays 😁😁
The Chinese uniform is comfortable and affordable so it wins needless to say. But still I prefer the Japanese uniform it's so so cute and makes high school days feel more memorable for many reasons
Beyond the fanciful appearance of those uniforms that portrays girls in a 'cute' demeanor, we have to enquire what is the fundamental purpose of schooling? Of course, the Koreans and Japanese are definitely more eye catching if not like eye candies for most people especially men but if the purpose here is education then practicalitiy trumps fanciful uniforms. I like the Chinese uniforms not only for their practicality but it also evens the playing field so that poor and rich students look the same and can afford these simple attire. They can focus on their studies rather than clothes (e.g. shortening the skirt or lengthening or shortening the socks) Education should be for all people, poor and rich with equal opportunities. High school is one facet of a person's life, what the person becomes later because of a good education is far more important.
Let me tell you about India , so in India the schools are The Government schools(the schools that work with the help of government's money, they usually have the NCERT BOARD) and the CBSE schools also called the private school that dont work with the help of government's money. So in government schools, you will mostly find blue SUIT AND SALWAR, these are like usually wore in India by the women and the government schools do have skirts too but the lenghth is like below the knees aur it can be up to the knees and the boys they have the shirt and blue pants. Food is free of cost , provided by the government and it is up to you if you want the mid day meal or not. I haven't really studied in Government school so i don't have any idea about the food. There are around usually 5 classes of 1 grade for example if the grade is 6 then the classes will be like 6A, 6B , 6C like this ,these classes can be more than 5 in one grade if there are more seats in the school for the grade 😃. About dating I guess It's just not restricted but girls and boys usually don't date but the school can call their parents. Now let's come to the Private schools or the CBSE schools. About the uniform for the girls their is a Shirt and Skirt. Shirts are basically of the pastel colours or they can be white. Skirts are of different colours.Every school has different uniforms.On Saturdays we have to wear White skirt/tunic and the skirt color matters on which house member you are like the Shivalik house has Yellow and the Nilgiri has Blue t shirts. About the boys uniform they also wear the same Shirt like girls and the pants are of the same colour like the skirts. Black shoes for both boys and girls and on Saturdays it's white shoes. The schools are really strict about the uniform. On birthday they allowed you to wear but now it's not sadly 🥲. And both the girls and boys have to wear tie. Food is not provided in my school, we usually bring our food. In some schools we have Canteens too and we can go there during the lunch or when we enter the school before going to class. Canteens do have everything from pen to food everything. And Dating same as Government schools. Both the government schools and private schools have Farewell party which is usually called Graduation party. So I am gonna sum this up all here as this comment has went tooo looooooonggg Let me edit one more thing Our nails are also checked whether they are long and girls have to make two braids with the ribbons matched with their school uniform.
@@lunayu9964 il n'y a pas d'uniformes dans les établissements français depuis les années 70 (je crois) Ceux qui en ont sont des établissements privés très sélectifs et chers. Ici les élèves s'habillent comment ils le souhaitent, à l exeception des lycées hôteliers où ils portent les tenus de restaurant certains jours 😊
@@boubas9273 C’est interessant😋 Peut-être L’école essaie de réduire le fossé entre les étudiants riches et les pauvres. Ces uniformes élégants et stylés sont également chers. Je pense.
@@lunayu9964 ils ont abandonné l'idée de l'uniforme pour éviter le coût aux familles mais sans uniforme, les différences se voient encore plus à travers les marques que portent les élèves et cela peut être pire. À tel point que la question de l'uniforme se pose de nouveau de temps en temps
The Chinese high school I went to has a three-floor cafeteria! Each floor serves different kinds of foods (rice, porridge, noodles, even mala tang) at different prices (from 6 to 30 CNY, pretty cheap in general) so students have a lot of choices regarding personal taste and economy. And they serve late-night snacks (soup, noodles, rice, baozi, bbq, etc.) every day after school (it's a boarding school with required study hall time every night)! I rly miss my high school cafeteria as there r no other places i can buy such delicious meals at such a low price TT
My rating as a japanese person In looking cute Japan wins, but it does have bad parts In looking professional, Korea wins, Tights, a nice color for blazer, and it just looks nice Chinese uniform is simply the most effecient. Easy to slip on, good comfort, and you don't have to worry about being sexualize. still learning full english so i hope you can understand
The Korean one reminded me a lot of my uniform in the UK. We had jumpers instead of vests tho. There were rules about no makeup, the type of piercings and earrings you were allowed to wear, dyed hair and they really cared about the type of shoes you wore. I preferred to wear trousers tho instead of skirts, either was optional. They’d send you home to change, or send a note home if something wasn’t acceptable. Different schools may have differing rules however. I never ate at my school canteen, I used to bring food in or go home for lunch (you needed a pass with permission to leave the school during lunchtime, with parents signed consent)
honestly same about the uniform except they changed it i think recently cuz all the younger years look like they're wearing their primary school uniform (grey skirts, pants etc. does not work with the otherwise navy blazer and sweater and black shoes at all) otherwise girls do tend to do the whole thing of wearing very short skirts, of which they seem to have a preference for stretchy tight skirts. which i never understood because the fabric was so thin which resulted in the school shirt being very bulky underneath when tucked in. tbf my skirt was not any better, i had it shortened in yr7 (so it wouldn't be past my knees) and wore it till yr11. it basically went from low rise to high waisted, and as a result did become extremely short due to changes in my body proportions. objectively, i actually liked the shorter skirts. it looked better, definitely better than the past the knee primary school grey skirt which didn't even match the original uniform colours when i was still attending secondary school (im in sixth firm now at my old secondary)
Same, the Korean one reminded me of my school uniform lol - except for the H line skirt. I have no idea why they decided to change it to H line skirts either, I feel like H is more body hugging so I'm surprised schools would choose that for the students.
Any other American students here? Schools in Asia seem so different :O Like in my high school we had a dress code for what we could *not* wear but other than that we could wear just about anything. Things like school festivals and such didn’t really exist, but there were still a lot of clubs so I made good memories :’) Depends on the kind of student you are but I feel like there was a lot less academic pressure here too. Never even heard of an entrance exam being a thing until a couple years ago
I went to a school in southern california. We had things similar to the festivals but it wasn't open to public, and happened 3 times a year and during an extended lunch. Instead of classes our booths were ran by clubs and we sold food as fundraiser and tried to requite new members.
yeah me too :’) its super bland, people care too much about sports here, there are clubs after school but there is nothing that’s gives off a youthful vibe, there are even classrooms without windows, it just feels like a facility, I think the only thing that is remotely romantic/pretty/youthful is when the sun is setting and makes the walls look yellow and orange, but otherwise, it doesn’t feel lively at all, there’s no sense of community or connection with your classmates because you’re not with the same people the whole day. Walking in the halls feels like hell, especially now with a lot of conflict regarding masks in our school, it’s just a mess, the counselors don’t care at all. I’m speaking as a person who grew up and attended a 1, private Chinese boarding school and 2, a public Chinese school. The vibe is completely different, it feels really cold(metaphorically) and dead In American high schools
@@lan9702 like China, the US is a pretty big place filled with different schools, each having students with their own unique experiences. What you say mirrors my own experience from senior year especially concerning the connection with classmates. I had been a part of sports team and once that was finished me and my “friends” drifted apart quickly. This shows that putting aside the fact we played the same sport we had little in common. I honestly wish I noticed it earlier then maybe I wouldn’t have been so pessimistic for the rest of my final year. With that said, I won’t discount any of my classmates own experiences in HS, who look back on it with such glee. Their youthful vibes revolved around Friday night football games, SAT, homecoming, college recommendation letters, relationships etc. Most of these they want to experience one more time. When I look back on it I realize my HS wasn’t bad. Most of the teachers and counselors were cool & helpful and I certainly did enjoy my sporting career but the food was awful (thanks Mrs. Obama) 😂. So it was more of a me problem than the HS life in general. School life is different for everybody and it looks like we both drew the short straw. In all honesty, I think you just went to a shit HS. It’s unfortunate that they exist here. I know one thing is for sure I wouldn’t be able to handle Chinese school just because it seems like a facility of overworked youths.
I went to a private school in USA I had a lot of different uniforms and designated uniform shoes (you can shoes between loafers or oxfords) you can choose which uniform you would like to wear for the season. (so you don't need to buy everything.) Summer: - Short sleeve blouse, vest (optional), skirt, knee high socks (white or black only) - Short sleeve polo, khaki shorts or navy skort Winter: - skirt with tights, long sleeve blouse, vest, optional cardigan or pullover - long pants, long sleeve blouse or turtle neck, vest, optional cardigan or pull over Summer gym: shorts and a t-shirt. Winter gym long sleeves, long pants, sweatshirt or fleece pull over I personally thought the uniforms were nice. I never had to worry about my outfit. Aesthetic wise, I love the Korean uniforms, since there fitted, and overall the details. the Japanese uniform is also super cute.
My school had summer and winter clothes which were sooo cute! The winter one looked like the Korean one, the summer one was like the sailor style (not exactly but similar). And on Fridays, we would wear tracksuits. And each person would be assigned a house color and that color is what color shirt u would wear with the tracksuit.
