Nice video. Usually you switch rooms in "Gymnasium" to the special equipped room too (chemistry, physics, geography etc). Not switching like at your school is related to COVID restrictions/hygiene rules.
Yeah but you don't switch for every class though I mean math class, german class, english class etc are all in the same room and the teachers switch like she said It is just for the classes where special equipment is needed like chemistry or art etc
@@keeeksmonster Some schools have special classrooms for foreign languages. In my time, it was also possible to choose a second foreign language. The whole class had basic English as the first foreign language, and when the second foreign language was on the schedule, the class was divided into different rooms. Some had extended English, others had French, and some had Latin. Later, Spanish and (I think) Russian were added - but that was after my time. Oh, and there were usualy separate rooms for music, too. Probably because the music teachers regularly got hernias when they had to lug the grand piano from one class to another.
"Everyone dresses really nice." As a German, I can assure you that this is not the case. Aside of other factors, it very much depends on which school you go to and in which neighborhood the school is located.
I have seen people in US go to the groceries wearing scrubs, crocs and latschen and other things we normally wear nur zuhause oder auf der arbeit, very impressive stuff maybe thats why she thinks people here are so put together.
Yes in my school ( I’m in the 12th grade) you switch the classrooms ( but in the 11th grade you don’t switch ) but this is from school to school a little bit different.
@@Isabella-mc5cc true, for me the switching started in 10th class and sometimes already in 6th class when you had like latin or french in another classroom but the rest was in the same room (NRW)
1:26 normely we do switch rooms in Germany for classes that aren't German, math, english, history or geography but some schools don't switch at all for some reson
"Students stay in their classroom". Yes mostly, but Biology is a bad example, because for physics, chemistry and biology there are usually special class rooms.
@@tihomirrasperic not really. Normally the rooms for chemistry/physics/biology have the most restrictions since there can be dangerous chemicals stored.
The same can be said about some of her observations about US schools. We had 15 minute breaks between all of our classes (except lunch of çourse), no Cafeteria (I'm from Southern California, we have a place where you can buy lunch, but we would just eat outside around the campus wherever you felt most comfortable, unless it was raining, then you'd go to your favorite instructors room with your friends). Our classes were all 90 minutes and we switched off everyday, but every HS in our district, and beyond was vastly different in that regard. Another school in our district had 45 minute classes, but doubled up on "important" classes like history, math, science, etc.
Hi Caroline: Be careful: Some of your observations are very specific to your school in germany. Nowadays, you usually have lunch rooms, the phone rules are different from school to school etc.
almost every example she gave, she mentioned « specifically at my school » or « at least at my school » so I think she was trying not to generalize too much
I wonder about the smoking 'habits' students and teachers , is it exceptional for this school ? Certainly it will not be tolerated in most Belgian schools , some have rules upon teachers even not to put up smokes in a certain distance towards schools.
One of my teachers once explained the schedule to us with the fact that a human brain can only pay attention for about 90 minutes. After this period, the attention and understanding ability drops significantly. Hence, school "lessons" are usually 2 x 45 min per session followed by a break. That is also the reason why most films last around 90-ish minutes... our brains get lazy after XD
Yes, that's nearly right. Attention drops after around one hour. After 90 minutes it is at the bottom. That is the reason for 45 minutes. 45 minutes is a 45 minutes high. If you give the brain a rest after 45 minutes for just 5 minutes, it is up to nearly its full capacity. So, shorter would be better than 90 minutes. Our teachers did always a short brake after 45 minutes in a "double-hour" to ensure, that we can follow the rest.
Depending how the brain is trained... The comments here do not keep in mind that we are individuals. Everybody knows, that the time to be able to concentrate is depend on the interest, the night sleep before and so on. No research can show a fixed time!
I currently heard a german 'Bildungsforscher' (educational researcher) speaking about the root of the 45 min lesson. It stems from the monasterys, where our school systems formed, and the remaining 10 min were used to pray, 5 min for bathroom or so.
I think that really depends on the school. There are also schools with catheterise and warm cooked lunch, we were allowed to use our phones in breaks, especially in lunch break, yes, we have fix classrooms here, but in my school we also had subjects where we have to leave the classroom, for example biology, chemistry, music, shop class, drawing and of course pe… we also had 50 minute lessons and only 5 minute breaks (and then 50 minutes lunch break)… In our school smoking was not allowed. So it really depends on the school :)
Bruh rauchen geht unter 18 ja nie aber wird immer gemacht, 5 min pause yallah raucherspot hinter irgendner ecke, ab 18 scheißegal da rauch ich vor der schule über der straße mir doch wayne
Auf meiner Schule hatte jeder Lehrer seinen eigenen Raum und die Kurse/ Klassen mussten für jeden Unterricht immer zum jeweiligen Raum des Lehrers, den man jetzt hat, gehen
@@finngluck977 Gymnasium bist aber am Ende oft 19. Bei unserer Schule gab es kein „um die Ecke“ oder „gegenüber“, aber wenn man abseits des Schulgeländes raucht, kann ja eh keiner was sagen 🤷🏻♀️
1:43 That depends on the school and the subject. For chemistry, physics, computerscience, music or art class you will most definitely switch the room, because not all rooms have the required equipment. And when I was in school, we students had to switch rooms most of the time.
I went to 5 different Gymnasien in Germany, and they were all so different, even though they were all in the same state. The schooldays at one school were 8-5 every single day, except Fridays. One school had varying hours, anywhere between 7:20 to 5:30. One year, my Tuesdays started at 9:20! One school started at 8:30 every day. Some schools had cafeterias serving real food, some only served junk food, one school didn't have a cafeteria or even vending machines at all because students were expected to go home during lunchbreak. Also keep in mind that different states (Bundesländer) have completely different school systems. Hope you have a great time here. :)
When I finished Gymnasium in 2014 I had never heard about a weiterführende Schule actually having cafeterias. That's still so strange to me, I grew up thinking that was a distinctly american thing. We had a little food 'stall' in the breaks from our janitor couple, they sold prezels, Brötchen and Dampfnudeln. Our lessons also most of the time finished at 13:05, in the Oberstufe we got afternoon lessons, too, but at most 2 times a week. And these where from 14:00 to 15:30, so we had enough time to walk to some Pizza or Döner place or go home. The only thing that was after 16:00 was PE. Having Nachmittagsunterricht/afternoon lessons *at all* was still kinda a new cultural discussion and not very normalized, at least not where I lived. I can't imagine having to stay in school that long all day :o But yeah, the Bundesländer reeeaally handle it differently.
@@jaquitavulpix3418 my school had a cafeteria since the late 1990ies, at least. How else could we eat lunch before the afternoon classes? Granted, most days we didn't have those, but starting Oberstufe we had afternoon lessons at least 3 of 5 days per week.
@@Enyavar1 Well we were expected to eat at home or to buy something in town. And I made Abi in 2014. i never heard of a school having a cafeteria then.
@@jaquitavulpix3418 Did you attend school in a city? I was in a rural area, where kids had a school route of maybe ~5 km, mean value. Buying food in town would have meant Döner for lunch every day. I guess parents disliked that idea.
Remember: there are 16 different Bundesländer in Germany with 16 different systems of school... So your experience only counts for the Bundesland your Gymnasium is in. And moreover, schools are different in the Bundesland too.
That's true. At the two schools I attended in Nuremberg (Bavaria), the teachers didn't come to us; we went to them. Especially the music teacher, who refused to move around with his piano. I can also confirm that air conditioners are banned across Germany. Neither of my schools nor the university had them. One cool thing about one of my schools was that it had a backyard where we were allowed to smoke cigarettes. Unfortunately, for some reason, smoking was later banned, just as air conditioners are, and we had to go outside the school to smoke.
Die Länder abhängigen Unterschiede betreffen allerdings andere Bereiche und nicht die einfachen Basics wie sie hier in dem Video genannt werden. Diese sind DE weit nahezu gleich. Auch bei dem Punkt der in einem anderen Kommentar angesprochen wurde, das nicht die Lehrer wechseln sondern die Schüler die Klassenräume.... Hier sind beide Fälle absolut die Regel. Man muss aber auch unterschieden um welche Art Unterricht es sich dabei handelt. Denn dies und die Art der nötigen Werkzeuge bestimmt in jedem Bundesland ob einfach die Lehrer ins Klassenzimmer kommen, oder die Schüler in die Spezial Räume wechseln. Baulich sind sowieso alle Schulen unterschiedlich, ebenso bei ihren finanziellen Möglichkeiten. Das ist aber in den USA noch weitaus schlimmer.
Lots of schools (not Gymnasiums only) have cafeterias, to sit down and have a warm meal. The open windows are because of Covid19, it wasn't before. Have a good time in Germany!
@@Camille_233 I’m from germany and still in school and tbh I’ve never heard about any kind of school which doesn’t have one well at least I don’t came across to any of those which haven’t a cafeteria so I would say if it’s so it’s pretty rare that a school doesn’t have one.
