7 High School Differences! (USA vs GERMANY)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 784

  • @DeanaandPhil
    @DeanaandPhil  4 ปีที่แล้ว +75

    We could honestly talk about this topic for hours! We had to cut a lot in this videos and we didn't even cover topics like dress code, teachers, lunches, scholarships, social dynamics and so much more! Let us know what your high school experience was/is like! 😉💜

    • @janetgardner3153
      @janetgardner3153 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm from SC too Deana 🥰

    • @janpracht6662
      @janpracht6662 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yes, the German school-system is complicated. We also have public and private Realschulen and Gymnasien (I was on a very old private Gymnasium that is financed by the church, specialising in old languages like Latin and Old-Greek), special-Gymnasien (for example business/economy) or for sports (if you want to become a professional soccer-player, swimmer or runner).
      Since 2010 Hamburg has an own way for the schools here: Hauptschule, Realschule and Gesamtschule are summarized in one: "Stadtteilschule". The different German states struggle, how long the school-time has to be. Some want Abitur after 12 years already, others after 13 years...

    • @-amosc.presley-7192
      @-amosc.presley-7192 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Me is, so Speechless right about now & then so, along from there...///

    • @QZ10
      @QZ10 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Do a part 2👍👍

    • @MBrieger
      @MBrieger 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Ok,I think you guys add a lot of value, but you also make it complicated at times.
      Basic Education is Bugs Bunny & Cie, Die Maus
      Then it becomes a bit more complicated
      Certainly History is important and that means Frederik the Great
      There is no way you can ignore Bismark
      Wilhelm II doesn't make my list
      Liebknecht
      Eberhard
      Then we get the dark ages
      After that, Adenauer deserves credit
      Ehrhard
      Strauss and Wehner can't be ignored
      More recently, I think only Schmidt really makes my list.
      Then of course we can't ignore German entertainers
      May that be the likes of
      Hans Alberts
      Karl Valentin
      Heinz Ruehmann
      Heinz Ehrhard
      Herr von Buelow (Loriot)
      Then we have literature and tons of it.
      Goethe
      Thomas Mann
      the list is long
      There are also Movies
      The whole Karl May thing
      Though not German, but who wants to miss the Spaghetti Western
      The US flops like Bandit with Robert Reynolds which only were great, because they were dubbed
      Nobel Prize Winners
      Otto Hahn
      Forgotten Geniuses
      Conrad Zuse
      My ex studied Medieval History in Toronto and had a crunch on Hildergard von Bingen
      Understanding Germany, means understanding the past. Our past has been diverse and rich, sometimes poor, but interesting in many ways.
      If Deana's German ever becomes good enough to understand Loriot, I raise my had and bow with respect.

  • @Uellp
    @Uellp 4 ปีที่แล้ว +161

    School in Baden-Württemberg/Germany here, mostly the same experiences as Phil, however we did have a big lunch break where we were allowed to leave the school ground (there was a school cantine, but we mostly left to get Döner or something else). For sports and extracurricular activities: We did have some (sports and other) clubs at school, organized by teachers. But they were rather unprofessional, not that big and many students ignored them. But is doesn't mean we didn't do sports. Sports (or music etc.) clubs in Germany are mostly owned by communities or are private, not by schools, and at least when I was a teenager, most students participated in one or the other. This also means that most people had friends they didn't go to school with.

    • @DeanaandPhil
      @DeanaandPhil  4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      yep, sounds about the same! A lot of kids played sports (mostly football). However, nothing was related to the school, at all.

    • @may-lin4575
      @may-lin4575 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I am currently going to high school in Nrw. Same thing here as well. But my school has a big cafeteria where you can get a good lunch but we also can leave the school ground to go get some food. And we do have many AG'S like a soccer team, a handball team and some others that do go to compete with other schools but when you are not on those teams you rarely even notice that they even exist which is kinda sad I think. But I am pretty sure that not many schools in Germany even have that many AG's.

    • @valeee790
      @valeee790 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@may-lin4575 Yes, I'm going to a gymnasium in Baden-Würrtemberg and we have a lot of AG's, too. At some of them you do sports like volleyball or football (soccer), but there are also musically things like different choirs and scientific AG's like archeology (what I do) or chemistry. And I like these AG's, because you can find friends from other classes and learn something about special topics you're interested in

  • @juliabenesch8183
    @juliabenesch8183 4 ปีที่แล้ว +144

    I'm german and currently in high school,and you're right we dont have sports clubs, but we have choirs and technological clubs

    • @Blankasbeast
      @Blankasbeast 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      but not all schools have those kind of activities

    • @levinkeller6515
      @levinkeller6515 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ich auch

    • @kaddhorino2138
      @kaddhorino2138 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Die sogenannten AG's

    • @bogdandumitru5377
      @bogdandumitru5377 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Well I have sports clubs oop and I'm in Germany at high school xd

    • @valeee790
      @valeee790 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      We (gymnasium in Baden-Würrtemberg) have different clubs (AG's), some for sports like volleyball, and some others like you (choir, chemistry, archeology, etc...)

  • @wandelndeslexikon1614
    @wandelndeslexikon1614 4 ปีที่แล้ว +86

    What we did with our time after school? It was filled with tons of homework we had to do until the next day. Especially our math teacher gave us so many things to do! I spent every day 3 more hours after school just for my math's homework. Mostly because I was very bad in it and couldn't solve the tasks on my own easily. I never learned anything from that but it was meant as help (or whatever). To me it was pure hate... . After that there were more things to to for German, English, French, sometimes biology. So after school I spent often around 3-4 more hours with homework and then theres were tests which you had to learn for too.
    The best days were when our teachers forgot to give us homework. Or if we could tell other teachers than our math' teacher that we already had so much to do or to learn for a test.

    • @Lukas-xb7cx
      @Lukas-xb7cx 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      In our school there was usually just one person doing the homework and everyone else was copying from that person before school lol. The Time after school for me was really more like Phill described it. Thinking about girls or playing video games. Or meeting with friends to drink or smoke weed in the later years

  • @legumesss
    @legumesss 4 ปีที่แล้ว +74

    Sports are just completely separated with high school in Germany. It's just done in sports clubs and not connected to school at all. We did have something called "Jugend trainiert für Olympia" = "Youth trains for Olympia" where we competed against other schools as a team. Though practice for that was still done in our normal sport clubs and not in school.
    The same goes for other extracurriculars, you do them in the afternoon after school, like playing an instrument, art, volunteering etc. It's not that different to the U.S.

    • @mariuspettersen664
      @mariuspettersen664 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I think its only US where sport teams are connected to the schools and teams are there, but non-school related

  • @simonab.242
    @simonab.242 4 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    I also went to a Gymnasium in Germany that did not have a lot of sports clubs... If you did sport you went to a local Verein which I think it is nice, because that way you would hang out with kids that went to other schools

  • @NickNelsons_bigsis
    @NickNelsons_bigsis 4 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    You forgot Gesamtschule, I went to a Gesamtschule and it is basically a combination of Gymnasium, Realschule and Hauptschule. Also my school had 60 min. lessons with one 20 min. break and one 60 min. break.