In Russia private schools (or top-tier public) have uniform more often than public. Basic public schools usually haven’t. Now trousers is allowed for girl’s uniform too, but usually it’s skirts. And about lunch -- parent have to pay for them every month except families with many children, families with disable people or families with other social benefits.
@@darassylmoniakam As a Japanese, I can tell you that’s not true at all. I went to China to study when I was in high school, but there is more pressure than Japanese high school. Don’t speak about Japan based on your impressions.
@@listin0812 maybe SLIGHTLY less pressured than in china. but it doesn't mean your schools in japan are better. ugliest uniforms, endless stress, stalking bullies, propaganda lessons, tyrannical parents, study-study-study over and over....
@@darassylmoniakam I am Japanese and never had any propaganda lesson in my school days.A Korean exchange uni student in Japan told that he was amazed to know Japanese top high school students didn't quit their musical lesson.He said that Korean parents and teachers tended to force their kids to quit it and forcus on studying.
@@pythonian-xp3vi anti-gaijin propaganda, when u learn how how to distrust them. You japanese are also taugh to openly lie to people and being overly positive, while in reality your schools are pretty similar to korean ones
I’m Japanese. When I was in high school, I loved short skirt.but now I don’t think that it’s good for high school students… China’s fashion is the best of those costumes. because it’s very safe.👏🏻
I would like to talk to someone here. can i have your attention? i met a japanese person called yu i in a "japan vs china" video . i left a section when i explained why china is a better place to be than japan , then that yui showed up and told me "japan is better, are you chinese?" before going silent. CAN anybody explain me what's wrong with her (something tell me yui's apparently a girl)? because she doesn't explain me in detail why japan would be better than china, and when i told her that i am not a chinese (i am just a cultivated french), she still didn't answered me , it's been some months she talked to me like that ! it's not polite! if she still didn't want to reply me here or in that other video , can somebody explain me why japan would be a better place than china then? why the school life in japan would be also better to live than in china too? please i need to know! yu i or somebody else here, please reply me frankly!
The schools here where I’m at the kids wear a uniform, elementary it’s navy blue or tan pants, baby blue/dark blue or white polo type shirt middle school black pants and top and I believe high school as well, years back the kids used to wear whatever but that changed, probably because so kids won’t tease/bully each other on how they dress.
In Germany, i actually brought this idea of school uniforms up, it became that popular in my school that our principal actually thought about it. It got declined though, because of it's cost and production problems. Getting bullied by your looks and how cheap/expensive your outfits are is a HUGE growing problem, so it wouldn't have actually hurt to give Uniform rules to german classes.
In Turkey, every school has different uniforms and there are also schools that students don't have to wear uniforms. In elementary and middle school my uniforms had check skirt, (we were generally wearing pantyhose) button-up shirt, sweater, pullover, tie or something like "neck tie with school emblem brooch". But in 2016-2017 (I was in 8th or 9th grade) idk why but girls started to wear pants or corduroy because it started to be allowed to wear pants back then (in my city at least) then it turned a thing. And uniforms started to look like more basic and simple. In my high school, we were wearing pants and hoodie which is unique for each school. In summer, there were also unique t-shirts. In P.E. class we could wear any clothes that suitable for sports. In my high school there wasn't an option to wear skirts. But now it is changing to not having uniforms and most of schools are not strict about anything like dying hair, wearing piercings etc. Most of the schools don't have free lunch for students. Some students bring lunchbox from home and some of them buy some foods like toasts, hamburgers from school's canteen for lunch and some schools have a cafeteria to sell healthier foods. We have a lot of special national days, in these days, there are shows such as theater and concert prepared by volunteer students. There is a traditional spring festival that lasts half a school day. Students do some competitions and there can be concerts again prepared by students with help of teachers of course.
Although Chinese school uniforms are not beautiful, they are comfortable and stain-resistant. They don't need to be changed frequently because of different courses, and they can also be prevented from being caused by the comparison among students.
The Chinese uniform was designed, so that all students could afford and wear it. The cheap pricing of these simple uniforms are friendly to all families, making sure even families with low-economic statuses are able to send their kids to school. Also, the uniform discourages discrimination, as with more fancy and high-maintenance uniforms, it costs much more to buy and maintain the quality, cleanliness, and overall performance value of the material and different layers. As with many statistics and research, it was found in China, that many students were bullied and suffered unfair treatment due to the obvious disparity in their clothing, brand, and maintenance. As people in low-class families were unable to wash their clothes of stains, or buy new clothes, their apparel, with patches and dust, and etcetera were a clear indication of their economic status, which became a prime/ideal target for other students to take advantage of. Therefore, this uniform has discouraged many cases of bullying, and at the same time allowed more families to let their kids attend school, and incentivize studying (many other comments explain this, so i will not go into detail), in addition to many other small details, such as how of comfortable it is, how much space there is for customization (one can easily wear anything they’d like underneath, wide choice of accessories, and etcetera).
EDIT: I see a few people commenting about this and I just want to clarify a few things. The first point is, that I never said it completely discouraged bullying but has helped in toning down and avoiding many cases of bullying. Yes, there are still many cases of bullying everywhere, but there would definitely be much more if the uniform was more high-maintenance. The next thing is that, yes, there is not a lot of individuality, but that’s the point with uniforms. Students can choose to accessorize and/or dress differently out of school. Lastly, this is just a personal opinion, if you don’t agree, that’s fine, and up to you.
Oh, I thought the Chinese government wanted the children to grow taller, so they made a track suit as a uniform. This was informative.
Indeed, is the best uniform
This is a public school uniform. It is the same for men and women. The fabric is comfortable and cheap. It is not easy to compare among classmates. It is not easy to shorten it. It is especially convenient for sports.
Finally someone who have useful information because someone be complaining "it doesn't look good"
when i was a students in china i found my uniform very ugly and uncomfortable to wear. i don't think my school was that strict since i remember that i don't wear much of my uniform, and the only strict requirement is really the red neck ties for morning gathering. once that is over, everyone just tuck their tie into their bag. then again that is when i was in first grade. i saw a lot of older kids wearing them thou. everyone have a shirt inside and treated the uniform as a jacket.
I like Chinese uniform more cuz it's more comfortable and no need to worry about weird guys.
True
I just like it because it makes it less about looks, and more about personality. Plus boys and girls are totally equal in terms of uniform which is cool
Feminist detected
@@lenaroy7725 not all feminists are bad you know
@@lenaroy7725 there is nothing wrong about that
I went to school in China, our uniforms changed depending on the season, so in the summer they were white and blue and the winter we had the black and white uniform. The uniforms are created in order for everyone to afford, and so that children from families with low income will not be discriminated for not being able to buy/maintain. Actually the uniform's appearance depends on province or school too.
Right so nobody would know who the poor kids were because clothes were the only way to tell....haha. No it's more about control and teaching that control at young ages. As usual they disguise it as something noble but in fact it's purpose is much more sinister.
@@gdubsterz1238 Respectfully what tf are you on about lmao
@@gdubsterz1238 I grew up poor in the US, and I would have loved to go to a school that didn't make the income disparity so obvious. It would have been one less thing to worry about.
Unlike China, Korea prefers school uniforms because it reduces misunderstandings and conflicts caused by the social gap between the rich and the poor.
It's so unusual for me. I am from Germany and besides a few examptions most schools never wore a uniform. I remember as I was in 5th grade my school was so close to make us all wear the same stuff cause they wanted to reduce people getting cirtizised by not having cool fashion. My teachers planned polo shirts in the summer and everyone would wear the same black pants and than a thick sweatshirt in the winter, but however altho the majority of my school was for it, they didn't made that (well it was cause the 10th grader said no since they said "Why should we buy that and wear it when we leave the school on 6 months?" and that sucked tho cause 90% of all students of the other grades said yes. The thing is that my school was 50% of all votes belong to the 10th grader so if nobody in 10th grade says yes, than you reduce the 90% from the other students to 45% if that makes sense and than you have a low overall number, wich is stupid.). I could allways wear whatever I wanted in school, but we still had some rules. The rules where simple 1) no sleevless shirts 2) if you wear hot pants you have to put leggings or tights underneath 3) no too short skirts if you wanted to wear skirts. That used to be the only laws for fashion so if someone said they wanted to dye their hair or wear makeup or band-shirts and punk-fashion etc. nobody was against that at all. I have a cousin who went to an international English school here in Germany and she used to wear a uniform. It was a simple one. Her skirt was as long as till her knee, she wore white tennis socks, black simple shoes, a white blouse and a dark blue jacket with her school's name on it. People stared at her of cause, because most people are not used to seeing school uniforms here, but they understood it in her hometown a bit easier since over 200 kids went to that school. As I was younger and watched a few TV-shows who got dubed into German where you saw kids in school uniforms, I was allways a bit jealous that they wore these outfits. I was also very close as a teenager and thought to wear similiar outfits that are simple and have similiarities since I liked that style and it reminded me a bit of when you see pics of very fashionable British people back like 10-15 years ago. I had some dark blue skirts that I wore with simple white sneaker and a simple pullover with a white t-shirt underneath when I want to school (I did not allways wore that, but many times during spring and summer) and I loved it, but nowadays I don't think I could pull such a style off anymore haha. I wonder sometimes how it comes that some countries use school uniforms and others don't
The Chinese uniform seems more practical. It's cheaper, more comfortable, and easier to get into each day.