@@niconii3663yours has a kiosk?? Mine only has a “Lunchbox” once a week that sells expensive bread, water and “Müsli Riegel” 💀😭 (I feel like that one meme about “I only slept 8 hours” “you slept 8?? I only slept 6” “You slept 6?? I only got 4” “YOU GUYS ARE GETTING SLEEP???” But with school cafeteria)
0:52 nahh what? Even tho I’m kinda late that’s kinda weird. At my Gymnasium I haven’t seen a single guy with skinny jeans since baggy jeans became the trend or standard.
I'm from Greece and the things you described are surprisingly similar to what I've experienced. There are many differences too of course, but still. What you said was especially true about the food stands (Just different snacks, that's obvious), smoking, using phones, and leaving the school at different times each day of the week. Also having a specific classroom but sometimes moving for certain subjects, opening the windows instead of using AC, literally everything. Thank you for sharing, I didn't know you did things so similar to us, it's kinda neat
You can't say it's the same overall in Germany. It depends from school to school how everything is managed. The schools are mostly free to decide on their rules.
I agree! In my school (i am done now🥳) it wasn’t allowed to smoke at all and we hab to change rooms for classes as well as the teacher! These are just 2 examples..
Julia Claire, this American girl is NOT typical for Americans because she talks about German schools without mentioning Waldorf schools. She's very provincial, with all due respect - she talks about her German school as if it were a shopping center. But she must have parents who have more money than most American youth who cannot afford to attend a German school. She ignores German and American REALITY.
@@disco.jellyfish But you dont do Abitur to go work if you go on a gymnasium right? If you already go to a gymnasium then you want to go to university, isnt it better to go to a berufsschule if you want to go work right away? We have almost the same system in Slovenia, if you go to a gymnasium you must go to university
@@timonbubnic322 Well thats the theory. Reality is that many companies require you to habe Abitur anyway, even if you dont got to university. So in theory you are right, but such a scenario is only realistic for most but not all jobs. If you, for example, wanted to work in the media branch, 99.99% of the time Abitur is required.
I am from Slovakia and I would say that that is how pretty much every school in Europe works, we have different schools that’s why everyone is so fascinated to study in America
in the uk here we have lesson all lasting an hour a break lasting 15-20 mins depending on the school and a lunch lasting 30m-1hr depending on the school
Yeah lol, I'm from Italy and I somewhat I felt like she was gonna describe my high school, therefore I realized pretty much all the schools are the same across EU.
Whenever I read stories that take place in America and tell about people dressing up, I get confused if the jeans are mentioned as fancy clothing. For Germans those are the most plain and casual thing to wear. If students turn up to their final oral exams in baggy jeans, some teachers actually send them home to get dressed properly. The room thing depends on the school. My school had different rooms for each lesson, so we had to switch rooms the whole day. Only the younger children stayed in one room for most of the day. Also ac is not a big thing in Germany, period. Smoking is sadly still a thing with students. I think it's mostly a way to be rebellious during teen years. In my school, many students smoked in 9/10th grade to be part of the cool group. Most of them had stopped by the end of the final school year.
I grew up in Europe but my daughter was born in the US and goes to school here. Girls wear leggings and baggy cropped sweatshirts, unless they come to school in pajama pants and tank tops. I can’t get used to it.
I'm curious as to why? Intelligence should not rely on clothing. In fact, comfort has been proven to help many improve in cognitive tasks. I'm from California, so that's my "bias", but it's common to have athletic shorts and a t-shirt and people are quite smart (especially in comparison to other parts of the US - not that that is the best barometer)
Thank you, this was very interesting. My Gymnasium was pretty much the same way you describe your experience. I didn't realize that there are next to no breaks between classes in US highschools. That sounds so stressful!
It’s ridiculous. I was a high school assistant for a year in Indiana and I couldn’t believe the way things are handled there (I went to school in Germany). The kids have five minutes to get from one classroom to another between periods. That includes getting any materials from their lockers or bathroom breaks, and this was a large building. The only real break they had was lunch, but that was only 30 minutes. With 1400 students at our school, there were two lunch shifts. Needless to say, a good number of kids didn’t really have time to actually eat lunch, anyway. And teachers got mad when the students started drooping in the afternoon…
At my high school in Michigan we had ten minute breaks between classes, but you needed that for some classrooms which were super far away from each other.
Also interesting for me as a German in his mid 30s to hear a foreigner's perspective. For most parts, I can confirm. But I am also shocked to hear that it is "common" nowadays that students smoke outside with the teachers... that was definitely, at best, a super rare case 15 years ago.
So in my town in Lower Saxony we also smoke in every break. sometimes the teachers know that many are not yet 18. but the older teachers are not as strict as the younger ones
That's interesting about the language. I took German in high school (I'm from the USA) and my teacher "Herr K" ONLY spoke deutsch in the classroom. I thought he was nuts at first, but it worked!
Was he German because maybe that's why. Growing up with "On English please I can't understand you" or "en français madmoselle (forgot already how to write it)" is making you a different person
@@florentinenice9146 I don't think that has anything to do with it. Actually using the language in class frequently makes it way easier to learn the language. If you rarely ever use the language then you won't really learn it. I had several teachers who immigrated and went to school in different countries. There was often a teacher like that because it is simply the best way to learn.
@@peteroconnor6394 referring to kafka he would be "herr koiner" which literallly means he is mr nobody. so i guess he dont think of himself as kafka...
It’s really interesting to learn about the differences in language learning. Until now I never understood how one can say “I took 3 years of Spanish” but then all they can say is Hola and Gracias. So thank you for mentioning that difference and enlightening me! Also I hope you have an amazing experience, happy to follow along
I took Spanish in Gymnasium, starting in Grade 11 until the Abitur. The teacher expected us to be able to read and understand Spanish poetry and literature after about 1.5 years, and to write essays about them. We. e.g. read poems by Federico Garcia Lorca and the "Crónica de una muerte anunciada" by Garcia Márquez. It helped though that in our school we had several children of political refugees from Fascist dictatureships in south America, who were native Spanish speakers (e.g. a boy, who's father was a government minister under the Allende government in Chile, several Argentinians, a girl from Bolivia and a girl from Uruguay). They all went to my Spanish class (as they knew the language already, it gave them easy credits for the high school diploma). I also learned English, starting grade 5 in elementary school (which continued to the Abitur) and French between Grade 7 and Grade 10.
@@CHarlotte-ro4yi I'm fluent in English (actually with an Irish accent, since I lived there for a couple of years), but not in Spanish and French (mostly due to lack of opportunity to use the languages. As for Spanish, I can use it now in conversation and correspondence with a Cuban aquaintance, but while I have quite a big vocabluary, my grammar is very rusty. french is quite similar. but let me spend a year or so in a French- or Spanish speaking country nd I would be fluent.
yeah, ive had Latin for 6 years and at the end we were expected to translate basically any poems and literature from the time. After that we had emglish starting at grade 6 which has evolved into politics and social and/ or economic issues just on english. There were ä 3 years french too and had to be able to make a acceptable oral conversation the first year.
On your point about learning a foreign language and the fact that it is immersive, and students having to learn to keep up. I know in continental Europe language is taught at primary schools and not starting in high school, so most kids should already have the fundamentals. It is those early experiences of language learning and a sturdy base of those fundamentals that enable the progression to a deeper level of learning.
only true for few Bundesländer. Language lessons in primary school are a joke. Just be prepared to husstle if you are going to a Gymnasium in Germany - success is your responsibility. If you are failing (I know many do fail in the early Grades bc they chose to learn Latin or several languages so they have less free time) you will have to change schools.
That is true, but only for English classes. In a German "Gymnasium", it is required for the students to learn a second foreign language (usually French, Spanish or Latin) starting from 6th or 7th grade and at least until the start of "Oberstufe" (which is 10th or 11th grade). So we have 4 years of language learning in the second foreign language, with at least 4 periods every week, and the teacher usually only speaks that language in class. (Note that this only counts for the "Gymnasium", but actually nowadays most students go to Gymnasium and not to the other school forms that we have.)
When I started high school in the UK I had to study French for 3 years. It wasn't the immersive experience discussed here, the teachers spoke English and translated. We were taught grammar and nouns but no rules about pronunciation. The class moved along too fast and there was (in my opinion) no support for those that struggled and dropped behind. By a few weeks into the first term I was totally alienated to the idea of French and for that matter any other language learning. It was 3 years of hell and I dropped French at the first opportunity. I would like to be multilingual, I travelled in Europe a reasonable amount and was envious of those people who were multilingual, I just think that the way language is taught needs to fit the different learning abilities of the student body so as not to exclude a proportion. I know that I wasn't the only person struggling with the subject.
@@silviav.2660 6th to 10th is actually 5 years (6,7,8,9,10) so it would be 5 or more year's. I am pretty sure you have to learn the language starting 6th (G8). At least we had to. And you could then learn another (3rd) language too. My sister's school did also give the students the option to learn Italian in 6th grade. Not to mention all the electable subjects (Wahlfächer?) you can learn like Chinese, old Greek, Arabic, Portuguese, Russian, Japanese etc. Depending on the school.