    • @JassBo83
      @JassBo83 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I went to Gesamtschule in Berlin. We had 45min classes with 5min or 15min breaks and a 30min lunch break.

    • @brokkrep
      @brokkrep 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, never forget the 16 school systems in Germany

  • @wandilismus8726
    @wandilismus8726 4 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    In Germany the best Student get's a title too "Streber!" 😂

  • @rb.8451
    @rb.8451 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I'm from germany and i noticed some differences to phils school experiance, for example, at my school there were actually many extracurricular activities like track, socker, handball, climbing,swimming... or learning languages, playing in the school orchestra, school choir, poetry slam, theatre, programming and lots and lots more. Maybe thats because my school was about twice as big as phil's. But we also had lots of lockers and a cantine which was shared with the neighbouring school. And in the "Oberstufe" I actually had 10 periods a day, twice a week
    By the way, I love your channel, you two are so much fun :)
    Deana is sooo beautiful and I really love her hair ,it's georgeous😍

  • @GuiltyPleasure1100
    @GuiltyPleasure1100 4 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    I really love these series! It’s so interesting to hear the real "differences" between the German system and the US-system! I really want to go back to school to experience the American way of school!🤣😭 You have a great channel! Liebe Grüße ☺️

  • @skyly2899
    @skyly2899 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    So I went to school in Berlin and elementary school was until 6 grade and then Highschool from 7-13. Yes we still have 13 years in some schools and there are a few more!

    • @annettewege9363
      @annettewege9363 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      In Hessen we have either grades 5 thru 12 or 5 thru 13 at the "Gymnasium" (the higher level middle school/high school).

  • @PianistStefanBoetel
    @PianistStefanBoetel 4 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    You both are an explosion of good mood!

  • @Sueso2007
    @Sueso2007 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    When we visited Germany we loved going to the coffee shops and finding rather large groups of students chatting and having coffee or tea together! I wished our kids were able or willing to do this.

    • @ursulasmith6402
      @ursulasmith6402 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Solidarity, they stick together.

  • @oliverhuhn9889
    @oliverhuhn9889 4 ปีที่แล้ว +64

    I already hated the German school from the first to the last day. I'm sure I would have hated the American high school even more as an introvert.

    • @ggjoseph1922
      @ggjoseph1922 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Privatschule klärt Bruder 😂

    • @tweetyuno
      @tweetyuno 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You just hate school plain and simple. Try when you have to work in a place that you hate because you didn't care for schooling.

    • @ursulasmith6402
      @ursulasmith6402 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@tweetyuno why not, all jobs are in Asia anyway.

    • @hanin1609
      @hanin1609 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Bruh im so happy in Germany school

    • @hanin1609
      @hanin1609 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ggjoseph1922 vhalla heute war Schlägereien bruder

  • @TheManWithTheHatKiel
    @TheManWithTheHatKiel 4 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Regarding the grades in German schools, it must be said that a six may actually only be given in cases of refusal to work. Those who answer all the questions incorrectly are actually entitled to a five. Many teachers do not adhere to this, but there are some cases where students have successfully appealed against a six.

    • @braeutigamp
      @braeutigamp 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      That's not true for Rheinland-Pfalz. You typically need 20%-25% in order to at least get a 5

    • @PPfilmemacher
      @PPfilmemacher 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Everyone please remember EVERY of our 16 states run their own school system means that every rule in your state can be totally different in a another state like the handling of the note 6
      As an example: my state of Berlin still refuses to finally abolish the insane idea of ​​"schreiben nach gehör" and even Brandenburg have finally (as one of last german states) decided last year to abolish this "innovation" of the education system. ..
      ... unfortunately only after a few years of screwing entirely 1 graders to 3 graders ....

    • @timomueller3021
      @timomueller3021 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@braeutigamp
      Same in NRW

    • @brokkrep
      @brokkrep 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PPfilmemacher My little brother also had this “Schreiben nach Gehör" in Baden-Württemberg. I almost got a stroke after hearing that.

  • @annag2827
    @annag2827 4 ปีที่แล้ว +84

    Bundesjugendspiele 😂

    • @Pinopumps
      @Pinopumps 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Es ist das beste was es gibt!!! (es ist abgesehen von den Wandertagen das einzige was es gibt)

    • @paulakohler2494
      @paulakohler2494 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      🤮

    • @nick0l0gy30
      @nick0l0gy30 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      nur die Lappen haben es gehasst haha

    • @ggjoseph1922
      @ggjoseph1922 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Ich hasse es

    • @user-rc9uw3uy5x
      @user-rc9uw3uy5x 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I hated it with every cell of my body.

  • @shanecotton1148
    @shanecotton1148 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    I went to high school in both Michigan and Germany, and this video is 100% accurate. Both schools were in big cities, and we did not have sports at the Gymnasium that I went to. Another major difference was the foreign language classes required. The Gymnasium that I went to, we took Spanish, French, English, Italian, and Latin as a requirement. In the US, I was one of few that took a foreign language beyond what was required. Great video, keep up the great work and stay safe.

  • @elli3352
    @elli3352 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    In my German High school everyone had to pick two extra curriculum classes but they where during school time and they where arts, crafts, IT, science, French, home economics, but I don't remember there being any sports.

  • @svenjabrunner3873
    @svenjabrunner3873 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    I went to the Ravenwood Highschool in Nashville and to a Gymnasium in Germany, so I can agree to all of this!!

  • @Nikioko
    @Nikioko 4 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    Well, in traditional Gymnasium there used to be Latin names for grades:
    Sexta: 5th grade, Quinta: 6th grade, Quarta: 7th grade, Untertertia: 8th grade, Obertertia: 9th grade, Untersekunda: 10th grade, Obersekunda: 11th grade, Unterprima: 12th grade, Oberprima: 13th grade
    And failing with a 5 is like "he/she made big efforts" in a testimonial, while 6 means: "he/she gave a shit and didn't even try". And they change the system of grades to 0-15 points because you then collect points for your Abitur. But it is easily recalculated to the original 6 grades: 15-13 = 1 (+/-), 12-10 = 2 (+/-), 9-7 = 3 (+/-), 6-4 = 4 (+/-), 3-1 = 5 (+/-), 0 = 6, where + is -0.3 and - is +0.3. So, 12 points would be a 2+ (1.7). And to pass, you have to have a plain 4 (5 points).

    • @ginajk8857
      @ginajk8857 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      YES !

    • @frankaa.6613
      @frankaa.6613 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wow i NEVER heard of this latin names for the Grades

  • @yannickn2665
    @yannickn2665 4 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    I think you didnt talked about the "Mottowoche" and the "Abistreich". I think the Abistreich was one of my best experiences in my life so far. Is this common in the US?
    We rent a big tractor + trailor and drove to our little city with loud music and pyrotechnics. After a hour we arrived at our school and received our "Abizulassung" and we celebrated it in every break on the schoolyard with loud music and much more pyrotechnics.😍
    Its the last day of school btw.