It looks like it was designed by some really old conservative, but practical guy.
@Naikomi im Vietnamese and we have the same uniform its def the most comfortable here lol
@Naikomi 是很舒服!It's very comfortable!
well i mean, china is known for being practical and smart
@루이야 내한하자 Oh wow that's expansive. I suppose that's the cost of pretty outfits (no pun intended lol). As a chinese I remember my sports style uniform costs around 30 dollars, which was the price seven years ago so Idk if they still keep the same money. It's cheap and practical, which can also be wearing in PE lessons, but clearly not that fancy compared to Korean uniform T T. I really prefer Korean and Japanese school uniforms
the one thing i wished i had was the school festival. its seems like a lot of work but it really lets students go wild with what they want to do. the fact that its mainly a class activity and not a club one can really help with students getting close to their peers.
Nah, it often causes bullying. The kids who weren't good at sports would often get bullied for the rest of the year.
@@plzleavemealone9660 While not quite the same as japanese school festival, sport festival is common here in Indonesia. As far as my experience go, nobody really cares about who aren't good at sports (in a good way). If you happen to be the ace player, people will recognize you of course. But if you suck, people might laugh a bit when something stupid happen but nothing more. With that being said, I suck at sport but playing on the sport festival is still fun. Or you can be on the cheering team. My class always did something unique in every sport festival that we always won the no.1 Supporter Award. If you don't even want to be cheering, students here brings their own games (card, laptop, chess, etc.) so we could still play even if there's nothing happening at the moment.
I couldn't say all schools are like that, but I never heard people here bullied because sports. Other reasons? most likely yes. But sport? unlikely.
My school call it 'school foundation' that is up for a week. A lot of booths are made such as wedding booth, horror booth, gallery booth, etc. And they also held contests for pageants, singing, dancing, etc. School festival like this are done in our 'school day' where we have sports and academic activities. We got concerts, majorette band, and classroom feast after that. And at the end of the year, we held prom and school ball (it's like a party day similar to what is going on in tomorrow land with edm artist). On Christmas month, we have Christmas party of course. One of the best. Unfortunately we are still stuck at home now and face to face classes only exist on some rural areas 😭
As someone who doesn't have any friends and had zero social skill+ low self esteem, I would hate school festivals. Only kids who had friends would have fun in that kind of occasion
We had school festivals here in Germany in our schools but it was boring. Teacher gave like 10 things to do and than a hand of students helped out and the rest was free to visit or not. So let's say you have 200 students in the school, 30 Teacher. All teacher and 40 students help out. You see 60 siblings or parents of the students who help out and from the other 160 students only 50 students with their 80 family member like to show up and other people are maybe 40 people or so who come and look if the school was good enough to send their own children there or to see what school their kid will be signed in if they have to take that school. It's kinda boring. Anime/Manga for example protray school festivals as a big thing and make it look fun but here in Europe it seems to be just a waste of time. I also tried to never show up at school festivals because it was just so boring and the year I was in my school's choir nobody even showed up wich upset my teacher. She said "You had to perform. We had like 800 visitors and nobody of you showed up except 3 people. We couldn't perform since 20 of you didn't came" and we all were like: "Well..." haha
As a Chinese person, it’s interesting to see other people react to our public school culture. Due to how the Gaokao system works, it’s a norm for a students to prioritize academics over every other aspect of life, because it dictates your employment and basically your future life. So yeah comfortable clothes are good for you to focus on school and generally feel good, but also unflattering uniforms can work to stop dating, prevent comparison of appearances etc. It feels like stripping individuality away from teenagers and turning them into study machines (in giant classes/schools too). But if you value studying above all else it’s a sensible choice.
Can u guys give gaokao only once in a lifetime ?
@@minholly5509 no if u dont do good u wait another year to attempt.
That's interesting to hear. My parents and older siblings still grew up in the era in Hungary where they all had to wear uniforms. But they said that even when the uniforms were all the same, you could still very well tell the difference between kids, based on eg hair or whatever accessories they had, or how their uniform was kept etc... So they thought it was useless in curbing differences. But I guess we never took it seriously enough or something.
@@andij605 You are right about the accessories. In China fancy accessories are also discouraged or even banned in schools.
哇,英语好啊!
In Sweden we have no uniforms and no particular rules about clothing. Everyone is allowed to look however they want.
Food for us is free. There's always several types of vegetables and salads available (including pasta salads sometimes), and then the main dish of the day. And there's also always a vegetarian option available, as well as bread and butter (and my school always had a soup option too, and milk or yogurt with corn flakes and sugar as well, but this isn't something all schools offer). Drinks available are water and milk (and my school had apple juice as well, but again, not all schools had that). The way it works is you just grab a plate (or more), stand in line and then when it's your turn you just fill up however much you like of whatever you want. Schools also offer breakfast buffet for those who arrive early. So you can have cereal or muesli with milk or yogurt, or make a sandwich (with butter, cheese, ham and cut up vegetables), or just have a fruit. Drinks are water, tea, milk or (in my school) hot chocolate.
We don't have a festival unfortunately, we just have a prom type of thing last year.
Ps. I went to public school, not a private one (in case anyone wonders).
It sounds so much food waste.
@@user-qm7jw Very good point, yes I imagine it must be a lot of food waste compared to countries with a different system. It's a problem that is talked about here.
School start often 8 to 15 sometimes 16. Depending, but never as in korea... 8-20 wouldnt survived
@Ajsal M same here in Pakistan
Uniform better.
3:04, when she said that people tend to buy larger size becuz it looks cute ...
Meanwhile my Indian mom: buys an oversized sweater or coat so that I can wear it for more years.😂😅
Y is this soo truee 😭😭
Yeah I can understand ,
Every one goes through this process
Same here 🤣 i go to a Japanese school and my mom keeps on telling me to buy a oversized vest that way i can use it up for years
Ikr. But somehow we still shop for new uniform every year lol
日本の制服ならではの「セーラー服」も
紹介してくれて嬉しかった☺️
Chinese one is honestly just more economical and more focus for general use and the purpose to ensure gender equality and focus on studies rather than puberty driven romance and crushes.
I understand the need for formal school uniforms like that in Japan and Korea, it honestly helps to groom students to become accustomed to work attire, after all alot of office environments require shirt and neat trousers or skirts. Or their uniforms (Usually women from what I see in Japanese and Korean Drama's) Have uniforms for female OL's
It's so interesting to look at the difference. In Indonesian high school, at least we have 3-4 uniforms; the white and grey uniform, scout uniform, school identity/batik uniform, and the gym clothes; so we change our uniform almost everyday. Sometimes we also use traditional clothes in a special day. We are not allowed to use our skirt very short for anyone who didn't wear hijab, below the knee is the standard. Back in my school, we are allowed to use jacket or hoodie only when it was raining and cold. 😊😊 I edited my comment again so I can share more information, hihi. About food or lunch, in my high school, because it is a public school, they didn't provide school lunch. We must buy it in the canteen, usually not managed by the school, and restaurant or street food around the school. Sometimes we bring our own lunch to save money 🤣
I'm indonesian too. in my school we have to wear black shoes
@@kiddo8597 yess, me too. But in my high school, we can use colored shoes in Friday and Saturday 😆😆
@@aeren6820 Indonesia is a pretty warm country, wearing such long skirts in such warm climate might be uncomfortable.
@@sambatra6162 Yeess. So usually the skirt is pretty wide not tight. And we don't used a layered uniform, only shirt and skirt/pants, no vest or blazer. And for who don't wear hijab or boys, the shirt also can be made short sleeve. 😊
I mean if you count all those then China, Korea, and Japan all have 3-5 various uniforms they would need to wear, this is strictly looking at the day to day classroom uniform.
In India, all schools have their unique uniforms and schools are pretty strict about uniforms. Maximum times, the shirt is white and the tunic/skirt is of a different colour (although there are schools which have colourful shirts). Mid-day meal is provided free of cost. Although at my school almost 50% of students bring their own tiffin. We need to pay once a year. In Indian schools, instead of graduation party, we call it "farewell function". Here we don't have any restrictions about one's looks
Not every school in India provides Mid day meal
@@bemymellow9842 most schools in South India do, idk about North India 😅
Ooh I loved my school's uniform it was the best i kinda miss it now that I am in college 😭
Our schools are much more restricted. Makeup is never allowed and that is good. Mobiles are not allowed and you must tie up hair.
@@Rukamylove-j6l but we still snuck in our phones lol
Chinese school uniforms prevent girls from caring about their figure and appearance (we are not allowed to make up in high school), everything the school does to students is to make the students only focus on study. Actually after graduating from university, my favorite is sports clothes. I believe many girls feel the same with me. I love comfortable sweaters and trousers, only when I need to go outside I would consider wearing a dress and making up. I miss the days when I only have to focus on my grades
I think that's a good idea. In Aus there's been constant battle with girls that wants to wear pants especially for winter but some school policy said no they have to wear their skirts.... It's stupid. It's most Catholic schools that have this stupid rule. I went to a private Catholic school for primary and it's so bad... The girls get cold all the time. My parents finally let me choose my own school when I got to High School, I picked a school where there is no uniform and no one cared about what I wore. I know not having a uniform may have it's own issues but for my school the students was very progressive and accepting. Some boys in the art area even wore very feminine clothing, like skirts with pants and everyone was cool. No bullying whatsoever.