@@florentinenice9146 uhm no. in the 10th class you can rechoose your subjects. in my school we had to choose latin or french in 6th grade and in 10th we choose to not continue those languages and/or to choose a new one like Italian. so it is 4 years
At the Gymnasium I went to, the "normal" school day started at like 7:55 am. During 5th and 6th grade, there were 5 lessons á 45 minutes (sometimes also 90 minute blocks). There was a 10 minute breakfast break and a 60 minute "break" which was divided into 3x 20 minutes for lunch, homework and freetime in the schoolyard. Food could be purchased by order (like 2-3€ each day, you could pick from 3 complete dishes 1 month in advance), so they had an external cuisine/ company prepare the meals and bring them to school. And you could also buy snacks at school or just bring your own food. As the cafeteria was really small back then, this 1 hour was for 5th and 6th graders only, the others had to eat ahead (usually 12 to 0:30 am) or after school. This resulted in most students above 5th or 6th grade not going to the cafeteria at all. From 5th to 10th grade, the usual school day ended at 3:15 pm (sometimes also 1:25 or 2:15 pm). In 11th and 12th grade though we had "Kurse" (courses) for which you wouldn't just switch the classrooms, but also the classes mixed. Only for the very basic classes like German and maths you were with your "actual" classmates, otherwise the people varied according to which courses they chose. The daily schedule was pretty much equal to the years before, but like once or twice a week - and again dependent on which courses you chose - we had a "0. Stunde" (a "lesson 0") which started at like 6:50 am. Besides that, in the "Oberstufe" lessons were mostly packed into 90 minute blocks with a 10 minute breakfast break and a 30 minute lunch break. After- school activities mostly took place between 15:15 (3:15 pm) and 16:10 (4:10 pm).
The not switching rooms is probably Covid related. At my school we didn't switch classrooms while the stronger lockdowns, now we never have classes in the same rooms anymore though.
Actually, it‘s not COVID related at all! Basically, from grades 5-10, you have a classroom that you really stay in with the same people for most lessons. All people from this class have the same schedule (but of course, the schedules from the different classes throughout the whole grade differ). You only switch rooms if you‘re taking different courses (for example, part of the students of class 7A are taking French alongside students of class 7B, the other ones are taking Spanish). Then you split up into new groups and switch classes. Also, if there‘s special equipment needed (for music, biology, chemistry etc.) you switch rooms, but there you stay with the same people. It‘s different when you‘re in grades 11-12 or 12-13, though - there, you switch rooms a lot because all the lessons are split up into heaps of courses. Depending on the profile you elected, your schedule looks different than everyone else’s! There may be differences between different schools and different regions in Germany, but this is the structure most schools use.
@@kbodychek it always depends on the school. In my school each teacher with an own class was designed a classroom, so when we weren’t kn lessons with our classteacher, we had to change rooms to the room of the other teachers and so on. Special rooms like for chemistry or biology are an exception of course.
We only had to switch classrooms for half of 9th grade but they then found out it doesn't really make sense, so the second half of 9th grade we stayed in our classroom (except for chemistry and physics). (Realschule) And at technical secondary school (FOS) we never switched. We chose the subject when we enrolled to the school so everyone had the same classes (except when you were in a mixed religion class)
No, its not - that part is usual in germany. With the exception of "special" classes like physics or chemistry. We had only one general subject teacher everyone had to go to, which was because he was in a wheelchair and 90% of the classrooms were upstairs (There were elevatory, but the halways were narrow and usually filled with students, so hard to get through even if you had use of your legs...)
in my school we had classes in our classroom lieke math, history, german, english and so on. But like sports, arts, music, biology, physics and chemistry (+ some extra classes) we had to switch rooms too. (because they have the supplies needed there mostly)
For us it was the cafeteria of the tax office across the street. Students from grade 11 on were allowed to leave the school grounds during their breaks (we also had to do it because our school used some classrooms in a nearby school for the blind as we were running out of space). With the younger students it was a legal matter, as they had to be supervised by an adult.
For my school students from 10-12th grade were allowed to stay inside and we had in the entryway like 10 sofas each being able to seat 3-4 student. The thing is that were were at lest 150 students per grade xD
I was really surprised that you don't have breaks in the US. I live in Chile and we have 15 minutes between classes, plus the lunch break that's usually 45 minutes.
@@Leenapanther I usually took 30 minutes to eat and some kids that lived close also when home to eat, an hour would've been nicer to them probably, but that much time is kind of crazy to me hahaha what do you even do with that much time?
We started switching classrooms in the last two years, but we didn't have classes in our regular class like before: We chose our different subjects and had other classmates (and rooms) in each subjects. All in the 90s..
Hey Caroline, just found this video and its very interesting! I myself was a german student in a Gymnasium till this year and I finally graduated. And I can tell you, the german Abitur is one hell of a ride… In what grade are you in? Usually there are two different systems within the Gymnasium, from 5th to 9/10th grade you have a classroom, your specific classmates and a classroom teacher. You stay in the room (except for sciences) , the teacher comes to you. Also its more common to have single 45 min classes after each other. In the other system, the „Oberstufe“, from 10/11th to 12/13th grade, you will only have subject courses, switch to different rooms and different teachers. Here, the subjects will be always paired together in two hours each, a „Block“ as we call it. At my school, we had a 15 min break between each Block for eating and switching the rooms. In the Oberstufe I often had 8 hour days, so these breaks were really important for my concentration. In Germany though you can‘t say the schools are the same everywhere in the country, each state/Bundesland has a different rules and expectations with how a school should be and what the students need to learn. The Abitur in Bayern is known for being the most difficult, while the Abitur in Schleswig-Holstein is not as hard. I hope you have a great time here! I will watch your videos :)
Some years ago the final grade for the Abitur as set by a committee from the state education authority which visited each school and conducted an oral examination of each student, covering the classwork. It made, at least in Hessen, for a standardized system, with confidence in the uniformity of the degree.
My Gymnasium is really relaxed with phones. We are allowed to use them in the breaks and also at the lessons. So its absolutely fine to pur the phone on the table in lessons. And we also have an cafeteria, where we can buy Nuggets oder Pizza e.g. But also real food like fish with potatos or sth like that
I love the first point of the list because here in Portugal (where I’m from) it’s the same way! In Europe we don’t have a big culture of athleisure (spelling???) so most ppl dress “nice” for school!!
Ah well the school experience can be so different all over Germany. Mine is also already some years back, so i would not start to compare without having an hours long forth and back.... but i love to remember how i started playing drums because of a friend did, but we did not have a proper music room in our small school. It was a normal class room, mostly used by teachers for brakes and do some out of class work most of the time. We had two drum sets there, and some other instruments, but nothing like a big school can provide. Anyways, after a while my friend and i practiced there, teachers were listening, and started to bring their own instruments, and it developed to proper jam sessions over time. We even met at the afternoons, when the school actually was closed. And at some days, even on weekends, the school director who lived only a few houses away would let me in to practice playing drums for some hours alone. That was very cool, and mostly the only times i really enjoyed going to school, alone, and making noise... Haha
Welcome in Germany! Your experiences are very much connected with your specific school. In the Gymnasium my kids went, for example, there is a cafeteria since 2010. Telephone rules are established by the school, so they can be very different even in the same city. As well as the switching classes, or opening windows before or during the class. Every region in Germany has different ideas how school should be done and leave a lot of freedom to the school itself for the normal day managements.
I live in Austria and my sister was an exchange student in the rural US for a year in the 1990s. Her French teacher there had such a terrible American accent when speaking French that you could hardly understand her. But worse, she also required her students to speak the same way! When my sister came back to Austria, I had to practice the correct French accent with her because she'd often fall into "American French"...
The Gymnasium I was on in Germany had a great lunch-room, excellent kitchen with healthy food, several options which were different each day. Back in the day it cost a few Euros (maybe 4 DEM, which is little over 2 EUR) and fast food joints in the vicinity of the school offered their food for students at exactly the same price (while everyone else payed regular = higher prices). And yeah, smoking is considered an important "human right" in Germany, horrible and sad . . .
I was an exchange student through AFS in Schorndorf, Baden-Wurttemburg in 2017-2018! Your video made me really nostalgic for my time there! Enjoy it to the fullest! It will go by so much faster than you think, and the friends you make will be lifelong!
Enjoy your stay. 🙂 Just a quick info that you might appreciate. - Plural of Gymnasium is Gymnasien. As you will notice, you will learn a lot more in less time over here in general, and this not only in language classes, but in math and science classes too. Because of the devided school system, it's possible to learn faster, and a lot more advanced stuff.
it's so interesting to hear about you experiences. I'm German, so I never thought any of that is strange. This video gave me more perspective, thank you!
In both of my US high schools, we had a short day once a week. On this day we usually had activities after school, like band or sports practice. A few of my schools also did not have AC, but this was many years ago. I did experience the same thing with language learning in the US. I took two years of Spanish and did not learn much even though I received high marks.