    • @shanecotton1148
      @shanecotton1148 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      We had an "AbiBall", where the school threw a GIANT bon fire/field party. They brought stacks of speakers and crates of beer and the party went all night. As a 16 year old American, I was in awe. I couldn't believe then, and still cant believe that was a school sanctioned event...it was awesome.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      In our school we put on some sort of show where all the teachers have to participate in, with all kind of funny games.

    • @melanielife769
      @melanielife769 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@swanpride we do the same thing last year the second director got handcuffed with pink fluffy handcuffs in a "cage" made out of these construction side thingys xD and it always ends in a huge water fight xD

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nah, prison was the theme of the graduates in the year before ours...so we send them to the island and forced them to dance limbo. We managed to fill the Aula with sand for the event.

    • @melanielife769
      @melanielife769 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      swanpride we aren’t allowed to make the school dirty so we’re always on the courtyard and prison wasn’t even their theme they just managed to lock him up there for no valuable reason, but we do have the “tradition” of throwing all the papers you won’t need anymore down from the “Lehrerterasse” down onto the students

  • @emiliesingelyn4981
    @emiliesingelyn4981 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I am from America and my high school is just like the movies when it comes to sports and things of the spirt one thing we have at my school is an Olympic size pool by the gym does any one else have those things and we have a fitness center too. Maybe that is just my school but after school you can just go there and play games in the pool as long as no else was practicing. It’s really fun

  • @Jay-in-the-USA
    @Jay-in-the-USA 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I do like the German system with three different kind of schools. It makes learning more efficient, as most students are on the same or similar level of skills.
    Also if somebody's skills improve at some point in their school career, it is possible to switch to Gymnasium. Actually many of my school friends who were recommended to visit Realschule, improved so much that they could visit a Gynmasium at a later point and do their Abitur.

  • @thomasprell4193
    @thomasprell4193 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So cool.
    Love it. Finally someone -> (Diana&Phil) who points it out.
    Glad to realize the differences and similarities....
    Thank you very much.

  • @TheManWithTheHatKiel
    @TheManWithTheHatKiel 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    With regard to the sports on offer at German schools, I can say that this does not exist because of the German "Vereinsmeierei". Politicians fear that sports clubs would die if schools were to offer intensive sports. Sports clubs are lobbying intensively on the issue of education policy to maintain the status quo.

    • @legumesss
      @legumesss 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I don't know about the lobbying, but there are also many pros to doing sports in clubs (Vereinen) and not in school. You have the chance to meet kids from other schools which is great for outsiders. Also in the U.S. when you fail too many tests or of you're caught drinking alcohol or get detention or anything you're suspended from doing sports as well.
      You're also much more limited and can usually only focus on one sport at a time while in Germany you can do as many sports as you like. There is also always that strong competition factor in the U.S. You have to be good enough to be allowed to be part of the team while you can do most sports very casually in Germany (of course also competitive if you want to).
      Also, if you go to a "Ganztagsschule" there are basketball clubs, circus etc.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I am not sure if that is a bad thing. After all, school clubs end with graduation, but you can be part of a verein as long as you want, hence a lot of adults are encouraged to continue doing some kind of sport. You are also meeting more people who share the same interest you do. It also allows more of a variety, since a school club can only exist if there are enough members in this one school, but a Verein can throw a wider net, which leaves more room for "smaller" sports.

  • @lisao7600
    @lisao7600 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Oh, what about spirit week? Most schools around where I'm from in central PA do a spirit week where each day that week is dedicated to a different theme that you dress up for. Like, pajama day, 80's day, hippie day, school colors day, crazy hat/hair day, and a bunch of other things.

  • @astridbauer8986
    @astridbauer8986 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi Deana and Phil! First: I love your videos and I've been following you for quite some time. You're awesome. On the topic: I am Austrian and school here is for the most part the same as in Germany. So you can just copy everything Phil said about the grading system, our "way to school", our lunch break, the (lack of) extracuricular activities etc... But there were a few things I'd like to add
    1) Students in Austria don’t change the classroom every hour. We’re usually put together in groups of up to 30 students who have the exact same time table. This group might be called “class 8A” (8th grade, goup A) and gets a classroom. The teachers change every period. Other than Germany we start to count again when we go to the Gymnasium. EG we say 1 - 4 in elementary school and 1- 8 in Gymnasium. It always confuses me when a German says “I am in the 11th grade”. In Austria we’d say “I’m in the 7th grade in Gymnasium”.
    2) What’s different in Austria than in the US is that there are NO entrance or exit controls at schools and during the lessons no teacher would be out in the hallway. This means that quite often students would use the breaks between two periods to just leave and skip the following periods, especially if they were “unimportant” classes such as biology or sports.
    3) We have a “class book” and there the teacher would note your absence but no one would immediately call your parents if you didn’t show up or “disappeared” between two periods. They did, however, contact your parents if you had a certain amount of “unexcused absences”. I once had 81, amounting in sum to almost 2 ½ school weeks. Oopsie!! Someone lost track of how much she’d skipped school, I suppose 😉.
    4) And oh yes - we wear slippers at school. Yes, we do, that’s no joke 😉

  • @devonmcknight8179
    @devonmcknight8179 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    New York City: the Bronx, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island
    Upstate New York (which is bigger than many countries in Europe): Yonkers, White Plains, Greenburgh, Scarsdale, Hartsdale, Mount Vernon, Mount Pleasant, Ossining, Peekskill, Elmsford, etc., etc.

  • @RO-zv9im
    @RO-zv9im 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Hi Phil and Deanna! I really enjoyed this video! I went to a very large high school in Baltimore, Maryland of the USA, in the city and my high school experience was very much like the high schools in American movies.
    I was a part of the popular crowd but I was not a "mean girl." I, also was a part of the pom pom squad, girls cross country (long distance running team), and the yearbook club. I had regular and honor classes. Also, I sang on the choir in my sophomore year of school. I graduated with average grades, because, sadly, my main concern in school was to have fun and hang out with the popular kids in school (which is something I wish I could go back and change). All in all, I really enjoyed my high school years!

  • @PianistStefanBoetel
    @PianistStefanBoetel 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    In every of the 16 German states the public school system differs hugely because education is sovereign competence of every state.
    For example, in Hamburg we only have 2 different schools:
    Integrated school and Gymnasium. At Gymnasium you get your high school degree after 12 years of school, at integrated school after 13 years. Integrated school you can also leave after 9 or 10 years to get lower degrees and start work training or actual work.

    • @ggjoseph1922
      @ggjoseph1922 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Wrong

    • @ggjoseph1922
      @ggjoseph1922 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ich lebe in Hamburg, es gibt stadtteilschulen, Gymnasien, Gesamtschulen und Hauptschulen!!! Und privat Schulen wie eine in die ich gehe

  • @Scott-lx4ic
    @Scott-lx4ic 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The German school system is based on supporting children and young people with different levels of maturity and/or learning abilities by providing them with learning content at a different, adapted learning pace, subject matter and quantity to a certain point. Children and young people from a „Realschule“ or „Hauptschule“ can move up to the next "school level" after the 9th or 10th year and attend school for a further few years until they are able to obtain a „Fachhochschulreife“ or start directly in the world of work after completing their first secondary („weiterführende“) school.
    Children who receive a direct recommendation for a „Gymnasium“ can complete the general Abitur after 12 or 13 years of school.