Yeah the China uniform is perfect for ugly girls so they don't feel so insecure. It's well thought out and will make girls more focused on grades instead of looks or fitting in. You can tell a guy definitely designed it LOL.
Same! Sports clothes are best
and become a study machine
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this was awesome! the prestige inn Chinese high school's for looking like a track suit was the writing put into your suit. This would actually signify which school you went to in terms of prestige (as in the academically rigorous). This is because you were not specifically limited to your district/county school zone, you had to take the 中考 (HS entrance exam). Based on your score -result meant you could unluck only certain HS within your area.. Of course this would add more travel time to your commute as a student.
Example: two of the most famous high schools in Beijing (there were several others) are probably 北四中 (beijing #4) and 北京101 (beijing 101). Being accepted into these two schools meant you were academically formidable and had a very good chance of going to top tier universities in China. Their school uniforms would have that imprinted and when you walked and saw others in their school uniforms it was a status symbol.
hopefully that was informative for all.
That's fucking true.
Yeah I'm now studying in Beijing 101 Middle School and my uniform is blue and white with the name of my school written on it.
I’m from hk (city in China) and in my school (I’m 6th grade) our uniforms are just like normal ones but the actual uniform is just like the Korean one. The teachers really don’t care about if you wear uniform or sweatpants (unless there’s P.E.) the sweatpants where like really ugly it’s green with a bunch of like orange teal and the school badge on it
just another jogger suit
the japanese and korean uniform are soo cute but i think the chinese uniform is just a lot more comfortable esp taking into account youre gonna be wearing it everyday plus the insanely long school days east asian contries have !
I personally love Chinese high school uniform 😂
I would love my school to have that uniform, it's so amazing!
live in china
@@fearlesskugkug5192 “everything China bad, I’m never wearin a track suit again”👴🏻
@@aftersea2450 yeah man track suits suck i hope it doesnt spread to more countries
I agree I think the uniforms look nice and comfy but that’s still not enough to make me wanna go to a Chinese high school bc u heard the lady: “we can’t date in school, you would get arrested.” 💀
This was great and informative. I love hearing the comparisons, and that they were shocked by each other's differences. I didn't know Japan High school was optional
Yeah a lot of kids tend to go straight into the workforce post middle school
madness, while there are third world South Asian Countries that make 12 years of education as mandatory
it's so surprising that an Asian first world country is even lower than that
@@electronresonator8882 well, even though it's not mandatory, more than 90% of junior highschool students (ages 12-14) attend highschool (15-17)
@@takuyamatsuda7214 I was also shocked that high school isn't mandatory over there. Is that because of the Japanese tradition of working in their family business? I heard Japanese hand their family business down generations, and that's just the way it is over there.
@@GetUnwoke Almost 100% of Japanese middle school graduates go to high school.It's very rare to go straight to the workforce.
from Czech Republic. from elementary to high school - Almost all schools don´t have any uniforms, we did not have any particular Rule/s about clothing. Everyone was allowed to wear anything what they wanted, how they wanted, this also applies to hair,piercing, tattoos etc. We are free to experiment with our looks. Food was not free, of course lunches were provided, but we needed to pay monthly, meaning our parents received an invoice for the next month, they paid it and the student could eat for this whole month. It was not expensive. But honestly, Lunches were not the best meals, we had soup (it was mostly a veggie soup, or some leftover soup make from ingredient from the previous day), and the main dish, for drinks we got some juice, and that was it. WE did not have any options, what was served, we had to eat. In High School we have a so called "graduation party" - which is basically an event for the last year high school student (or seniors), you can also imagine it as a prom (like in the american movies). Those "proms" are prepared by the students themselves, from finding a place, drink, food, enterntainment etc.
exactly same here in poland haha maybe one difference is that in high school we don't have any meals and food included at all
@@zuzia5725 (I'm from Poland but I will write in English to make it easier for others to understand)
I sincerely don't understand why we don't have lunches provided in high school
like- in primary school lunches were mostly in every school but then you go to high school and it disappears :((
When I was in my first year in high school a little shop was at the end of hallway on 1st floor where we could buy French fries, toasts, different types of sandwiches, etc., but after the whole coronavirus thing the owner closed the shop and it was hard for students who forgot to take or buy snacks for school, especially when our lessons start at 7:20AM
now school bought two vending machines for students to make it easier for us to buy food if needed (because we can't go out to e.g grocery shops near the school 'cause of the virus) but it still can't replace warm, handmade food :((
@@animex2515 I have similar situation, before covid we had some kind of school café, where we easily could get lunch when waiting for the bus after the lessons, but when the virus started they closed and since 2 years we don't even have vending machines with snacks and the nearest shop is 1 km away from our school.... it's impossible to go there, come back and eat even during the long break:(
@@zuzia5725 ohh that sucks :((
I'm from Hungary. It was the exact same thing for is as well, including the food. Older generations did have uniforms, but it was abolished right when I went to school. My mom was very relieved, she thought uniforms were useless, and that it was a lot of work to keep them in shape.
Food, though.... I remember refusing to eat school food at first, it was so different form the homemade meals. But then I eventually warmed up to it. It's still better than like mcdonalds or whatever. It's just basically the same 20 kind of meals on rotation. Or 15? I don't know, there wasn't a wide range of recipes. The way we got by is we exchanged a lot of food between us, depending on which classmate liked which food better. So a lot of sharing.
We did get food from kindergarten to end of high school. Honestly I think we could have signed up for communal lunch at university as well, it's just not popular.
No Doubt. Korea 🇰🇷 and Japan 🇯🇵 uniform looks very beautiful.
Love it.
Chinese uniform is my favourite, it looks so comfy and practical.
@Miles Bennett Dyson which is exactly the point of it... you don't need to be thinking of high schoolers in that way lmao unless you're a complete weirdo
@Miles Bennett Dyson weirdo
Chinese uniform is cuter
@Miles Bennett Dyson i agree with you whole heartedly the Chinese uniform is ugly as hell
@@zebra2662 looks like squid game lmao-
Korean and Japanese uniforms: Looking fancy
Chinese: Yo what’s good coach?
Pov = the 3 outfits are great and fashinable
Damn if they knew about Indian school life.......they will be sad. I envy them for their school life. Average School life in Indian is very sad and dull(not talking about the rich kid's school) 🤣🤣🤣 I bet no one can survive Indian school life except for Indians. The most daring or exciting thing i could do was to climb up my school's wall because I was late to school 🤣🤣🤣🤣 . Btw loved the video quite informative and fun. If possible we would love an Indian guest in an interview like this.
To be fair upto class 5 we had fun and then the rat race started (ICSE board pass out 2009). We had our fun moments as well but got ruined especially in class 10. The hell on earth is from 10-12 and then college
*I'm from India, goa* we had canteens, short uniforms/skirts were worn by the girls and we used to date and the timings were from 8am to 1.45pm 😇
@@taetaethv9704 Good for you man. I am from India West Bengal. Sorry i was just venting. While we had our ups and downs, we enjoyed our school life
@@taetaethv9704 Oh, I see
@@taetaethv9704 dude even our school had canteens and girls wore skirt, in our school it was a rule for skirts to be knee length but none of the girls used to follow them. but my point was not about uniforms and cantene its just we were supposed to be very discipline. forst it was an indian school second thing a missionary.
As an Australian, I’m genuinely jealous over the uniforms the asians have. Because our climate here is dry and hot, our uniforms are designed to be a “summer” type all year round (including our 2° mornings in winter), they are styled with a top short sleeve shirt with our logo along with a pair of shorts in whatever colour the school preferably wanted you in (in this case navy blue for me). We also have these baggy jackets we wear. I love the style of the uniforms they showed us. It looks very simple and well made
@@phroglord IKR! The jacket thing is so annoying! Like some people can’t afford a fucking $70 jacket, and there just gonna let them freeze?
korean and japan ones looks much more uglier, and uncomfortable.
@@maegalroammis6020 bruh how is it ugly but i get the uncomfortable part
@@literallylyn.z what do u mean
Not all schools in Australia wear uniforms though right
I've been teaching senior high school students in Japan for almost 5 years, and loose socks are so out of fashion right now! XD lol It's like the old gyaru style... Those fashion styles are more from the 90's and early 2000's. The rest of the uniform sounds about right, but again, it depends on the school. Some of my high schools had a polo shirt top instead of a shirt and blazer. Some other schools have a jumper/ more conservative style dress for girls. And only in the past 2 years, some of my schools allowed girls to wear pants instead of skirts, but I've only seen 3 or 4 girls wearing them...