In my school we do actually switch classrooms every time or almost every time. Every 45 minutes we have a 5 minute break which is either there to just chill or to switch your room if you have to and after second and after the fourth period we have a 20/25 minute break which is like lunch break, on the campus. And after that it’s all very wobbly wobbly with the time and breaks because sometimes you have like two free periods and then another one and then it’s just chaotic usually
In the late 1990s die "Raucherecke" was a very important place at our school. In Germany there's a tradition that students on the way to the exams were treated as adults. All students older than 16 and being 11th -13th grade (the last 2.5 years on the way to the Abitur) were allowed to smoke in the "Raucherecke". Also Theachers. The "MSS-Parties" were also a very important institution. These parties were organised by all students of 13th grade for earning money to pay the bills for the prom and everything after the prom. These parties took place in a local club and yes, there were a lot of teachers, and yes, beer was cheap. "Everthing after the prom" means that you finish school on wednesday, friday is prom night ("Abi-Ball") and saturday till there´s no beer and no food left you´re having fun on a camp site. Sleeping in tents, barberque and beer and everything else. Back in those days you finished exams aroung 24th of june. Party until 30th june, starting military service 1st july...(Germany stopped conscription in 2011). The first day basic training was funny...Around 70 % of the draftees finished "Abitur" and were in a bad condition....
Would you like to change the back of the picture nicely, I'll delete the back of your picture nicely, you hired me background removal: file format is png, jpeg, • Model photo background removal • Pure white background • Remove background you can hire me
What you're describing is so close to my experience in a swiss Gymnasium (I'm swiss myself)! I graduated in 2016, so not that long ago. Admittedly is was a private school and smaller than other Gymnasiums in Switzerland, so traditions are generally easier to uphold. In Switzerland the smoking an (beer) drinking age (or, when you're allowed to buy cigarettes) is also still 16.
In Germany you switch the classroom every lesson, because you often have lessons in subject-specific rooms (like biology, physics or chemie). So we also need the break for going to the other room. And of course we have a lunch room and a school kitchen
"Of course" - na also das ist schon noch eine neuere Entwicklung :D Vor 10 Jahren noch hatte das fast keine weiterführende Schule - Gesamtschulen ausgenommen. Ich habe 2010 Abi gemacht. Da wurde es gerade umgebaut auf dem Schulgelände und eine Mensa gab es erst für die Unterstufe. In meiner Schulzeit gab es nur den Kiosk des Hausmeisters... mit Frikadellenbrötchen oder Schokoriegeln. Und es gab auch keinen Ganztag. Selbst in der Oberstufe war spätestens nach der 7. Stunde um 14.05 Uhr Schluss. Ausgenommen den nachmittäglichen Sportkurs oder wenn jemand einen Zusatzkurs belegen musste (Sowi/Geschichte). Mit G8 sah das schon anders aus. Und an Gesamtschulen gab es immer schon Langtage, wo dann aber am Nachmittag oft Hausaufgabenbetreuung, AGs oder sonst was stattfanden, nicht unbedingt reguläre Mathestunden. Eine wirkliche Mittagspause und auch die Möglichkeit eines Mittagessens jedenfalls gibt es soo lange noch nicht flächendeckend...
Bin zwar aus Österreich, aber ich hatte auch erst auf der Uni eine Mensa. Im Gym gabs bei uns auch nur so einen kleinen Kiosk mit ein paar Tischen, aber nicht genug für sie ganze Schule.
Thats how it was when I was in Jr. high and high school in America. Each class had its own room. Only in elementary did you spend the whole day in one room.
I learned French the same way- a Frenchman, who gave us all French surnames. all addressed as monsieur: Le Prix (me) Mr La Cloche (Bell) Mr Fils de Richard (Richardson) and from the moment we entered the class, everything was discussed and conveyed in French, and it worked wonders as nobody could "hide". It makes the brain operate totally in the language. Many years later, i still converse with friends in French, read in French sometimes, and enjoy maintaining the links and visits to France.
Wow! I really enjoyed this. I'm 60 years old now and I was an exchange student in Germany at a Gymnasium for one year in the early 80s. Not much has changed. Unfortunately the kids smoking, with everything that we know today about how bad smoking is for your health, was and is mind boggling that an educated population would still be smoking so much in 2021.
I am amazed that Germany , a very health orientated country , is still allowing smoking in public places. It has been banned in britain for many years indoors in public places , uncluding restaurants. One of my sons smokes , and he says that the looks he gets from the 82% who do not smoke (including me) makes him feel lik e a criminal. In High Schools , students and teachers are not allowed to smoke at all in hospitals they give in -patients nicotene patches as smoking is not allowed even in hospital grounds. In Britain the air is free from cigarette smoke ,
The smoking thing usually only is allowed when you’re over 18. When under 18, teachers will require a paper from your parents, so that it’s clear that your parents know that you’re harming yourself.
I have been living in Germany for seven years so far (this time). But I have never had any experiences with the education system. Thanks very much for this video! I hope you're enjoying your time here!
This video randomly popped up on my feed and I just had to watch. But interestingly enough, I studied abroad in Heidelberg for college from 2006-2009. It was my first time in Germany and I basically did it on a whim with little more than 2 months preparation. It was initially supposed to be for a semester and I ended up staying for 3 years. I'll be honest, it was the best decision I'd ever made. Enjoy your time in Germany and stay away from the Lucky Strikes and Stella's.
When I was in high school (40 years ago) we had specialised classrooms for things like biology, chemistry physics, arts and music. The ones for the sciences were actually labs, where you could do experiments and had store rooms for chemicals and equipment, and the one for arts had work benches and cabinets for supplies, we also had a printing press in there. And as for music, one wouldn't expect the teacher to lug a grand piano around. So there was a special classroom just for music, with an attached closet for musical instruments.
Well I went to elementary and highschool from mid 90's to mid '00 and I second that... All the more specialized subjects that need special equipment etc had their own rooms which you would go to in your selected class band (let's call it that) and German, Math, English, Politics, History you get the gist were in our designated class rooms ... also Religion was split into catholic or protestant or ethics/philosophy (for non christians or everyone who didn't want to learn about religion)
Back in the seventies, I was invited to spend a day at Gymnasium with a neighbor of my grandparents. Smoking students had an ashtray at their desks and during lunch break we went to the local wirtschaft (pub) to have a beer and bratwurst.
Hi Caroline, smokers are actually on the decline in Germany. I am amazed that you noticed that teenagers in particular seem to be smoking more and more again. It was different a few years ago.
From my own school I can say that it‘s not necessarily that many people smoke, but the ones that do, do it very openly (and as she mentioned sometimes alongside the teachers). I think that might be what she picked up on?
The totala mount of smokers is on the decline, but if you look at the percentage conpared to the US there are way more smokers in Europe in general. (Hint Germany is the only 1st world country allowing tabacco advertisment on the streets/bilboards). I smoked as a teen and in my Gymnasium we had to typical smoker spots. One was changing all the time, since the teachers didn't tolerate smoking for under 16yo, the other been at the the same gate all the the time, where the smokers from the Oberstufe (grade 10-12 or 11-13, depending on your state) smoked, often with the teachers. I never heard of smoking in the toilets in Germany though. It also doesn't make sense to me, if you can just leave the school ground/area where your school makes the rules. Vaping wasn't a thing 10 years ago, when I grafuated, but I also don't see a lot of teens smoke anyway. Which I can understand, since inhaling the smoke of any addictive chemical isn't a good habit to pick up.
There are too many of these braindead smoking people, not only in schools, but everywhere. I cant stand to live in Germany anymore and be constantly annoyed by braindeads. Moving out is already in progress.
I’ve noticed that about Germany as well. I often wonder why there are so many smokers around - given how health-conscious they always think themselves to be. You see so many people outside and living active lifestyles, yet nearly every teen or especially tween, seems to smoke. It’s really weird.
I'm way past high school so I can't really relate, but I am impressed that you traveled across the world to get a new school experience. I wish I had done that back in school.
I’m studying in a Slovene gymnasium and I’d say that German schools are pretty similar to ours. In my school, classes start at 7: 10(ofc, it depends on a school) and usually last till around 12: 45(6 hours), 13: 35(7 hours) or 14: 25(8 hours). But, every other Thursday, my first class starts 2 hours later than usual(our class is divided into two groups at that subject for easier work). In normal conditions we would switch classrooms but because of COVID we have a designated classroom in which we stay through all lessons. Our school offers lunches as well but because we don’t have a kitchen, we’ve to walk to a nearby primary school in which we also eat(it’s only like 100 meters away so it’s not a big deal) Our main break lasts one school hour(45 mins) while breaks between lessons only last 5 minutes(except when we have double sessions and work the same as in Germany) About phones, our school allows phones through breaks. You’re supposed to have your phone silent or turned off during classes but if it accidentally goes off, professors usually don’t cause a big deal about it(unlike in Slovene primary schools)
American living here for 12 years. I watched some videos over the years, from others, to get an idea of their experiences. Most were cringe level and I was hesitant to watch another. To my surprise you had great takes and you seemed comfortable with the changes. Thanks for the positive review and hope you have FUN while you are here. ;)
I noticed the smoking culture as well in Germany and it does seem to be out of hand for a visitor. We went to Zugspitze and we really had to find places where we werent smelling the smoke. It just sucks that people will go all the way up and not enjoy the fresh air.