  • @eastcoastdouchebag7105
    @eastcoastdouchebag7105 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    In Alberta (Canada) first period is 9am-10:30am, second 10:30-12, half an hour lunch then third 12:30-2pm, and last forth 2pm-3:30pm. grades are 10-12. My public high school had 2500 students. We were fortunate because the school was and still is brand new (built in 2011) and came with a parking garage for teachers and seniors (who signed up quick enough). But most people preferred the parking lot because it was much more fun to hang out in your car, and the teachers patrolled the parking garage for people vaping in their car. Most schools in my city have culinary class, so the students in the class are required to do lunch shifts preparing food for students to purchase. Then we had a school store where you could buy phys. ed uniforms and school branded merchandise and the business students would manage and operate the store during lunch and before/ after school. In our part of the country american football is very popular, so we have our own football team. Cheer leading however is less popular and ours were pretty bad. I didn't find that we had many cliques however. the jocks we more of an identifiable group however.

  • @andreamaronn4510
    @andreamaronn4510 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Junior High vs Middle School: typically Middle Schools r grades (years) 6-8, Junior Highs r grades 7-9. It just depends on how the school district ur in n how it's structured. 😊

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Not really, the years that are in included and the naming is basically regional. I went to a junior high that was years 6-8 as were all the schools in my area.

    • @BWDavisV
      @BWDavisV 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's school districts here in GA. I went to middle school for 6th to 8th grade then high school for 9th to 12th. My cousins a county over were in junior high for 7th to 9th then high school was 10th to 12th.

  • @daybreakshooter
    @daybreakshooter 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Went to a high school in Austria. In my Gymnasium we actually had two sports teams, a soccer and a handball team. We also participated against other schools. But I grew up in the city, so that might have been a different experience in general. Also, we had a pretty big prom, themed and everything. I was on the council and we spent almost an entire year organising. The prom is the "closing event" of your school career, so to speak.
    PS. Great video as always😊

  • @renee176
    @renee176 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Your channel was recommended and I found the subject matter interesting. I'm more your parents age and went to a junior high after graduating from elementary school...which was 1st through 6th grade. Junior High was 7th through 9th grade. High school, at that time was 10th through 12th grade. What Middle School was for you was probably the equivalent of what junior high was for me. I'm coming from the southern part of the United States and if you wanted to learn certain specialized skills (example: carpentry/ masonry or learning to be a beautician or culinary arts) you would leave High School half the day and go by bus (yellow bus that is... LOL ) to go to a technical school to get that instruction and travel back to high school before school ended. To then get on the regular School bus, walk / drive back home at the end of the day. Proms were held at school at first, but as I got older than they moved to the big hotels or other big venues. At that time you were also taught driving instruction in School, from what I have gathered now that is no longer the case anymore. Strangely enough not as many Young people nowadays get their license early anymore, which that was freedom for the kids my age back in the day! Thank you, I liked hearing how things were different in other countries, take care!

  • @karinaalbrecht7797
    @karinaalbrecht7797 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm a teacher in Germany, so I have seen several German schools from inside. There are some schools that have more than two clubs as an extra curricular activity, but I guess no German school gets even close to the offer of extra curricular activities of an American school. The reason might be that many sports or music activities are organized by people from outside school. So there are football clubs you can join or you can learn to play an instrument in a "music school" but usually these are privately owned and work completely independent from high schools (unfortunately, this usually means that you have to pay to be part of a club or for your music lessons).

  • @lisao7600
    @lisao7600 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    My kids go to the same high school I went to that is very small. There's around 80-100 kids per grade and we had all the sports, cheerleading, band and choir, and competed against other nearby schools. I think it's like that in all schools in the U.S.
    We also have a technical school that 10-12 graders can go to for half the day if they choose to. All the schools in our county, around 5-6 schools, go to the same one together. They offer nursing assistance, cosmetology, electrical, carpentry, culinary, diesel mechanics, welding, and maybe a few other things to choose from.
    Also our school has a semi-formal dance they do for freshman every year. It's just called "the freshman dance". Lol

  • @Nathan_the_Green
    @Nathan_the_Green 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My school in the swiss (Oberstufe, 8. class) starts at 7:35 am. We have lunch brake from 11:45am until 13:30pm. So we can go home for lunch. The school in the afternoon is until 15:05pm, 16:00pm or 16:45pm.
    The school in the Swiss is really different from the school in Germany. We have 6 years of elementary school, then we have 3 niveaus. The Sekundar- (Sek), the Real- and the Werkschool. The Sek is the "best". We have the Sonderschool too. But you can also go in the longtime Gymnasium. This is from the 7. class until the 12. class. Normally you go in the Sek or the Real. When you are in the Sek, then you can change after the 8. class or the 9. class in the Gymnasium.
    The others, who don't go in the Gymnasium can do a Lehre. Then they work three days and go to school for two days. They get money for their work.
    I know a little bit complicated.

    • @paulagiger9992
      @paulagiger9992 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's even more complicated. Because depending on the canton the school system is totally different. I'm from Basel and had 4 years elementary school, then 3 years OS (Orientierungsstufe) with a music focus and then did 5 years of high school. Now they changed the system (Harmos) to assimilate with the surrounding cantons. Which made it even more complicated for a few years because half of the students were in the old system and the other half in the new system.

  • @jeannemseybold8117
    @jeannemseybold8117 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Choir, Orchestra, Future Farmers of America (FFA - also with cool Jackets) and Home Economics where you could knit, crochet, cook, sew, etc. The elective classes were lots of fun!

  • @Scott-lx4ic
    @Scott-lx4ic 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Grading system: (Germany)
    If you have a 5 or 6 in one subject in grades 5-11 (G9) or 5-10 (G8), you can make up for it with a 2 or 1 in another subject that has the same value.
    Example:
    German - 5
    Math - 2
    English - 2
    Art - 1
    - Passed
    German - 6
    math - 2
    English - 2
    Art - 1
    - failed (art has a lower value than German)
    -> Math, English and German are major subjects

  • @patbecker333
    @patbecker333 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m an American from California… everything that she’s describing is spot on….
    We actually had open campus and we had the choice to eat out or eat school cafeteria food…
    We had sports as well, I took archery, and I took art classes, photography, but of course our school offered cooking class too, foreign language classes.. super cool… etc… I was fortunate to attend 3 proms… super cool.. but that was back in the 80’s… crazy.

  • @devonmcknight8179
    @devonmcknight8179 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    At my school (Upstate New York), we have a very large cafeteria, we have a variety of food and drink -- we can even leave the school grounds

  • @MichelleJonesKralka
    @MichelleJonesKralka 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I did year 11 of my high school in Germany (I am from Canada but now live in California). I attended a Gymnasium in tiny little Metzingen which was a maths and sciences focus school - which was not my focus in school back in Canada. In order for me to complete my 11th year and get credit for it back in Canada, my Gymnasium structured my learning by letting me take math, art, English (this actually helped me learn German and fast!), French (not as easy as you think translating from French to English to German and back into French!), and Physical Education. High school in Germany in the Gymnasium format is similar to what it was like in Canada - we had grade 13 (like Abitur) which was a prep grade for university. Although it was only offered in the province I grew up in and it no longer exists. I also attended a Volksschule in Metzingen in the evenings to learn German. I was fluent in less than 3 months. I am not sure the current definition of Volksschule applies today - but maybe you know Phil? It’s like a mandatory people’s school but my host family paid for my lessons and they were classes for foreigners/immigrants.