Also, no school would allow students to roll their skirt up that high! XD lol The actual length of the uniform skirts in Japan is below the knee, but most girls will roll it up to the knee or just above the knee not to get in trouble with the teachers. I've seen Japanese teachers asking girls to roll down their skirts when they look too short. Also, at my 8 senior high schools, no hair dye, no makeup, nail polish or jewelry allowed. They keep wet wipes in the teachers room as well as black hair spray.
The loose, bulky socks are more like street fashion than school fashion. I don't think it's allowed in school either
in the rest of the world tho, loose socks are kinda trendy lately and gyaru is getting quite popular on tiktok and Instagram
Loose socks and gyaru culture are making a comeback in Japan rn and I’m living for it!!
@@sabreenasnow119 bruh it’s so annoying how late the west is 🤧 I remember when gyarus were out here with the longest nails and it only started popping like a year ago and now people are getting into the gyaru style 🥲
Did you just.... out the ages of the 3 girls in the video....
In Mexico ,when you choose a high school, you can go in the morning (7am-2pm), in the afternoon (3:20 pm-8:20 pm) or on saturdays, but it's difficult to later change schechual because the number of students is limited. It's a really different experience depending on what you choose, and i'ts usually known that the students who go in the mornings are better (normally students who go in the afternoon is because they couldn't pass the school exam to go in the morning or have a job besides school).
Our uniform normally consist of a skirt/pants, a short sleeved shirt, a vest and a sweater, we also have a formal version for special events which is just a long sleeved shirt and a tie, my school doesn't have gym class so we don't have that uniform.
My school don't have lunch time, we have to eat in class if the teacher allow us, and you have to carry it yourself from home or buy something in the school (although they don't sell very healthy things).
We have small events for special dates like dia de muertos or Christmas, but the biggest one is for "student day" and it's like a festival but I couldn't experience it because of the pandemic :(
You are so lucky that students get choices of what times to go to school! Wow!
In india, atleast for the school i come from, we're very strict about out uniforms. we aren't allowed to wear colored dress for our birthdays. it differs from school to school though. our uniform is just checked shirt and skirt for the girls and the same shirt & pant. we have a canteen / mess idk what you call it but you have to pay for the food. we have some restrictions, we aren't allowed to wear much jewelery like bracelets, we aren't allowed to wear smart watches or bring phones to school. most teens don't really have phones here either way. The schools are realy strict when it comes to studying, you do anything else, you get notices to your parents. its fun sometimes but ig they prioritize studying a lot here.
For birthday it is allowed to wear makeup , dress . In India Parents don't buy phone for children , tennagers . They're using their parents phone . Aah only rich people buy phone for their children at tennage age . I have watched an English TH-cam family channel name the royalty. They buyed a brand iPhone 13 for their son and he is only 13 year old. I am 15 and still I don't have my own phone and I am using my mom phone now.
@@loveyourself2807 what free from everything ? What do you mean
wobble head
@@kanchanwagh7590 maybe your school allows that. mine is strictly against it and we'd get suspended if we wore stuff like that.
Same. My miserable school was run by Hitler.. we didn't have any sports or any fun activities. It was always mugging up some BS and tones of tests and exams. We had to oil our hair everyday and wear big bindi to make ourselves look as ugly as possible. No colour dress for birthday, we were no even allowed to talk during lunch breaks or talk to boys. They even monitored what we did after school. We were banned from hanging out with friends after school hours in school uniform. My school was straight up hell.. They never had the same discipline when it came to teaching.. the education was garbage. It completely destroyed our self esteem and confidence.
I have a Japanese friend. She said they don't have uniforms!^^ she also said a lot of students break the "piercing" rule
Edit: i know not every jaoanese school is like this! I just said it becauss i'm pretty sure lot of people think everyone wears uniforms there
Different schools have different rules and uniforms. Some highschool still use that sailor uniform as well. (My japanese gf had it in highschool)
@@Daryl90 yes. Some schools are more strict than others
she’s definitely in the minority, almost all schools require uniform and piercing is only after you graduate
The Japanese uniform is so cute and adorable!! 😍
中国ジャージなのめちゃくちゃ良いな。
お腹圧迫されないし、着るの楽だし。
でも日本や韓国の制服のデザインの可愛さも捨てがたいよねえ🥺
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All 3 look so pretty in their uniforms.
Ahhh, I feel privileged. In my country nobody is required to wear uniform in school or university. We don't have a dress code either, everyone would just wear whatever they like.
Edit: I live in Romania
Wow!! you guys enjoyed high school life and here in Indian students focused only on studies ☹️
No, they study really hard. They only have a few breaks to enjoy themselves.
@@00l80 okay 🙂 I thought high school life in foreign countries are joyful, so all countries student life is same😌
@@00l80 are you from korea??
@@bj079 not all western school is more fun and I went to an international school in china so we have a lot of foreign students and we dont wear uniform but traditional Japanese, Chinese, and korean school have really harsh classes and they have tutor class after class even some of the classes ends at 9PM -10PM
3 Idiots is the most famous Bollywood film in Korea and a lot of them watch it in high school because they relate to the struggles in the education system. If you want to do well you have to go to cram school after normal school and it's not uncommon for students to stay there until 11pm everyday.
I'd love so much to have the Chinese uniform in my school 😩😩
So, I am an American student who went to a private Christian Catholic school from 3rd grade up to high school and here is how it was like:
*Middle School*
- Uniform: Polo shirt, skirt (jumper skirts for girls under 5th grade), knee socks, whatever school shoes.
- Gym Uniform: T-shirt and sweatpants (shorts that were especially worn by the elementary kids)
*High School*
- Uniform: Button down shirt, skirt, knee socks or tights, brown oxford shoes everyone wore.
- Gym Uniform: whatever you want as long as the shirt had sleeves and shorts were not too short (no jeans, no skirt, etc.)
*School life in America overall*
- School Schedule: 7:00 AM to 3:00 PM; 5 days a week from Monday to Friday
- School lunch: You have to pay for lunch, random menu item each day
- Homework depended on what classes you have. Usually becomes a lot in late middle school or start of high school.
- Grades consists of A, B, C, D, and F along with numbers from 0-100.
- Dating was pretty common and not restricted
- Other rebellious things are not allowed but common (drugs, alcohol, sex, fights, swearing, etc.)
- School events: pep rally, spirit week, school play/musical, guest speakers, prom, homecoming
- Sports in America are very emphasized, especially football and basketball
- School is required for everyone up to 10th grade or second/sophmore year of high school.
-College/University is not required but *highly* recommended
Anything I missed or I am wrong on, please let me know.
In Hungary:
We don't have uniforms, some schools has rules like not having short hair if you're a girl, no piercings, no dyed hair
But that's not that common i think
In my school you can have dyed hair, you can shave your hair if you want, you can have piercings and tattoos.. and you can wear any clothes! You need to pay for lunch, i personally just bring some sandwiches and if i get hungry i can just buy food in school (which is usually expensive lol)
I personally did all my piercings during high school and no one said a thing about it.. tbh it's pretty normal here, because lot of students study art here
You're so lucky
If I don't get to visit atleast one of Japan, Korea or China atleast once in my life my soul won't rest in peace
Yall gonna trying the foods there all day long i can imaging
😂 Why?
@@tobacco118 I dunno actually. They're my most favourite countries. The cultural diversity in these countries are genuinely mind blowing and I'm from a South Asian country so I love my fellow East Asians a lot. I don't even have a single friend from these three countries 🤧
@@Mingukkie13 The effect of too much Chinese food, K-pop, or too many Chinese & Korean drama? 😂
@@tobacco118 yah maybe. Kdrama Cdrama and kpop
I am from Romania. In my highschool years we had to were uniform only in the first two years when it was obligatory. The uniform was office type suits in black with white shirts in variante for boys and girls. Since I always had a androgynous face I looked good in both variants according to my classmates.😃
But in my third year of highschool the school rules changed and everyone was free to were the clothes they wanted as long as it didn't expose skin (no exposing the chest area for both boys and girls, shirts were banned for both boys and girls, skirts and dresses for girls were allowed but no exposing skin in delicate places (breasts and butt). Therefore since rules were relaxed I mostly dressed sports because it was my favorite style since way back then.
Thouse days most of highschools don't have uniforms but most of them still have a few normal standard rules against revealing to much skin for both boys and girls.
As a Chinese, when I was a child, I was very envious and fond of Korean and Japanese school uniforms, because Chinese school uniforms are big and loose, but now I don't feel it, in fact, I think Korean and Japanese school uniforms need beauty and figure to ensure visual comfort, so it takes a lot of time and trouble for me.
its a form of discipline and respect in japan :P
Korean school uniforms are the most beautiful and trendy. Japanese ones are innocent and youthful. Chinese ones are practical and comfortable.
As an American, I like the Korean ones myself as the Japanese ones give off "too young" vibe and the Chinese ones are ... tracksuits lol.
Chinese ones gives me good vibes
same.
the korean one is just pretty overall. the details/coloring is so trendy
the japanese uniform is youthful and cute, manga vibes
the chinese ones are just regular gym clothes. I personally never liked wearing PJs or sweats to school.. Something about being in clothes that are too comfortable, would make me relax and un-focused.
I'm a japanese high school student. Actually,we don't wear such socks in dairy life at all. This style was popular in the 90's and early 00's.