Smoking rates absolutely plummeted during the last 20 years though. When today's teenagers with their low smoking rates will be in their 30s or 40s, the teens of their time probably won't smoke at all. This process just happened earlier in the US and is already completed, basically.
But Germans don't vape as much which is good considering vapes, especially the ones that are legal in the US, can be just as damaging if not more damaging than cigarettes
It's similar here in Slovenia 😊 They do say we are using "German school system". And for changing classrooms: We currently don't change classrooms, because of the virus, but usually we change them for every class. Oh and we do have a cafeteria or at least special place to eat lunch.
In my school we switch classrooms for different classes. Every teacher has an own classroom which they can also decorate and the students go to the teacher‘s room. We also have a cafeteria where we can sit down to eat. But unfortunately the cafeteria is closed because of covid and now we only have a kiosk :(
Usually, we have Cafeterias where you can buy DOnuts, Bretzels, Tea, Coffee etc. and another area where you have to register yourself and pay a monthly/ yearly subscribtion and you'll get lunch + 1 dessert daily (unlimited refill). At least it was like that in my schools, though I have to say i went to a private elementary - middle school before i switched to a public school. but my new school still has those things (js with fewer options to choose from daily)
In Belgium phone rules are very strict! And in secondary school clothing rules too! There are even some schools that keep a school uniform ! Food (lunch ) is also regulated ; not all items are allowed (certainly no warm items). And there is no smoking at or near the school! Beer is not so strict ;-) I do not have numbers but I do belief there is less smoking over all in Belgium.
This sounds very similar to Russian school! We have 5-10 minute breaks after each 50 minute lesson and we stay in one class for most of the time, so instead of there being a math classroom, history classroom, etc. we have a class 7a room, a class 10b room.
Well, Smoking is "common" under teenagers, bacause, as I know, on every class ther is someone, who is Smoking cigarrets, but all in all only a few are smoking.
As being born and educated in Germany (Gymnasium and University of Applied Sciences), I'd like to point out that "Gymnasium" in Germany is more of an equivalent to a College Prep school in the US. It's a different form of high school, which prepares for an academic career and university. There is a comparison of the abitur to something close to an associates degree in the US. When students graduate from the Gymnasium with the Abitur, they can enter university and chose their degree major from the beginning, while the US high school student is entering college and the first two years (4 semester) are covering what you learn in the Gymnasium, before you chose your major.
It depends on the school. Each school has its own rules. You are only allowed to smoke on school grounds, if you are old enough, and even then it depends on the school rules. Mobile phones aren't allowed during the lessons and can get confiscated. In my middle school I had to switch rooms.
I haven't had a schedule like that since elementary school, it's so short :0 From 5th grade, we had afternoon lessons 4 days a week (usually til 3:30 pm) and then til 5 or 6 pm in higher grades.
Oh no :D Even in the last grades, aged 17 or so, I mostly finished around 1 or 2 pm. Except sports lessons in the afternoon. But there was no lunch breaks, no longer breaks in between... a lesson of 45 minutes is common in Germany. After each you got 5 minutes as a break. Sometimes you stay in your classroom and the teacher changes, so you can chat and such. Sometimes you have to change rooms, so the break is needed for that. Every two lessons there is a larger break of 15 minutes and you have to leave the classroom and be outside on the schoolyard for this. A regular schoolday counts 6 lessons, sometimes 7. Including two of those longer breaks. But no lunch break. That changed for most schools some years ago, so they offer a lunch and also end later in the afternoon. I'd say maximum at 4 pm though. A longer schoolday is reserved for the college students in some cases or for voluntary activities like a sports club or choir or acting class.
In my Gymnasium, you can take out your phone in class and break from 9th to 12th grade. We also have something called "Mittagsbänder" where you can do activities like watching movies, go out, study for exams, play table tennis etc..
As a German guy who did an exchange in the US this is very interesting to me. I would really be interested on how you will see difference’s in ours behavior. Like are people more open, funny, ambitious, plans for having a family and stuff. Sheeesh
You're class should be really happy with this schedule, in my school we had at least one day a week until 16:15 since 6.grade, later even school days from 7:00 to 17:00
Sounds familiar. In grade 12 my schoolday on Friday was from 7:40 to somewhat after 5pm. I did have third and fourth period off....however it was boring because there wasn't much too do during this spare time. I eventually used it for my motorbiking classes sometimes. We also had school til at least 03:30 once a week since grade 5 and later one it was rather normal. We barely got out of school at 1pm. And I had 13 years. The younger ones with Abi after 12 years had even worse schedules.
@@celinesiebert4858 yes, its the 0. lesson. in my school that lesson was sometimes used when teacher and students agreed to have it in the early morning instead of the 9/10th lesson on a friday
hey, I'm from Berlin and my school is really different than yours. I also know other schools and just wanted to add that the schools are all so different here (in Germany). The rules are so different depending on the school. The Gymnasiums are in general different than the Sekundarschulen.The Gymnasiums are stricter and more intense than others. For example: I am changing clases and we do have a cafeteria. really love your videos
Love two things….first, the teachers change rooms, NOT the students !! Second, the different class day schedules and designated breaks !! We should adopt those practices here in the US.
...teachers changing rooms means the classrooms are broken, vandalized, without material or only a little. Teachers teach at least 2 to 3 subjects in different grades from grade 5 to 13.
Weird - my American high school was so much stricter on phones (they collect them every morning - you have to hand it in to get in the door) whereas in Germany, it was just kinda required to not use your phone and students just try not to get caught. Hope you’re enjoying your year!
What a great experience! The fact that you uploaded this video could be helpful to people who are also going on an exchange to Germany. I could also notice that german schools are very similar to those in my country, Argentina. Greetings!😁
In Germany you are not allowed to smoke under the age of 18 and my school for example has a very strict policy abt that so if you see students smoking outside of the school (on the street) they are probably over 18 because underaged students would not do that publicly. Drinking however is a different topic.
I think thats interesting in my school for example no one smokes during school we have no area or something and even outsight in the City where we sometimes go during break I see no one smoke and as far as I know for us it is pretty out And we are the oldest for us Smoking is something unhealthy and not very accepted
just because it's not allowed doesn't mean nobody does it. at my school smoking started around the age of 15. because only 18 year olds are legally allowed to smoke, they were the only ones permitted in the raucherecke, which meant that it was only the younger kids who were smoking outside the school grounds
I graduated a couple of years ago but literally every school I know was so strict concerning this matter. Once I went back to my school after I graduated to get some documents and a teacher saw my phone literally just in my hand and nearly kicked me out like wth I don't even go here😂
@@samiraansari5686 im from nrw and i know quite a few people who go to schools in different areas and none of their schools have strict rules about phones but i dont know about any other area so i guess its kind of mixed
It used to be really strict in almost all schools back in my day in the 2000s. At least everyone I ever talk to about it had the same experience. However, at least in my old school parents complained about teachers taking phones away and now they are no longer allowed to do it and without a good way of enforcing the rule, it has been getting weaker and weaker.
Hi Caroline, I had your video in my recommendations and as a German, I find it really interesting to get to know your perspective in our school system here! I've got a question about the American system: You said, you always have the same subjects each day for half a year, and then they will switch. And you usually have 4 subjects each day. Does that mean that each day, you will have for example Biology in first period and Social Studies in last period? To me, from a pedagogical perspective that does not sound so good, as then, kids would probably start to hate the subject that they have at the end of the school day more, as then they are tired already. Is it like that? Here in Germany, we usually make sure that a subject ist not being taught only in the last periods. For example, if you have 4 periods of Math per week, and two of them are on Monday in 5th/6th period, the other two will be on another day in an earlier time slot, as students are much more likely to be more tired and lose motivation at the end of the school day.
We had block schedule so you took 4 classes called "A" day Monday Wednesday and Friday then 4 other classes on "B" day Tuesday and thrusday if the week before had 3 "b" days then the next week had "2" b days and so the days switched from you taking your "b" day classes 3 times or 2 times and you ended up visiting every one of your 8 classes every other day for 1.5 hours each. Or 4 classes a school day. it made the classes feel like they lasted forever and you really only did one lesson plan or as much work as if you only had a standard time of 45 mins and just had a ton of time you couldn't leave but had nothing to do. Then once you get to the last two years you can apply for work program and if you have a job and enough credits you can do 1/2 day of school from 8am-12pm or 11am-3pm so just two classes would be a half day and you would always have your last class of "a" day be the last class of all "a" days and same with "b" day always having the same "b" class in the same time each"b" b day
It is important to realize that, like in Germany, not all U.S. schools do things the same way. Schedules and other practices vary widely from district to district, and state to state.