  • @jorglaurisch3786
    @jorglaurisch3786 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    We have some Sports-activities in our Scool
    Football-team- Handballteam. And Games against other School. Scool in Germany- Berlin

  • @kilsestoffel3690
    @kilsestoffel3690 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I got a 6 in a test once. It was a blank paper, only with the date and my name in it. And a long, intense talk with the teacher, a short talk with the prinzipal, a talk with the "Vertrauenslehrer" and at last with all of them and my parents. This was really annyoing, but some problems got solved.

  • @eliseholway3117
    @eliseholway3117 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I go to a public high school in the US (Vermont specifically) and we have tons of sports programs. We have both sports teams and clubs. We also are allowed to leave the school for lunch and anytime we don't have a class. We also have tech centers for each county in my state.

  • @millievanillie0
    @millievanillie0 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I‘m at the realschule and mine starts 7:50AM and ends 1PM. Lessons are also 45 min each and its 2 periods successively. First break is 15 min and the 2nd 25 min long. Only mondays i have a 7th Lesson so school is till 2:15PM. About clubs, as far i as know we have a social activity club and mediator club. Before, we also had choir and drama but idk, got cancelled.. At the end of 10th grade we actually also have a graduation Party. After my graduation i wanna go to the Fachoberschule to do 2 more years and then i also can study at uni 🤟🏼 Another nice video!

  • @lariel19
    @lariel19 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    1. Between the Realschule and the Hauptschule there is also the Gesamtschule.
    2. As for clubs we have the Chess Club, Drama Club (they are currently working on Highschool musical) and actually a school band
    3. As for events: we have (mandatory) football tournaments for the lower classes (5-6) and middle classes (7-9), the ball of course, the Christmas breakfast with secret Santa and twice a year there is a ‚Wandertag‘, where the classes go outside of school to visit a Zoo, Museum or just to the city for shopping. Also the „Tag der offenen Tür“ where the school is open on a Saturday for the families and children who want to enrol there, can look what the school has to offer. The students have to attend the day as well because they either guide the families around or are in the classrooms where there are special things like little experiments for the Children or such.

  • @kathybennett4335
    @kathybennett4335 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm in South Alabama, and here ( hometown ) our graduating class are small like 25-30 people sometimes 45.

    • @JenniferPerkins
      @JenniferPerkins 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I know that Alabama loves their football.

  • @morgaankelton5296
    @morgaankelton5296 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I go to a public school in rural Ohio. Our school starts at 7:45 and ends at 2:35. We have a Connect, which is a time for announcements and meetings, this is followed by eight 40 min periods.
    My county has 3 school districts, a rural and two 'city' schools. I go to the main city school. My building has the junior high (7-8) and the highschool (9-12).
    Our school is set up that if you're more advanced you can start high school classes in JH, and college classes in HS. Most required classes have a regular and honors version, with the honors version learning the same subject just at a faster pace.( time spent on a subject - Honors 1-2days - Regular 3days-1week) During your Junior and Senior years, you can also go to a Career Center (all three districts go there), but it is known that this school is generally for students who are at risk of dropping out.
    We definitely have cliques but it's not like the movies. For the most part the popular kids sit together. But for example, some band kids I know sit with cheerleaders.
    I'm a junior and only go to 4 highschool classes a day because I take classes at the local college.
    I have talk to friends that go to other schools in the state, they all say our school is way less advanced than other schools.

  • @hi.panorama
    @hi.panorama 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I only know American high school from movies and I'm totally fascinated by this image of the school ♥
    Various people, lockers with posters, huge buildings, single school tables (unfortunately I always had a double one) and iconic school yellow buses - I've always wanted to go on a bus like these ♥

    • @aryanbhuta3382
      @aryanbhuta3382 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hollywood doesn't get many things right, but one of their rare successes is the school buses (and school in general). Those buses are just a common thing in America.

    • @brokkrep
      @brokkrep 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      As a kid I always grumbled, that I had to go to the bus stop to get taken to the school.

  • @ESUSAMEX
    @ESUSAMEX 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I went a public high school in NY outside of New York City. We had about 1000 students in the high school-- about 400 in my graduating class. Primary school was K-6 grades, then 7-9 in junior high and high school was 10-12 grade when I was there. Now primary is K to 5, junior high is grades 6 to 8 and high school is 9 to 12. High School started at 8AM until 1:30PM. Only Seniors could drive to school, plus they were allowed to leave school for lunch. We had sports teams but football games were on Saturdays. Our scores or grades in classes were A+ to F without E. We also had Driver's Ed, where students learned to drive a car. My school district had its own pool so we had to take swimming in junior high. We had AP classes for the smart students for college credits. I know someone who took all AP classes except for Math.
    By the way, Kindergarten was 9am to noon, 1- 6 grades were 9AM to 3PM and junior high was 8AM to 2PM

  • @joshuamayer7219
    @joshuamayer7219 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Menden in Sankt Agustine NRW we had PE and Swimming separate. No extra Curriculars. In the US we had everything but not swimming.

  • @mizztorian8844
    @mizztorian8844 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am from Indiana and just found your channel a few days ago. I have been binge watching it. My ancestors immigrated from Bavaria back in 1850. It find it fascinating to learn about Germany from a German perspective. Thank you so much for sharing your travels and lives. Congratulations on your marriage. May you have a long happy life together.

  • @ChrissCorner92
    @ChrissCorner92 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I went to a high school in a small farm town in southeast Michigan and in the fall, we had a homecoming dance, the winter we had what was called Subdeb (pronounced as sub dub) which was like our winter ball and in the spring, we had prom. I Never went to prom but I was vice president of the German club my freshman and sophomore years. I took German for two years and loved it. Was gonna take it again my junior year but I took vo-tech where they teach you career building in a teacher like setting. I wanted to be a teacher so my vo-tech class was called "Careers in Education".

  • @kashyaqod1351
    @kashyaqod1351 ปีที่แล้ว

    To add to that I'm from Heidelberg and I vividly remember *Stadtschule Meisterschaften, where the various schools in the city competed in sports from track and field, swimming, gymnastics, basketball etc

  • @joannereall2097
    @joannereall2097 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    There were two high schools in the town where I grew up. My high school had a huge pool that was from 5 feet deep to 12 feet deep and a planetarium. We also had a gym that was big enough to split into four individual rooms . We were also lucky enough to have the Driver's Education classes and the simulators to practice on in class. Of course the school I went to was built 8 years before I attended whereas the crosstown high school was built in the 50's. I have to say that we had to be at the bus stop for 6:45 a.m. and classes started at 7:30 . To everyone that is in high school now, enjoy your time there because once you get out into the real world reality will be a lot different.