🇺🇸 = 🏳️🌈 🤣🤣
japanese uniforms doesn't looks comfortable. chinese and koreans ones are better
China Japan and South Korea talking about their schools (SPECIALLY UNIFORMS)
Meanwhile INDIAN STUDENTS 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😢
6:00 I'm not sure about now, but in the UK the uniform tends to be knee length skirts with wide pleats, a shirt, and a jumper for girls (or blazer, depending on your school) with a tie; in my experience the summer time allowed students to wear polo tshirts. However, there were a few girls who wore skirts like that, and somehow got a way with it - I genuinely think how much you alter your uniform if you have teachers that pay attention will be guided by your social standing hahaha i.e. if you're well liked, you won't get in trouble.
my daughter wore trousers for the first four years of UK secondary school but the final year ( 2020, until covid struck) she talked me in to letting her wear a skirt. Big mistake-they all roll them up so it looks like they aren't even wearing one if their blazer is long enough. I think the school did try to correct them but it was low on the list after dealing with all the other day to day low-level disruptions the kids came up with, She still got good grades though.
In my school teachers don't say anything about people wearing very short skirts. Girls are allowed to wear trousers as well. We're allowed to wear black or grey hoodies, jumpers, and vests underneath our blazers. Your shoes must be completely black, but they don't care about what you wear for P.E. as long as you have one piece of the P.E. uniform. In my school, even if the teachers like you, you still get into trouble if you deserve it.
my school didn't even allow us to take our blazers off
we had to ask permission, we were except from the rule only during bad heatwaves or when it's break. as if the heatstroke will put itself on hold inside out hot classrooms. yup seemed 'reasonable'.
majority of my school doesn't even have air con. the ones that did were either not switched on cuz the teachers are cruel, or it was because the students would use the ceiling fans to make the glue sticks accelerate in speed by throwing them at the fans. or pencils, those hurt.
@@Milkpastasoup yeah same here
During the summertime, students in international schools in China (that I am aware of) normally wear the school shirt and their own whatever colored trousers. During the winter, they'd wear a random sweatshirt or hoodie with a school overcoat and a school skirt/or any pants (depending on comfort ukwim).
short skirts, shorts, jeans, are all allowed to be worn.
U currently go to an international School in beijing and it differs from school to school but ours has the English dress code
*I
@@elisafrota4641 not in beijing but ok
In the Philippines, our uniforms are long (usually under the knee length) skirt and a short sleeve blouse with a ribbon (for elementary or middle school) or neck tie (for highschool). This is the traditional uniform we have and the only difference was that in every school there is a different pattern or color in the skirt and the ribbon and tie (as it usually matches).
About the school lunch, I only experienced having a cafeteria on my school when I studied in a private one. They have chairs and tables and also stalls where you can buy them. However, in most public schools they don't have cafeteria. We also bring pack lunch made by our parents as we always prefer home made dishes and, ofcourse, to save money instead of buying from the school.
Chinese uniform is way better in my opinion because it covers the body. Japan skirt is waaaay to short. Also Koreas tight short skirt trend is very provocative.
All the country are lucky
In India there is nothing but studies
Chinese one is the best so comfortable
here in Singapore, schools are extremely strict about uniforms. for girls hair has to be tied up in either a ponytail or braids at all times and no accessories like bracelets and rings are allowed. even our shoes have to be white (some schools have black) and socks are ankle socks. for school lunches we don’t have a fixed lunch and our canteens are basically food courts with different stalls that sell different food. also we don’t really have any festivals but in 2019 my school threw this huge carnival to celebrate 120 years. we do have prom but it’s only in secondary 4 after we finish our o levels (national exams)
I'm also SG, back then guys cannot have certain hair styles as well, no side burn, bangs should not touch eyebrows, back hair cannot touch the collar, no center parting, side shave, mohawk etc., items like glasses, bags, wallets must be certain colour or material etc.
Are you allowed wear makeup?
@@loonaot12forever nope
@@GuyWithAnAmazingHat yeah we still have the hairstyle thing for guys but the colour of wallet/glasses/bag i don't think there's that anymore
Similar in Malaysia
Korean Uni expresses beauty, Japanese Uni expresses cuteness, and Chinese Uni expresses comfortable and a balanced look
The chinese uniform reminds me of the publics school from my country (Argentina)wich is a black/blue/grey(it depends of the school) sports pants and a white shirt
And it's very basic and affordable 👍🏽
This trio again, the energy omg 😂🙌 more videos with this trio please
Next video = High School uniforms , but with 3 boys 🇰🇷🇨🇳🇮🇪
🇰🇷🇨🇳🇯🇵*
noone watches that
India isn’t in East Asia
@@Laura-Yu that was not indian flag
@@Laura-Yu thats not even indias flag
Wow chinese i love them and their culture
Lol its litterally bc ur chinese
It says ur location is hong kong on your yt desc
Japan and Korea value beautiful appearance, and China seems to have considered comfort and practicality.
I love the high school life of Japan, we also have something like the festivals but we call it a fete. The kids all make their own stalls and prepare food and sell it, each class has their own theme and we made haunted house, someone made history themed museum. It really encourages students to learn how to create things together, what it takes to run a small business, how to make profits and build social skills.
This was so fun!!! They all had GREAT chemistry together. I was laughing & smiling along & learned so much!! 😍💕
Wow... this is so different from French high schools !
We don't wear uniforms, but some schools have rules like "no mini-skirts" or "no jeans with holes".
There is a self-restaurant but you also can eat out of the school if you want. The price of lunch depends on the family's earnings but it's usually between 2 and 5 euros (between 2 744 and 6 860 Korean wons). In some schools you have what we call a "carnival" but it's usually just a costume competition.
There is absolutely no rules about dating, couples are just required to "don't have in indecent behavior" inside the school
Les crops tops sont interdits aussi fin je crois sa dépend de l'établissement
@@SairoGirl Comme tu as dit ça dépend de l'établissement. Par exemple nous au collège on pouvait faire sport en brassière de sport y'avais aucun problème. Il ne me semble pas que les croc tops étaient interdits dans mon lycée
So you can just walk out of the school during lunch?? That's amazing cuz here in india 2 security personnel guard the gate and no one is allowed to leave lol
@@avikarathore850 Actually you can walk in or out the school every time the bells ring. So every hour. When the bells ring they open the portal, check the fact you're a student of this school and then you're free to walk out. When we had around 2h or 3h for lunch, my friends and I used to go to the fast-food or to the downtown and buy something. And the school isn't responsible of us as soon as we walk out the school. Hope this answers your question 😁
@@avikarathore850 Yes you can eat out of school or just go home but after you have to back to school ( sorry for my english )
I like china school uniform the was comfortable
The Japanese uniform is pretty
Although the Chinese one seems ‘ugly’ compared with the other 2, it looks comfortable and you can wear it to do sports.
It depends on the school. My old school's winter uniform was this kind of sports suits, but made of crappy materials and no one wanted to do sports in those, summer uniform was Japanese-like shirts and skirts also of poor quality. In the end, only the socks were somewhat wearable.
China has uniforms like Korea as well, just depends on the school ool
I don't even think it's ugly - I wish she brought her actual uniform T__T I actually like the sporty look
Yeah, it does look ugly. Maybe just my taste
It doesn't look ugly it depends on school Koreans school uniform are ugly nd not comfortable
I prefer the chinese uniform, it seems more comfortable
In India😀😀
most student wear an black coloured legis l(like pants ) under the skrit 👗👗and some girls wear kurtas
we don't have canteen
beause we bring lunch 🍟🍕🌮🍔🌭🥪from home
their are two uniform in school
one is white uniform
we have to make two ponys 🙆🤷
we have to tei our hair tightly 🙆
we have to cut our nails 🙅
and dating is not present in school 👫but may be in higher school 👩❤️💋👩
we have to say good morning every time we see a teacher 🧓👩🦳
I think only government school students enjoy the good school life 🕺🕺
but in my opinion you can have a 🌺🌺good school life while under disciplines 😉😉
im an indian and I have canteen in my school (its optional if u want to eat from canteen or homemade food)
We dont have to make 2 ponytail 1 is fine
These types of videos are the reason I love TH-cam so much. I love these ladies. This was very fun and interesting to watch. I learned so much. It's funny to me that I was once never interested in the world....my whole world was Jamaica now I'm in the U.S exposed to multiple cultures and I want to see more. Thank you. I love Japan from anime. And I really enjoy everyone in the comments sharing what school is like in their country so here is mine: In Jamaica 🇯🇲 schools have devotion in the mornings ( prayer to God, singing of worship songs and reading of a Bible verse) as Jamaica is a Christian country. It is either you are a Christian or not a Christian. Schools are strict, no 'dating' and we wear uniforms. No jewelry except watches are allowed and we have to wear the appropriate socks and shoes to go with our uniforms. We take notes in notebooks, phones are not allowed. Children are children so they cannot or are not allowed to behave like adults. The food varies by school. We eat regular Jamaican food- rice and peas ( not beans - red peas) and chicken ( fried, brown stewed or curried), we have white rice, dumplings, steamed or raw vegetables ( specifically cabbage and carrot) and stuff like that- for lunch. For break time (before lunch) we usually just buy snacks, juices, water, cheese or beef patties, meatloaf, biscuits, at a little tuck shop on campus. Other high schools may buy from vendors. I went to a top 3 all girls high school- Westwood High which is very strict as we are trained to be lady-like. I went to a CoEd primary school ( grades 1-6, ages 6-12)though and I finished high-school in the U.S ( boys and girls). Meals are covered in our school fee so it's not a separate bill unless people don't eat from the school canteen and prefer to buy lunch from the shop or take their own. Our uniforms are dresses for the girls, some schools do skirt and blouse or girls wear regular dress uniform up until 10th-11th grade where they wear skirt and blouse as seniors. The boys wear Khaki pants and shirt and this may change in higher grade levels for some schools. Some schools boys don't wear the khaki material at all. We have celebrations at school like Jeans day where we get the day to wear jeans and t-shirt instead of uniform to school. We also have Jamaica day where we wear decent casual clothes representing the Jamaican flag- usually a Jamaican T-shirt or blouse with the flag and jeans. We may have talent shows at specific times in the year and fundraiser events. At my highschool there was or is this big Christmas party event at the end of the year where ( all girls school) we get to wear formal clothing like fancy dresses and heals and nice hairstyles to a dance and dinner. At the party we also have a pageant / talent show where we announce the queen of the year until the next pageant the queen gives her crown to the next winner. We sometimes invite our brother school Cornwall college or the other one don't remember (Top 3 all boys school). We also had another major event in April or May at Westwood it's called Barbeque where we dress in our Westwood Tshirt and Jeans and come to the big William Webb auditorium and listen to music and dance - high school boys are allowed here. Teachers always watch you to make sure you don't sneak off into some corner with a boy as it's night - up to like 11:00pm. So yeah.