The room thing is different in many schools. In my school we change the room and the teacher, but another school in the same city, they don't change the room often, they change the teachers. (I've always gone to school in Germany)
The thing is, you can't say "German School" the systemsmare quite different in every state. For example, in my state, we will also change the rooms not the teachers and will also only have Short brakes in between to change rooms. It just depends on where in Germany you are
One thing I definitely find very interesting is that you only have half of your subjects for half a year. I've never thought something like that might exist. How does it feel if you haven't heard anything about a subject for half a year and starting with it again?
Dear caroline, I am a Geman student in grade 6, learning English. I like the way you speak, I understand you very well, because you speak clearly. Thanks, I learn a lot from you! Please keep up the good work!
It really depends on the school. In Germany each school ist different and has an other system. Some schools have a cafetheria and some don't. Some schools have longer lunchbreaks or rules like you can stay in classroom while breaks or you have to go outside. We also have special rooms for each class. But yeah, it's common to stay in one room but especially for Natural Sciences Subjects we have extra rooms.
Interesting side by side comparison. About the classes, you talked about 5:15 : Interesting concept of having a small amount of classes for the first half of the year and then switching them. I have heard that schools here in Berlin are trying a similar concept. Instead of having two hours of e.g. chemistry per week, you have like six hours per week but no physics or biology. And the week after, it swaps. The reason behind is, that you can teach a lot more knowledge in a row of six hours per week instead of a double hour per week. Unfortunately, I hadn't this concept during my school time.
Wait? You have no breaks in between classes in the US??? I mean my school day goes like this: Each lesson is 45 minutes School starts at 7:45 Than: 1. lesson 5-minute-break 2. lesson 20-minute-break 3. lesson 5-minute-break 4.lesson 15-minute-break 5. lesson 5-minute-break 6. lesson Either end of school day Or 45 minute lunch break Two times 45 minute lesson that don't actually have a break in between but most teachers let us have one for five minutes. End of school day But those 5-minute-breaks are not at every school, some schools don't do that and some schools have one big 35 minute break during the school day instead of those two breaks. I could never get through the school day without breaks in between How do you do that???
Nice video. Usually you switch rooms in "Gymnasium" to the special equipped room too (chemistry, physics, geography etc). Not switching like at your school is related to COVID restrictions/hygiene rules.
Yeah but you don't switch for every class though
I mean math class, german class, english class etc are all in the same room and the teachers switch like she said
It is just for the classes where special equipment is needed like chemistry or art etc
@@keeeksmonster That depends. We frequently had to switch rooms, even for German or English. Not always, but often.
@@keeeksmonster Some schools have special classrooms for foreign languages. In my time, it was also possible to choose a second foreign language. The whole class had basic English as the first foreign language, and when the second foreign language was on the schedule, the class was divided into different rooms. Some had extended English, others had French, and some had Latin. Later, Spanish and (I think) Russian were added - but that was after my time.
Oh, and there were usualy separate rooms for music, too. Probably because the music teachers regularly got hernias when they had to lug the grand piano from one class to another.
Our gymnasium kiddo changes classrooms for every single subject.
I didn't change rooms for geography, but for physics, chemistry, biology and a few rare times for language classes to the language lab
"Everyone dresses really nice." As a German, I can assure you that this is not the case. Aside of other factors, it very much depends on which school you go to and in which neighborhood the school is located.
Yeah
I have seen people in US go to the groceries wearing scrubs, crocs and latschen and other things we normally wear nur zuhause oder auf der arbeit, very impressive stuff maybe thats why she thinks people here are so put together.
@@neuropretense ... Yeah, what she said
the average German student dresses really nice compared to students in American high schools, believe me ....
Jogginghose all day haha
So normally in "oberstufe" you also switch classrooms for the different class. I have every subject with different people, I'm in 12th grade.
Ahhh okay! Thank you for telling me!
@@carolineruby For my school the whole room changing thing starts in 6th grade
@@lillyknc Same here, I think even in fifth grade
Yes in my school ( I’m in the 12th grade) you switch the classrooms ( but in the 11th grade you don’t switch ) but this is from school to school a little bit different.
@@Isabella-mc5cc true, for me the switching started in 10th class and sometimes already in 6th class when you had like latin or french in another classroom but the rest was in the same room (NRW)
Why did I randomly got this on my feed in September of 2024 as a German?
Lmao samee
Sameee
youtube is random
Same
October 2024 ✌🏽
1:26 normely we do switch rooms in Germany for classes that aren't German, math, english, history or geography but some schools don't switch at all for some reson
"Students stay in their classroom".
Yes mostly, but Biology is a bad example, because for physics, chemistry and biology there are usually special class rooms.
you forgot about music, it is the most specific and often the school has an orchestra
@@tihomirrasperic not really. Normally the rooms for chemistry/physics/biology have the most restrictions since there can be dangerous chemicals stored.
And art lessons are in another classroom as well
Arts and music as well. And PE, of course.
The same can be said about some of her observations about US schools. We had 15 minute breaks between all of our classes (except lunch of çourse), no Cafeteria (I'm from Southern California, we have a place where you can buy lunch, but we would just eat outside around the campus wherever you felt most comfortable, unless it was raining, then you'd go to your favorite instructors room with your friends). Our classes were all 90 minutes and we switched off everyday, but every HS in our district, and beyond was vastly different in that regard. Another school in our district had 45 minute classes, but doubled up on "important" classes like history, math, science, etc.
Hi Caroline: Be careful: Some of your observations are very specific to your school in germany. Nowadays, you usually have lunch rooms, the phone rules are different from school to school etc.
almost every example she gave, she mentioned « specifically at my school » or « at least at my school » so I think she was trying not to generalize too much
Wait, you mean when people talk about their experiences at school, it’s specific to their experiences? No way!
@@Natalie37854 doch
we are even allowed to leave the school for lunch
I wonder about the smoking 'habits' students and teachers , is it exceptional for this school ? Certainly it will not be tolerated in most Belgian schools , some have rules upon teachers even not to put up smokes in a certain distance towards schools.
One of my teachers once explained the schedule to us with the fact that a human brain can only pay attention for about 90 minutes. After this period, the attention and understanding ability drops significantly. Hence, school "lessons" are usually 2 x 45 min per session followed by a break. That is also the reason why most films last around 90-ish minutes... our brains get lazy after XD
I wish the USA did the same!
Yes, that's nearly right.
Attention drops after around one hour. After 90 minutes it is at the bottom.
That is the reason for 45 minutes. 45 minutes is a 45 minutes high.
If you give the brain a rest after 45 minutes for just 5 minutes, it is up to nearly its full capacity.
So, shorter would be better than 90 minutes. Our teachers did always a short brake after 45 minutes in a "double-hour" to ensure, that we can follow the rest.
isn't it three minutes today?
Depending how the brain is trained... The comments here do not keep in mind that we are individuals. Everybody knows, that the time to be able to concentrate is depend on the interest, the night sleep before and so on. No research can show a fixed time!
I currently heard a german 'Bildungsforscher' (educational researcher) speaking about the root of the 45 min lesson. It stems from the monasterys, where our school systems formed, and the remaining 10 min were used to pray, 5 min for bathroom or so.
I think that really depends on the school. There are also schools with catheterise and warm cooked lunch, we were allowed to use our phones in breaks, especially in lunch break, yes, we have fix classrooms here, but in my school we also had subjects where we have to leave the classroom, for example biology, chemistry, music, shop class, drawing and of course pe… we also had 50 minute lessons and only 5 minute breaks (and then 50 minutes lunch break)…
In our school smoking was not allowed.
So it really depends on the school :)
Bruh rauchen geht unter 18 ja nie aber wird immer gemacht, 5 min pause yallah raucherspot hinter irgendner ecke, ab 18 scheißegal da rauch ich vor der schule über der straße mir doch wayne
@@finngluck977Muss dir da zustimmen, auch wenn ich 2 Jahre zu spät bin.
Auf meiner Schule hatte jeder Lehrer seinen eigenen Raum und die Kurse/ Klassen mussten für jeden Unterricht immer zum jeweiligen Raum des Lehrers, den man jetzt hat, gehen
@@finngluck977 Gymnasium bist aber am Ende oft 19.
Bei unserer Schule gab es kein „um die Ecke“ oder „gegenüber“, aber wenn man abseits des Schulgeländes raucht, kann ja eh keiner was sagen 🤷🏻♀️
1:43 That depends on the school and the subject. For chemistry, physics, computerscience, music or art class you will most definitely switch the room, because not all rooms have the required equipment. And when I was in school, we students had to switch rooms most of the time.
I went to 5 different Gymnasien in Germany, and they were all so different, even though they were all in the same state. The schooldays at one school were 8-5 every single day, except Fridays. One school had varying hours, anywhere between 7:20 to 5:30. One year, my Tuesdays started at 9:20! One school started at 8:30 every day. Some schools had cafeterias serving real food, some only served junk food, one school didn't have a cafeteria or even vending machines at all because students were expected to go home during lunchbreak. Also keep in mind that different states (Bundesländer) have completely different school systems.
Hope you have a great time here. :)
I went to 5 different schools in grade 12 and 13. I needed the breaks to get on my bike and switch schools.