  • @thedocdodge
    @thedocdodge 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I grew up in a small town in Pennsylvania... We had K-6 in one school (Elementary), and 7-12 in another (High School). Then again, my graduating class was about 65-70 kids... Like I said... SMALL TOWN. lol

  • @spoon1968
    @spoon1968 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    The school bus doesn't stop at every house. They make a central stop in different neighborhoods and the children gather at the stop at a specific time.

  • @evab.6948
    @evab.6948 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Uh, please more of this. This was really fun to watch! For me it was super similar to what Phil described as I also grew up in a small German town (but near Frankfurt). We also had a motto for our 'senior year': ABInson Crueso - 13 Jahre warten auf Freitag. So cringy now :D And our 'prom' was equally unspectacular. I kind of envy the American High School kids for their school spirit and sports and other activities they can do, but I guess it could also add a lot more pressure to a kid in puberty, dealing with all the social pressures and then having to perform well in extra-curricular stuff as well etc. Anyway, cool video! Stay healthy!

    • @DeanaandPhil
      @DeanaandPhil  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I totally agree! =)

    • @KasdeyasVids
      @KasdeyasVids 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      We had "Erzogen zur ABIose" (= Lebensunfähigkeit) ^^

    • @LythaWausW
      @LythaWausW 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The most recent corona graduation themed hoodie says Mit Abstand Der Besten. Ha ha? My husband, a teacher, has all these hoodies with kids' names all over them, and the theme of the graduating class. He also has a lot of high school musical theme hoodies. He actually wears them to school.

  • @JenniferPerkins
    @JenniferPerkins 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    We're not forced to do any of the sports or Proms etc. I loved our high school solidarity during football games and basketball games. We had a lot of pride in our school. We played other local schools and the competition was amazing. Especially if you had friends from the school you're playing and you give each other a hard time and then laugh. I loved all of this and can't imagine not having the school pride and competition.
    I also enjoyed the proms and dances. Everyone got dressed up and most had dates. Then we danced away to the current music.
    Then when you went to college the atmosphere was the same. You had tremendous school pride, huge football fields, huge basketball arenas. When you played other colleges you wore your colors and cheered for your team. Every college (University) had a mascot. It's a huge deal in the USA.

  • @TheManWithTheHatKiel
    @TheManWithTheHatKiel 4 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    The German schools are currently undergoing a transformation to all-day schools, so that schools are certainly building cantines and are also setting up locker.

    • @MBrieger
      @MBrieger 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      And God help us all when that becomes reality and Parents are further removed from the obligations of raising a child.

  • @lauriea2971
    @lauriea2971 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi
    Here in Kanada (Canada). The school is like K-6(elementary school), 7-9(junior high school) and 9-12(high school)

  • @katherinecorbett7580
    @katherinecorbett7580 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Virginia Beach, Virginia doesn't skip Es in the grading scale but we don't have f's. That's weird and moving out of the area and seeing e's meaning excellent. 🤷

  • @morganv7895
    @morganv7895 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I’m late, but as an America, this was accurate. Although I’m not from South Carolina (I’m a Texan) most of the stuff spoken in the video happens at my high school.

  • @kyagos1839
    @kyagos1839 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Depending on the school in germany I had afternoon classes I could choose at the beginning of the school year.
    It could be swimming, other PE things like athletic or handball, photography and playing music in a band.

    • @ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard
      @ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      in my school in Germany only 5-7th grader had to go to school for 8 hours, 8-10th grade only for 5 or 6 hours. Except if you were in a class to get "Mittlerer Abschluss" you had 1 or 2 days a day with 7 or 8 hour IDK. I didn't went to that school from beginning but from 8th grade so I had no idea what the kids do there all day long who are younger but I than saw a poster some kids made about what they do after 2pm in school. Some kids wrote they learned how to play guitar, painted their fingernails, draw pictures, played chess,... something like "staying in school just duing random stuff" because some kids wrote they did a lot different stuff each day. IDK if it was a law of out school to go there since I never been there in the first 3 years so IDK. Everything you could choose on your own was inside the normal classes so for example as I was working in a group of kids that cared for the school's garden like building a "insects hotel", cutting bushes, planting flowers etc. that was allways in my last 2 hours from 11:40 to 13:10 on 1 day a week and in the same time other kids from my class did art or were in the school's band etc.

    • @kyagos1839
      @kyagos1839 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard oh yes... there are a lot of opportunities in germany! While schools sometimes don't offer any activities at all we got a huge amount of other clubs/organizations that offer activities to kids. I went to a music school to learn instruments, joined several bands, did some sports at another club. But all of those clubs had zero connection to the school and were financed by the community and parents of attending kids.
      Overview:
      Sport Club: soccer, athletic stuff, tennis, handball, gymnastics, dancing, ... including games against other clubs all over the region/country.
      Music Club: studied music teachers with pedagogical backgrounds taught how to pleay instruments (starting kindergarden up to people at the age of you are way to old to learn). Plus there were bands that were set up by the teachers for people of different age.
      Music Band Clups: A club that was founded by musicians in the area for people to play music and earn money for the club to buy more scores (music sheets)
      Spefic Clubs: There are clubs that offer courses made by people in the community for the community. Like shooting pictures, cooking, typing on a computer, baking. All levels of skills.
      It won't be boring after school. There rather is too much to attend and the whole schedule is filled to the brink so people have less time to learn or relax. Never forget that the amount of homework rather advanced in skilllevel required.

  • @timriehl1500
    @timriehl1500 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I went to a very large hs in the South. We had 300 people in our graduating class. Athletes and cheerleaders ruled the school. Once we completed required courses for our grade level, we were allowed to take electives that were offered: a semester devoted to writers like Edgar Allen Poe or Mark Twain; botany; etc. There were two "tracks" we could take but there were no tests to determine who was put onto which track: you could take the "college" track (you had to have at least 2 years of a foreign language) or you could take a "vocational" track and go to some classes in the Vo-Tech building. The year after I graduated, they finally renamed "Home Ec" to "Life Skills" and boys started to sign up for that class. AND I remember girls were given a choice between home ec and biology, but boys had to take biology; girls also weren't offered any wood working classes. That was in Mississippi and I'm sure things have changed--at least I hope they have. We also had a "smoking" zone outside where students were allowed to smoke and/or chew tobacco!

  • @MiciFee97
    @MiciFee97 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am from Frankfurt and i was at a sports high school that was also a gesamtschule where you get different classes depending on your skill. And we also had sports Clubs in school. But usually kids in Germany attend a sports club that doesnt have to do with school at all

    • @DeanaandPhil
      @DeanaandPhil  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Interesting! Did you compete in school teams against other schools?

  • @lara_8736
    @lara_8736 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    at our gymnasium in germany we have sports teams put they don't practice together and just sometimes go to competitions.
    Also something that's different is that we have school from 7:40 until 17:25/16:35. and then three days a week until 1pm.
    And we have a cantine but can leave to go eat somewhere else

  • @nitaserrano3063
    @nitaserrano3063 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm from the US and a lot of schools have Tech Schools. I started in 9th grade and you get training in the career you are interested in......nursing, cosmetology, culinary, computers, HVAC, mechanics etc etc. You take your majors subjects (Math, Science, English and Social Studies) in the high school and then get transported to the tech school for the remainder of the day.