헉 한국 교복 보자마자 어 저거!!!하고 놀랐어요...유튜브에서 학교 선배님을 보게 될줄이야 ㄷㄷ 이렇게 익숙한 교복을 보니 진짜진짜 반갑네요 ㅋㅋㅋ
I love korean uniform 😻💞😗💖😽
Central Asian youths should take part in this podcast, cuz they r a lot of people in Korea
When i came into k-drama world the thing that pissed me off was whyyy such cute uniforms are not there in our schools!?
My school life could have been exciting just wearing those uniform.
If they listen to Indian school life they would be shocked the most .... If possible do try to make an Indian school life comparassion also because there is no dating , no lunches , full discipline, no canteens in 70 per cent school, no school lunches and so on
U r right 😂😂 those 7-8 hours are like ....but u know its really necessary for us bcz we all know about competition in India , but for positive we celebrate so many festival and holidays 😁😁
*I'm from India, goa* we had canteens, short uniforms/skirts were worn by the girls and we used to date and the timings were from 8am to 1.45pm 😇
But nowadays schools have canteens, most of the schools I know have canteens, but teachers do tell parents that to avoid the food as much as possible.
canteen i guess it's there in almost 70% of schools 😂 Indian schools are not that bad bruh
@@azzusheikh542 true, we literally don't get bullied as much as many foreign school students get.
the chinese girl is very pretty, i love her hairstyle too :)
The Chinese uniform is comfortable and affordable so it wins needless to say. But still I prefer the Japanese uniform it's so so cute and makes high school days feel more memorable for many reasons
Beyond the fanciful appearance of those uniforms that portrays girls in a 'cute' demeanor, we have to enquire what is the fundamental purpose of schooling? Of course, the Koreans and Japanese are definitely more eye catching if not like eye candies for most people especially men but if the purpose here is education then practicalitiy trumps fanciful uniforms. I like the Chinese uniforms not only for their practicality but it also evens the playing field so that poor and rich students look the same and can afford these simple attire. They can focus on their studies rather than clothes (e.g. shortening the skirt or lengthening or shortening the socks) Education should be for all people, poor and rich with equal opportunities. High school is one facet of a person's life, what the person becomes later because of a good education is far more important.
Let me tell you about India , so in India the schools are The Government schools(the schools that work with the help of government's money, they usually have the NCERT BOARD) and the CBSE schools also called the private school that dont work with the help of government's money. So in government schools, you will mostly find blue SUIT AND SALWAR, these are like usually wore in India by the women and the government schools do have skirts too but the lenghth is like below the knees aur it can be up to the knees and the boys they have the shirt and blue pants. Food is free of cost , provided by the government and it is up to you if you want the mid day meal or not. I haven't really studied in Government school so i don't have any idea about the food. There are around usually 5 classes of 1 grade for example if the grade is 6 then the classes will be like 6A, 6B , 6C like this ,these classes can be more than 5 in one grade if there are more seats in the school for the grade 😃. About dating I guess It's just not restricted but girls and boys usually don't date but the school can call their parents. Now let's come to the Private schools or the CBSE schools. About the uniform for the girls their is a Shirt and Skirt. Shirts are basically of the pastel colours or they can be white. Skirts are of different colours.Every school has different uniforms.On Saturdays we have to wear White skirt/tunic and the skirt color matters on which house member you are like the Shivalik house has Yellow and the Nilgiri has Blue t shirts. About the boys uniform they also wear the same Shirt like girls and the pants are of the same colour like the skirts. Black shoes for both boys and girls and on Saturdays it's white shoes. The schools are really strict about the uniform. On birthday they allowed you to wear but now it's not sadly 🥲. And both the girls and boys have to wear tie. Food is not provided in my school, we usually bring our food. In some schools we have Canteens too and we can go there during the lunch or when we enter the school before going to class. Canteens do have everything from pen to food everything. And Dating same as Government schools. Both the government schools and private schools have Farewell party which is usually called Graduation party. So I am gonna sum this up all here as this comment has went tooo looooooonggg
Let me edit one more thing Our nails are also checked whether they are long and girls have to make two braids with the ribbons matched with their school uniform.
damnn , u wrote a whole essay
@@vamikasingh3563 lol, I did 🥲🤞
Bravo les filles ! 😉👏🏽
J'adore vos uniformes 😍
Ce fut très intéressant et divertissant
C'est très différent des écoles françaises 😊
Juste curieux, Comment ca ressemble des uniformes de lycee francais?
@@lunayu9964 il n'y a pas d'uniformes dans les établissements français depuis les années 70 (je crois)
Ceux qui en ont sont des établissements privés très sélectifs et chers.
Ici les élèves s'habillent comment ils le souhaitent, à l exeception des lycées hôteliers où ils portent les tenus de restaurant certains jours 😊
@@boubas9273 C’est interessant😋 Peut-être L’école essaie de réduire le fossé entre les étudiants riches et les pauvres. Ces uniformes élégants et stylés sont également chers. Je pense.
@@lunayu9964 ils ont abandonné l'idée de l'uniforme pour éviter le coût aux familles mais sans uniforme, les différences se voient encore plus à travers les marques que portent les élèves et cela peut être pire.
À tel point que la question de l'uniforme se pose de nouveau de temps en temps
leur uniformes sont hideux
The Chinese high school I went to has a three-floor cafeteria! Each floor serves different kinds of foods (rice, porridge, noodles, even mala tang) at different prices (from 6 to 30 CNY, pretty cheap in general) so students have a lot of choices regarding personal taste and economy. And they serve late-night snacks (soup, noodles, rice, baozi, bbq, etc.) every day after school (it's a boarding school with required study hall time every night)! I rly miss my high school cafeteria as there r no other places i can buy such delicious meals at such a low price TT
My heart is full of .... happiness?
Am happy to see others people from different countries to tell us experience of their school etc
My rating as a japanese person
In looking cute Japan wins, but it does have bad parts
In looking professional, Korea wins, Tights, a nice color for blazer, and it just looks nice
Chinese uniform is simply the most effecient. Easy to slip on, good comfort, and you don't have to worry about being sexualize.
still learning full english so i hope you can understand
The Korean one reminded me a lot of my uniform in the UK. We had jumpers instead of vests tho. There were rules about no makeup, the type of piercings and earrings you were allowed to wear, dyed hair and they really cared about the type of shoes you wore. I preferred to wear trousers tho instead of skirts, either was optional. They’d send you home to change, or send a note home if something wasn’t acceptable. Different schools may have differing rules however.
I never ate at my school canteen, I used to bring food in or go home for lunch (you needed a pass with permission to leave the school during lunchtime, with parents signed consent)
My school couldn't care less about how much makeup you wear or your piercings or dyed hair.
honestly same about the uniform except they changed it i think recently cuz all the younger years look like they're wearing their primary school uniform (grey skirts, pants etc. does not work with the otherwise navy blazer and sweater and black shoes at all)
otherwise girls do tend to do the whole thing of wearing very short skirts, of which they seem to have a preference for stretchy tight skirts. which i never understood because the fabric was so thin which resulted in the school shirt being very bulky underneath when tucked in. tbf my skirt was not any better, i had it shortened in yr7 (so it wouldn't be past my knees) and wore it till yr11. it basically went from low rise to high waisted, and as a result did become extremely short due to changes in my body proportions.
objectively, i actually liked the shorter skirts. it looked better, definitely better than the past the knee primary school grey skirt which didn't even match the original uniform colours when i was still attending secondary school (im in sixth firm now at my old secondary)
Same, the Korean one reminded me of my school uniform lol - except for the H line skirt. I have no idea why they decided to change it to H line skirts either, I feel like H is more body hugging so I'm surprised schools would choose that for the students.