When I finished Gymnasium in 2014 I had never heard about a weiterführende Schule actually having cafeterias. That's still so strange to me, I grew up thinking that was a distinctly american thing. We had a little food 'stall' in the breaks from our janitor couple, they sold prezels, Brötchen and Dampfnudeln.
Our lessons also most of the time finished at 13:05, in the Oberstufe we got afternoon lessons, too, but at most 2 times a week. And these where from 14:00 to 15:30, so we had enough time to walk to some Pizza or Döner place or go home. The only thing that was after 16:00 was PE. Having Nachmittagsunterricht/afternoon lessons *at all* was still kinda a new cultural discussion and not very normalized, at least not where I lived. I can't imagine having to stay in school that long all day :o
But yeah, the Bundesländer reeeaally handle it differently.
@@jaquitavulpix3418 my school had a cafeteria since the late 1990ies, at least. How else could we eat lunch before the afternoon classes? Granted, most days we didn't have those, but starting Oberstufe we had afternoon lessons at least 3 of 5 days per week.
@@Enyavar1 Well we were expected to eat at home or to buy something in town. And I made Abi in 2014. i never heard of a school having a cafeteria then.
@@jaquitavulpix3418 Did you attend school in a city? I was in a rural area, where kids had a school route of maybe ~5 km, mean value. Buying food in town would have meant Döner for lunch every day. I guess parents disliked that idea.
Remember: there are 16 different Bundesländer in Germany with 16 different systems of school... So your experience only counts for the Bundesland your Gymnasium is in. And moreover, schools are different in the Bundesland too.
That's true. At the two schools I attended in Nuremberg (Bavaria), the teachers didn't come to us; we went to them. Especially the music teacher, who refused to move around with his piano. I can also confirm that air conditioners are banned across Germany. Neither of my schools nor the university had them.
One cool thing about one of my schools was that it had a backyard where we were allowed to smoke cigarettes. Unfortunately, for some reason, smoking was later banned, just as air conditioners are, and we had to go outside the school to smoke.
@@peters9621Berolt Brecht Schule hahahhah ?
Die Länder abhängigen Unterschiede betreffen allerdings andere Bereiche und nicht die einfachen Basics wie sie hier in dem Video genannt werden. Diese sind DE weit nahezu gleich. Auch bei dem Punkt der in einem anderen Kommentar angesprochen wurde, das nicht die Lehrer wechseln sondern die Schüler die Klassenräume.... Hier sind beide Fälle absolut die Regel. Man muss aber auch unterschieden um welche Art Unterricht es sich dabei handelt. Denn dies und die Art der nötigen Werkzeuge bestimmt in jedem Bundesland ob einfach die Lehrer ins Klassenzimmer kommen, oder die Schüler in die Spezial Räume wechseln. Baulich sind sowieso alle Schulen unterschiedlich, ebenso bei ihren finanziellen Möglichkeiten. Das ist aber in den USA noch weitaus schlimmer.
Talahons kinda wild rn
That’s true in the US too though, just with 50 states.
Lots of schools (not Gymnasiums only) have cafeterias, to sit down and have a warm meal. The open windows are because of Covid19, it wasn't before. Have a good time in Germany!
I thought that every school in Germany have a cafeteria 😅
@@Camille_233 I’m from germany and still in school and tbh I’ve never heard about any kind of school which doesn’t have one well at least I don’t came across to any of those which haven’t a cafeteria so I would say if it’s so it’s pretty rare that a school doesn’t have one.
My school didn't have a cafeteria, just the Aula/Foyer where there was some space to sit down (barely any tables though), and people mostly ate there.
@@raidyyn4211 my gymnasium only had a kiosk. lol but every other school i went to had a cafeteria, yes.
@@niconii3663yours has a kiosk?? Mine only has a “Lunchbox” once a week that sells expensive bread, water and “Müsli Riegel” 💀😭
(I feel like that one meme about “I only slept 8 hours” “you slept 8?? I only slept 6” “You slept 6?? I only got 4” “YOU GUYS ARE GETTING SLEEP???” But with school cafeteria)
0:52 nahh what? Even tho I’m kinda late that’s kinda weird. At my Gymnasium I haven’t seen a single guy with skinny jeans since baggy jeans became the trend or standard.
I'm from Greece and the things you described are surprisingly similar to what I've experienced. There are many differences too of course, but still. What you said was especially true about the food stands (Just different snacks, that's obvious), smoking, using phones, and leaving the school at different times each day of the week. Also having a specific classroom but sometimes moving for certain subjects, opening the windows instead of using AC, literally everything.
Thank you for sharing, I didn't know you did things so similar to us, it's kinda neat
You can't say it's the same overall in Germany. It depends from school to school how everything is managed. The schools are mostly free to decide on their rules.
I agree! In my school (i am done now🥳) it wasn’t allowed to smoke at all and we hab to change rooms for classes as well as the teacher! These are just 2 examples..
Abitur in Bremen is worthless, though. The only thing you can become with that is a teacher in Bremen.
Julia Claire, this American girl is NOT typical for Americans because she talks about German schools without mentioning Waldorf schools. She's very provincial, with all due respect - she talks about her German school as if it were a shopping center. But she must have parents who have more money than most American youth who cannot afford to attend a German school. She ignores German and American REALITY.
@@disco.jellyfish But you dont do Abitur to go work if you go on a gymnasium right? If you already go to a gymnasium then you want to go to university, isnt it better to go to a berufsschule if you want to go work right away? We have almost the same system in Slovenia, if you go to a gymnasium you must go to university
@@timonbubnic322 Well thats the theory. Reality is that many companies require you to habe Abitur anyway, even if you dont got to university. So in theory you are right, but such a scenario is only realistic for most but not all jobs. If you, for example, wanted to work in the media branch, 99.99% of the time Abitur is required.
I am from Slovakia and I would say that that is how pretty much every school in Europe works, we have different schools that’s why everyone is so fascinated to study in America
in the uk here we have lesson all lasting an hour a break lasting 15-20 mins depending on the school and a lunch lasting 30m-1hr depending on the school
The high schools in Argentina are also like the german ones. (No switching classrooms, diffrent schedules, no specific places to eat, etc)
Yeah lol, I'm from Italy and I somewhat I felt like she was gonna describe my high school, therefore I realized pretty much all the schools are the same across EU.
wrong
Hi, Ivica
I am looking for text friend. I want to improve my English level. Would you like to be friends with me?
Whenever I read stories that take place in America and tell about people dressing up, I get confused if the jeans are mentioned as fancy clothing. For Germans those are the most plain and casual thing to wear. If students turn up to their final oral exams in baggy jeans, some teachers actually send them home to get dressed properly.
The room thing depends on the school. My school had different rooms for each lesson, so we had to switch rooms the whole day. Only the younger children stayed in one room for most of the day. Also ac is not a big thing in Germany, period.
Smoking is sadly still a thing with students. I think it's mostly a way to be rebellious during teen years. In my school, many students smoked in 9/10th grade to be part of the cool group. Most of them had stopped by the end of the final school year.
So cool! Thank you for your comment!
I grew up in Europe but my daughter was born in the US and goes to school here. Girls wear leggings and baggy cropped sweatshirts, unless they come to school in pajama pants and tank tops. I can’t get used to it.
In Czech Republic they won't even let you in on the high school final exams if you''re not wearing a suit.
@@irener.3849 Yeah. It's not that jeans are fancy, it's that americans daily clothes are basically their pajamas.
I'm curious as to why? Intelligence should not rely on clothing. In fact, comfort has been proven to help many improve in cognitive tasks. I'm from California, so that's my "bias", but it's common to have athletic shorts and a t-shirt and people are quite smart (especially in comparison to other parts of the US - not that that is the best barometer)
Thank you, this was very interesting. My Gymnasium was pretty much the same way you describe your experience. I didn't realize that there are next to no breaks between classes in US highschools. That sounds so stressful!
It’s ridiculous. I was a high school assistant for a year in Indiana and I couldn’t believe the way things are handled there (I went to school in Germany). The kids have five minutes to get from one classroom to another between periods. That includes getting any materials from their lockers or bathroom breaks, and this was a large building. The only real break they had was lunch, but that was only 30 minutes. With 1400 students at our school, there were two lunch shifts. Needless to say, a good number of kids didn’t really have time to actually eat lunch, anyway. And teachers got mad when the students started drooping in the afternoon…
At my high school in Michigan we had ten minute breaks between classes, but you needed that for some classrooms which were super far away from each other.
Also interesting for me as a German in his mid 30s to hear a foreigner's perspective. For most parts, I can confirm. But I am also shocked to hear that it is "common" nowadays that students smoke outside with the teachers... that was definitely, at best, a super rare case 15 years ago.
Smoking has actually reduced in the recent 15 years.
So in my town in Lower Saxony we also smoke in every break. sometimes the teachers know that many are not yet 18. but the older teachers are not as strict as the younger ones
Smoking in school ist prohibitet in Germany.
No it isn't!!! Maybe at this school.