  • @bellakrug5039
    @bellakrug5039 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I can totally agree to literally everything Phil said about german high schools. Feel like we shared the same one but mine was so so boring. Every time I watch an American high school movie, I wish I went to one in America but on the other hand, high school for me was not even a big thing. Like you would just go there and do almost the same stuff you did on middle school (just a few hours more a week) and were just happy to be home at 4pm to meet friends. So funny that its obviously a completely different thing. But I wish we had at least Football Games to watch...

  • @roxannaramirez929
    @roxannaramirez929 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m from California. My high school also had 0 period so you could start school at 7 am. Actually, you may be there even earlier like 6 am if you were in sports, esp. swim team. But, by senior year, you could also be done by lunch time if you had 0 period (we had a block schedule too where Monday you had all classes, then WEd/Fri you had 3 classes for like 2 hrs each, and TTh you had your other 3 classes for 2 hrs). I think because our weather is also like at least 70 deg most of the year, no one ate in the cafeteria; everyone spread out around campus and ate on the grass. Also, if we were in a sport we didn’t have to take P.E., the sport counted as P,E, credit, so I had no high school locker room experience, thank goodness. The joke was friends don’t let friends take regular P.E.

  • @ogiedee5289
    @ogiedee5289 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I like the caption with the photo of Phil - "I married Ellen"

  • @billgracey6369
    @billgracey6369 ปีที่แล้ว

    In Phoenix, school kids on schools days can show their school ID and ride the city buses for free from like 6 AM to 6PM, they don't use school buses as much in the Phoenix area. And school age kids can rid for half price any time.

  • @ramona146
    @ramona146 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I was at a Comprenhesive school in Germany, two afternoons a week we had "AG" where we could chose a lot of sport like tennis, badminton, football, dancing, basketball and also things like chess, caring for Aquariums and fishes, some scientific things...and a lot more, but I don't remember them. We had abiut 40 0r 50 classes between which we were able to choose

    • @ramona146
      @ramona146 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I remember now we had painting clubs, cookin clubs, sewing clubs, circus, a musical club, choir, computer club, school newspaper club, Texas club where they prepared for an exchange with our partner-school in Farmers Branch and clubs where you can learn to play instruments too. We also had lockers and two Cafeterias. One which sold only healthy things like fruits, veggies, curd cheese, sticks with fruits and cheese, healthy sandwiches, whole grain products and healthy beverages. The other one sold normal hot meals. We also had a kiosk that sold sweets and lemonade.. My Highschool was a very big one with about 2000 or 2500 students, classes 5-13. My classes usually went from 8 am til 4pm and every day from 01.30pm to 02.30 pm we had a lunch hour. We also had a library and there was a room where we were able to lent some games or things for outdoor activities like rollerblades, footballs, skipping ropes and so on

  • @noranekokimono4301
    @noranekokimono4301 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I went to a gymnasium in a big city, we had four 9 hour days a week with the 7th hour being lunchbreak. But our cafeteria was like way to small and couldn´t even seat a school year so we would sneack off of the schoolgrounds to McDonalds or bring our own food. Friday was always only 6 periods. And we did have some clubs, they were called AG short for ArbeitsGruppe (workgroup). We had a musical AG till the teacher went into retirement, we had a chess AG, a canoe one, a basketball AG. But sport is mostly done in clubs that do not have anything to do with the school. I for example used to be a synchronized swimmer training 3-4 times a week in the local swimming club (one of the few in germany that have a sychronized swimming team) and I learned 3 instruments at the local musicschool and played in 2 orchestras. There is more than enough to do after school, not only gaming (though I did do that, too xD) It was really nice to be with other people though, because I didn´t have real friends in school, but I had friends in my other activities. If it had been tied to the school as well I would have had no one.

  • @bartolo498
    @bartolo498 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    It very much depends on the school and sports are overwhelmingly organized in clubs in Germany, but in some schools there is considerably more sports than Phil's experience shows. There are of course a few (boarding) schools for high level sports but even some normal schools used to have teams that entered competition. There used to be "Jugend trainiert für Olympia", a competition in many levels starting with the schools of a town or district and going up all the way to the federal level. Some schools had a tradition of competing there but usually the school teams were based on a core of players or athletes from certain club teams.
    One also should keep in mind that until quite recently, the Gymnasium was considerably more elite with less than 30% going to that type of school around 1990, so in some respects they were more like prep schools with a strong academic focus than like US high schools that had been comprehensive (more like German Gesamtschulen) for many decades.

  • @kentuckylady2990
    @kentuckylady2990 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My high school was in a farming community, we had drive your tractor to school day. Our biggest sport was basketball but we had all the others too. Anyone could purchase a school jacket not just those involved in sports . And we had class rings.

  • @jasd3072
    @jasd3072 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I loved hearing the amazement on phils voice about the yellow buses lol Something we find totally "normal" in the u.s. I never rode on the school buses except for field trips... my parents always dropped me off. I'm from California and went to highschool in the L.A area and the experience was pretty much the same as Deanas. School started at 8am-3pm, and I also had cross country team practice right after so went home until 6. You guys always give me a good laugh, Love it! :D

  • @hannahk4801
    @hannahk4801 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I just wanted to point out that Magnet schools were often used in the South to facilitate desegregation. So, my High School had a quota, until 2002, a number of students had to be from each racial group, (that matched the racial makeup of my city) in addition to academic entrance requirements. We also had to ride the city buses or carpool because the school pulled students from the entire county.

  • @haleykins5091
    @haleykins5091 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Another thing for the US is some schools (high school usually) theres a block schedule. So every other day you have different classes. So on monday Wednesday and friday you have a certain set of classes and Tuesday thursday you have different classes and it switches every week. For us, we had four classes everyday but it was different everyday.

  • @emros2022
    @emros2022 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You guys should look up some of the "Every 15 minutes" program videos for US schools. It basically focuses on educating high schoolers about drunk driving, but when I was in high school I always thought it would be interesting to see how people from other countries would react to it. At my school they went all out. They shut down a street next to the school and recreated a car crash during a lunch assembly. There was an actual helicopter that air lifted the "injured" students away from the "crash".

  • @ThatRandomJ
    @ThatRandomJ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I went to Realschule for 5th and 6th grade. My school was a grade/elementary school combined with a Haupt and Realschule. My school would have 1 school dance every year on the last day before Fasching break. For clubs, my school had a choir club and a drama club. I don't know if there were any sports clubs.
    For high school, I went to a public charter school. My school was an early college school, so we could take actual college classes, not just AP. And the general education classes were based on skill, so you could be a freshman taking classes will a senior. We were allowed off campus for lunch and if we had classes at the college campus. My school had a small basketball club, but that was the only club available when I went to school there.

  • @lisao7600
    @lisao7600 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Our high school, in a small town in Pennsylvania, considers 7-12 high school. They call 7-8 Jr high and 9-12 Sr high but all in the same school. Some towns nearby do the same and some have middle school, then 9-12 high school.
    Also our school does number scores with 90%-100% considered A. 60% is failing I think considered F but I'm not positive the exact comparisons from Letter grade to percentages.