I mean Japan/Korea and China to some extent’s school systems are all based on the U.K. education system but “the next step” in each of their own ways.
very ugly uniforms
They both are beautiful and cute.
only both?
I like the korean uniform because it looks so chic and elegant
I prefer the Chinese uniform, which is more dignified, and has integrity
Korea🇰🇷 I love you Respect from Uzbekistan🇺🇿
Any other American students here? Schools in Asia seem so different :O
Like in my high school we had a dress code for what we could *not* wear but other than that we could wear just about anything. Things like school festivals and such didn’t really exist, but there were still a lot of clubs so I made good memories :’)
Depends on the kind of student you are but I feel like there was a lot less academic pressure here too. Never even heard of an entrance exam being a thing until a couple years ago
I went to a school in southern california. We had things similar to the festivals but it wasn't open to public, and happened 3 times a year and during an extended lunch. Instead of classes our booths were ran by clubs and we sold food as fundraiser and tried to requite new members.
yeah me too :’) its super bland, people care too much about sports here, there are clubs after school but there is nothing that’s gives off a youthful vibe, there are even classrooms without windows, it just feels like a facility, I think the only thing that is remotely romantic/pretty/youthful is when the sun is setting and makes the walls look yellow and orange, but otherwise, it doesn’t feel lively at all, there’s no sense of community or connection with your classmates because you’re not with the same people the whole day. Walking in the halls feels like hell, especially now with a lot of conflict regarding masks in our school, it’s just a mess, the counselors don’t care at all. I’m speaking as a person who grew up and attended a 1, private Chinese boarding school and 2, a public Chinese school. The vibe is completely different, it feels really cold(metaphorically) and dead In American high schools
Y’all had clubs? Cuz we never had any where I’m from
@@lan9702 like China, the US is a pretty big place filled with different schools, each having students with their own unique experiences.
What you say mirrors my own experience from senior year especially concerning the connection with classmates. I had been a part of sports team and once that was finished me and my “friends” drifted apart quickly. This shows that putting aside the fact we played the same sport we had little in common. I honestly wish I noticed it earlier then maybe I wouldn’t have been so pessimistic for the rest of my final year.
With that said, I won’t discount any of my classmates own experiences in HS, who look back on it with such glee. Their youthful vibes revolved around Friday night football games, SAT, homecoming, college recommendation letters, relationships etc. Most of these they want to experience one more time.
When I look back on it I realize my HS wasn’t bad. Most of the teachers and counselors were cool & helpful and I certainly did enjoy my sporting career but the food was awful (thanks Mrs. Obama) 😂. So it was more of a me problem than the HS life in general.
School life is different for everybody and it looks like we both drew the short straw. In all honesty, I think you just went to a shit HS. It’s unfortunate that they exist here. I know one thing is for sure I wouldn’t be able to handle Chinese school just because it seems like a facility of overworked youths.
but honestly chinese uniform is the best, it's comfortable and fair for everyone, everyone can wear pants
I went to a private school in USA
I had a lot of different uniforms and designated uniform shoes (you can shoes between loafers or oxfords)
you can choose which uniform you would like to wear for the season. (so you don't need to buy everything.)
Summer:
- Short sleeve blouse, vest (optional), skirt, knee high socks (white or black only)
- Short sleeve polo, khaki shorts or navy skort
Winter:
- skirt with tights, long sleeve blouse, vest, optional cardigan or pullover
- long pants, long sleeve blouse or turtle neck, vest, optional cardigan or pull over
Summer gym: shorts and a t-shirt.
Winter gym long sleeves, long pants, sweatshirt or fleece pull over
I personally thought the uniforms were nice. I never had to worry about my outfit.
Aesthetic wise, I love the Korean uniforms, since there fitted, and overall the details.
the Japanese uniform is also super cute.
My school had summer and winter clothes which were sooo cute! The winter one looked like the Korean one, the summer one was like the sailor style (not exactly but similar). And on Fridays, we would wear tracksuits. And each person would be assigned a house color and that color is what color shirt u would wear with the tracksuit.
I personally like and prefer the Korean uniform. It just looks amazing!
lots of guys------>pantyhose fetish.....
nice taste
My favourite uniform is from china.
The Japanese uniform is so cute omg
In Russia private schools (or top-tier public) have uniform more often than public. Basic public schools usually haven’t. Now trousers is allowed for girl’s uniform too, but usually it’s skirts. And about lunch -- parent have to pay for them every month except families with many children, families with disable people or families with other social benefits.
the way she explains japan school life makes it seem like Japanese students had the best times in their lives.
no. they are pressured to death
@@darassylmoniakam As a Japanese, I can tell you that’s not true at all. I went to China to study when I was in high school, but there is more pressure than Japanese high school. Don’t speak about Japan based on your impressions.
@@listin0812 maybe SLIGHTLY less pressured than in china. but it doesn't mean your schools in japan are better. ugliest uniforms, endless stress, stalking bullies, propaganda lessons, tyrannical parents, study-study-study over and over....
@@darassylmoniakam I am Japanese and never had any propaganda lesson in my school days.A Korean exchange uni student in Japan told that he was amazed to know Japanese top high school students didn't quit their musical lesson.He said that Korean parents and teachers tended to force their kids to quit it and forcus on studying.
@@pythonian-xp3vi anti-gaijin propaganda, when u learn how how to distrust them. You japanese are also taugh to openly lie to people and being overly positive, while in reality your schools are pretty similar to korean ones
i like the chinese one Because it look like sport uniform
It seems to me that the Japanese uniform skirt is too short for a schoolgirl.
日本人です。日本の制服のスカートは基本膝が隠れています。校則にもそのようなルールが書いている学校がほとんどです。
でもみんなスカートを折って短くします笑
@@猫好き-f6o なんで短くするんですかね?
単にダサいと感じるからですか?
China is the best country. I love it so much!!!
It was very interesting to learn all these things about school life between these three countries!
I’m Japanese. When I was in high school, I loved short skirt.but now I don’t think that it’s good for high school students… China’s fashion is the best of those costumes. because it’s very safe.👏🏻
✌︎( ᐛ )✌︎haha
That skirt length and socks are in the 90's.
why would you wear short skirts?
I would like to talk to someone here. can i have your attention? i met a japanese person called yu i in a "japan vs china" video .
i left a section when i explained why china is a better place to be than japan , then that yui showed up and told me "japan is better, are you chinese?" before going silent. CAN anybody explain me what's wrong with her (something tell me yui's apparently a girl)?
because she doesn't explain me in detail why japan would be better than china, and when i told her that i am not a chinese (i am just a cultivated french), she still didn't answered me , it's been some months she talked to me like that ! it's not polite!
if she still didn't want to reply me here or in that other video , can somebody explain me why japan would be a better place than china then? why the school life in japan would be also better to live than in china too? please i need to know!
yu i or somebody else here, please reply me frankly!
The schools here where I’m at the kids wear a uniform, elementary it’s navy blue or tan pants, baby blue/dark blue or white polo type shirt middle school black pants and top and I believe high school as well, years back the kids used to wear whatever but that changed, probably because so kids won’t tease/bully each other on how they dress.
In Germany, i actually brought this idea of school uniforms up, it became that popular in my school that our principal actually thought about it. It got declined though, because of it's cost and production problems. Getting bullied by your looks and how cheap/expensive your outfits are is a HUGE growing problem, so it wouldn't have actually hurt to give Uniform rules to german classes.
I miss heejae with her squad
In Turkey, every school has different uniforms and there are also schools that students don't have to wear uniforms. In elementary and middle school my uniforms had check skirt, (we were generally wearing pantyhose) button-up shirt, sweater, pullover, tie or something like "neck tie with school emblem brooch". But in 2016-2017 (I was in 8th or 9th grade) idk why but girls started to wear pants or corduroy because it started to be allowed to wear pants back then (in my city at least) then it turned a thing. And uniforms started to look like more basic and simple. In my high school, we were wearing pants and hoodie which is unique for each school. In summer, there were also unique t-shirts. In P.E. class we could wear any clothes that suitable for sports. In my high school there wasn't an option to wear skirts. But now it is changing to not having uniforms and most of schools are not strict about anything like dying hair, wearing piercings etc. Most of the schools don't have free lunch for students. Some students bring lunchbox from home and some of them buy some foods like toasts, hamburgers from school's canteen for lunch and some schools have a cafeteria to sell healthier foods. We have a lot of special national days, in these days, there are shows such as theater and concert prepared by volunteer students. There is a traditional spring festival that lasts half a school day. Students do some competitions and there can be concerts again prepared by students with help of teachers of course.
Buradaki bazı şeyleri okuyorum da biz lise okumamışız ahır okumuş heyt be
Although Chinese school uniforms are not beautiful, they are comfortable and stain-resistant. They don't need to be changed frequently because of different courses, and they can also be prevented from being caused by the comparison among students.
One of the reasons I feel good living as a Korean is our school uniform designs. I love it❤