  • @Nikioko
    @Nikioko 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Funnily, in the UK, public schools are private schools. :-D

  • @bennetmauser1430
    @bennetmauser1430 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was on a Gymnasium in the Hochtaunus-Kreis and we had like a Basketball AG (AG=Arbeitsgruppe=work group) but nothing more and the people who really did sports were in a football, handball or whatever they were doing club.

  • @mariomasiv4563
    @mariomasiv4563 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    At my school there just clubs (in German AG) so there is the soccor club, debate club (Jugend debattiert), beekeeper club, history club

  • @SoniaJbrt
    @SoniaJbrt ปีที่แล้ว

    My High School experience was great! I had music as a subject and also Hotel Management and Catering. Every year we had a Revue (a musical) and every year I participated. In my Matric (grade 12) year we had a mini Opera and I participated. It was so much fun! I also sang in the School Choir, it was a Classical Choir. We got training in this Choir that it is possible for me today to sing in a Classical Choir like a performance of Handel's Messiah. I absolutely loved Choir! We had beautiful uniforms for Choir. Also I won a literature competition 1st place and 3rd place for English Poetry. I didn't do Sport. And I have wonderful memories of my Matric Farewell. It's more formal than Prom. No king or queen. But black tie. I had this beautiful wine-red satin ballgown and my escort for the evening (like a date, just a friend) had a satin wine-red bowie and vest on with his white shirt and black tuxedo. It was really nice. I think we really go out of our way here in South Africa to make High School glamorous for the students.

  • @gweisa899
    @gweisa899 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I want to a private school we had sport after school. The public school the same too. They had block period that change in certain days. You never a same class everyday. It switch. School day started at 7:30-2:30

  • @ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard
    @ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My old school here in Germany where I went from 5-7 grade (till they closed the school forever) had shelfs in the class for each student., but the teachers were not happy cause art-projects got stolen out of it a lot and nobody of the kids ever said they replaced theirt own crapy art with a stolen better piece... but the school I went to from 8-10th grade had 4 large almost 2m tall lockers in the class with 1 row in it for each student, but that didn't worked out cause the kids who had the keys for it lost them or forgot them a lot ...

  • @thomasblattner3148
    @thomasblattner3148 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hallo, ich bin Schülerin an einem Gymnasium in Köln und habe grade euren schönen Kanal entdeckt :). Wir haben an unserer Schule zwar Spinde, aber die sind wirklich sehr kläglich, da sie winzig sind und im Keller stehen. Man kann sich einen mieten, wenn man das möchte. Acht Stunden Schule zu haben ist eigentlich recht normal geworden, ich bin aber auch in einem G8 Jahrgang. Wenn man Pech hat, hat man zwei mal die Woche 11 Schulstunden. Das geht dann bis 17:45 und ist eher weniger angenehm. Es gibt übrigens auch noch eine vierte Form der deutschen high school, die Gesamtschule. Diese Schulform ähnelt der amerikanischen wahrscheinlich noch am ehesten, da dort quasi alle Schüler nach der Grundschule zusammengewürfelt werden, und dann auch nach ihren Stärken unterrichtet werden. Wir haben auch eine Kantine in unserer Schule, aber da gehen nur die Unterstufenschüler hin, die noch nicht in den Pausen das Schulgelände verlassen dürfen. Hoffentlich hat euch dieser Kommentar geholfen :D

  • @buchertante4708
    @buchertante4708 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Phill forgot to tell, that Hauptschule ends after 9th grade, and Realschule after 10th grade. After this the young people can apply for a professional training, which lasts from 2-3 years.

  • @Victor-tl4dk
    @Victor-tl4dk 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The main thing about magnet schools is that they enroll a broad range of students. They are diverse. The academic focus and level however varies by program.

  • @lePoMo
    @lePoMo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The tought of sports being tied to the school you go to baffles me.
    I cannot imagine that it can cover the same diversity as when school and sports clubs are independent things. Ok, I guess there's also independent sports clubs.

  • @jupamoers
    @jupamoers 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I went to a comprehensive school (Gesamtschule), which wasn't mentioned here...
    As far as I remember, there was an activity group (AG) in the afternoon, once a week. Some people chose Art class, some chose Music class, some chose Sports class. But there were no teams or clubs...There is a thing called Abi-Ball (a party-like event after final grade) which is sort of like a Prom, I guess. But since most of the students finish school after 10th grade, they don't experience that xD

  • @stainedglassbeauty6945
    @stainedglassbeauty6945 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m from Indiana. We definitely had what we called a “career center.” I went there for early childhood education. There was a classroom and also an entire daycare. We had to plan lessons for the children among other things. My senior year, I was a teachers assistant and barely had any classes. It was for a math class at the high school. I was able to leave campus often and run errands for that teacher. I would also help grade papers and tests.

    • @James.D.B.
      @James.D.B. ปีที่แล้ว

      I went to a career center as well, but it was only 11th and 12th grade and there were a bunch of career classes where you could get work experience, I was in the engineering program and there was a separate building for the engineering design and there was part of the main building with 2 CNC Mills, a CNC Lathe, and a bunch of things, and each career path had special things like that, large animal science had a barn with horses and cows, automotive tech had a garage area where they worked on cars, culinary had a kitchen, early childhood development has a daycare, and several other classes. Wow I went on a rant on accident, but it was fun, I failed Engineering and probably should've taken automotive or industrial tech instead, though I don't regret the good friends and memories I made
      Edit: Forgot to mention, from Ohio

  • @seleyav.7101
    @seleyav.7101 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I went to a grammar school in Saxony and we had a ton of after-school-activities. At least 2/3 of our teachers had a club. We had several choirs, tech, robot, several languages, nature (animals, pets, lake, aquarium, redevelopment of a small river), arts, tutoring, special lessons for gifted students. And we had many sports activities: soccer (several groups), tennis, athletics, volleyball, basketball, fitness, gymnastics, table tennis. We often fought against other schools and some were part of "Jugend trainiert für Olympia".
    And of course many had activities out of school. There was music school, fire brigade, church/religion, tutoring, sports clubs ... Most of us had a full day, but it was a good time.

  • @whataboutbob9786
    @whataboutbob9786 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Big city in Texas:
    K-5 = elementary school
    6-9 = Jr high school
    10-12 High school
    If your GPA is above average, you can skip final exams, and get out of school 2 weeks earlier.

    • @morganv7895
      @morganv7895 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I’m a Texan as well, basically what happens at my school

  • @skeletonkill5907
    @skeletonkill5907 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    the main difference that my high school had that was not mentioned was we only had the same four classes for each semester of 9 weeks. No one used there locker and if they did it was for sports. I live in the midwest

  • @Toni.Antonia
    @Toni.Antonia 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I went to a quite big high school in the Munich area and we had a lot of different clubs: orchestra, big band, theater, basketball, handball, gymnastics, choir, crafting,... mostly sorted by age
    The sports teams also competed, but it wasn't such a big thing, for most of the participants it was more like extra training since they were all in other non-school clubs
    With all of our clubs in school it really depended on what our teachers were able and willing to offer to the students