ITS true, that smoking at school is prohibet by the law. In every German state. Look for NRW bass.schul-welt.de/pdf/8460.pdf
That's interesting about the language. I took German in high school (I'm from the USA) and my teacher "Herr K" ONLY spoke deutsch in the classroom. I thought he was nuts at first, but it worked!
Was he German because maybe that's why. Growing up with
"On English please I can't understand you" or "en français madmoselle (forgot already how to write it)"
is making you a different person
@@florentinenice9146 I don't think that has anything to do with it. Actually using the language in class frequently makes it way easier to learn the language. If you rarely ever use the language then you won't really learn it. I had several teachers who immigrated and went to school in different countries. There was often a teacher like that because it is simply the best way to learn.
@@ducklingscap897 that was a joke... 😅
Jimmy up - if your German teacher called himself Herr K, ask him if he thinks he's Kafka.
@@peteroconnor6394 referring to kafka he would be "herr koiner" which literallly means he is mr nobody. so i guess he dont think of himself as kafka...
It’s really interesting to learn about the differences in language learning. Until now I never understood how one can say “I took 3 years of Spanish” but then all they can say is Hola and Gracias. So thank you for mentioning that difference and enlightening me!
Also I hope you have an amazing experience, happy to follow along
I took Spanish in Gymnasium, starting in Grade 11 until the Abitur. The teacher expected us to be able to read and understand Spanish poetry and literature after about 1.5 years, and to write essays about them. We. e.g. read poems by Federico Garcia Lorca and the "Crónica de una muerte anunciada" by Garcia Márquez. It helped though that in our school we had several children of political refugees from Fascist dictatureships in south America, who were native Spanish speakers (e.g. a boy, who's father was a government minister under the Allende government in Chile, several Argentinians, a girl from Bolivia and a girl from Uruguay). They all went to my Spanish class (as they knew the language already, it gave them easy credits for the high school diploma).
I also learned English, starting grade 5 in elementary school (which continued to the Abitur) and French between Grade 7 and Grade 10.
@@jankrusat2150 I had a very similar experience, hence being fluent in all three languages came rather easy to me.
@@CHarlotte-ro4yi I'm fluent in English (actually with an Irish accent, since I lived there for a couple of years), but not in Spanish and French (mostly due to lack of opportunity to use the languages. As for Spanish, I can use it now in conversation and correspondence with a Cuban aquaintance, but while I have quite a big vocabluary, my grammar is very rusty. french is quite similar. but let me spend a year or so in a French- or Spanish speaking country nd I would be fluent.
yeah, ive had Latin for 6 years and at the end we were expected to translate basically any poems and literature from the time. After that we had emglish starting at grade 6 which has evolved into politics and social and/ or economic issues just on english. There were ä 3 years french too and had to be able to make a acceptable oral conversation the first year.
yep, what does that mean, in the US they only teach vocabulary in the first year and nothing about sentence structure? Or what?
On your point about learning a foreign language and the fact that it is immersive, and students having to learn to keep up. I know in continental Europe language is taught at primary schools and not starting in high school, so most kids should already have the fundamentals. It is those early experiences of language learning and a sturdy base of those fundamentals that enable the progression to a deeper level of learning.
only true for few Bundesländer. Language lessons in primary school are a joke. Just be prepared to husstle if you are going to a Gymnasium in Germany - success is your responsibility. If you are failing (I know many do fail in the early Grades bc they chose to learn Latin or several languages so they have less free time) you will have to change schools.
That is true, but only for English classes. In a German "Gymnasium", it is required for the students to learn a second foreign language (usually French, Spanish or Latin) starting from 6th or 7th grade and at least until the start of "Oberstufe" (which is 10th or 11th grade). So we have 4 years of language learning in the second foreign language, with at least 4 periods every week, and the teacher usually only speaks that language in class. (Note that this only counts for the "Gymnasium", but actually nowadays most students go to Gymnasium and not to the other school forms that we have.)
When I started high school in the UK I had to study French for 3 years. It wasn't the immersive experience discussed here, the teachers spoke English and translated. We were taught grammar and nouns but no rules about pronunciation. The class moved along too fast and there was (in my opinion) no support for those that struggled and dropped behind. By a few weeks into the first term I was totally alienated to the idea of French and for that matter any other language learning. It was 3 years of hell and I dropped French at the first opportunity.
I would like to be multilingual, I travelled in Europe a reasonable amount and was envious of those people who were multilingual, I just think that the way language is taught needs to fit the different learning abilities of the student body so as not to exclude a proportion. I know that I wasn't the only person struggling with the subject.
@@silviav.2660 6th to 10th is actually 5 years
(6,7,8,9,10) so it would be 5 or more year's. I am pretty sure you have to learn the language starting 6th (G8). At least we had to. And you could then learn another (3rd) language too. My sister's school did also give the students the option to learn Italian in 6th grade. Not to mention all the electable subjects (Wahlfächer?) you can learn like Chinese, old Greek, Arabic, Portuguese, Russian, Japanese etc. Depending on the school.
@@florentinenice9146 uhm no. in the 10th class you can rechoose your subjects. in my school we had to choose latin or french in 6th grade and in 10th we choose to not continue those languages and/or to choose a new one like Italian. so it is 4 years
At the Gymnasium I went to, the "normal" school day started at like 7:55 am. During 5th and 6th grade, there were 5 lessons á 45 minutes (sometimes also 90 minute blocks). There was a 10 minute breakfast break and a 60 minute "break" which was divided into 3x 20 minutes for lunch, homework and freetime in the schoolyard.
Food could be purchased by order (like 2-3€ each day, you could pick from 3 complete dishes 1 month in advance), so they had an external cuisine/ company prepare the meals and bring them to school. And you could also buy snacks at school or just bring your own food.
As the cafeteria was really small back then, this 1 hour was for 5th and 6th graders only, the others had to eat ahead (usually 12 to 0:30 am) or after school. This resulted in most students above 5th or 6th grade not going to the cafeteria at all.
From 5th to 10th grade, the usual school day ended at 3:15 pm (sometimes also 1:25 or 2:15 pm).
In 11th and 12th grade though we had "Kurse" (courses) for which you wouldn't just switch the classrooms, but also the classes mixed. Only for the very basic classes like German and maths you were with your "actual" classmates, otherwise the people varied according to which courses they chose.
The daily schedule was pretty much equal to the years before, but like once or twice a week - and again dependent on which courses you chose - we had a "0. Stunde" (a "lesson 0") which started at like 6:50 am.
Besides that, in the "Oberstufe" lessons were mostly packed into 90 minute blocks with a 10 minute breakfast break and a 30 minute lunch break.
After- school activities mostly took place between 15:15 (3:15 pm) and 16:10 (4:10 pm).
No students, Studenten, only pupils, Schüler at schools!
Biggest difference: no-one brings a gun to school!
That's right
Germany also used to have school shooters.
@@thiklpet 1 - 2 Persons. US has over 100 Times more
Well, but latley there are so many fights with knives in Germany and probably also brought to school.
The not switching rooms is probably Covid related. At my school we didn't switch classrooms while the stronger lockdowns, now we never have classes in the same rooms anymore though.
Actually, it‘s not COVID related at all!
Basically, from grades 5-10, you have a classroom that you really stay in with the same people for most lessons. All people from this class have the same schedule (but of course, the schedules from the different classes throughout the whole grade differ). You only switch rooms if you‘re taking different courses (for example, part of the students of class 7A are taking French alongside students of class 7B, the other ones are taking Spanish). Then you split up into new groups and switch classes. Also, if there‘s special equipment needed (for music, biology, chemistry etc.) you switch rooms, but there you stay with the same people.
It‘s different when you‘re in grades 11-12 or 12-13, though - there, you switch rooms a lot because all the lessons are split up into heaps of courses. Depending on the profile you elected, your schedule looks different than everyone else’s!
There may be differences between different schools and different regions in Germany, but this is the structure most schools use.
@@kbodychek it always depends on the school. In my school each teacher with an own class was designed a classroom, so when we weren’t kn lessons with our classteacher, we had to change rooms to the room of the other teachers and so on. Special rooms like for chemistry or biology are an exception of course.
@@kbodychek wir nicht wir hatten nur in der 5.klasse ein klassenzimmer.
We only had to switch classrooms for half of 9th grade but they then found out it doesn't really make sense, so the second half of 9th grade we stayed in our classroom (except for chemistry and physics). (Realschule)
And at technical secondary school (FOS) we never switched. We chose the subject when we enrolled to the school so everyone had the same classes (except when you were in a mixed religion class)
No, its not - that part is usual in germany.
With the exception of "special" classes like physics or chemistry.
We had only one general subject teacher everyone had to go to, which was because he was in a wheelchair and 90% of the classrooms were upstairs (There were elevatory, but the halways were narrow and usually filled with students, so hard to get through even if you had use of your legs...)
in my school we had classes in our classroom lieke math, history, german, english and so on. But like sports, arts, music, biology, physics and chemistry (+ some extra classes) we had to switch rooms too. (because they have the supplies needed there mostly)
The “Oberstufe” usually has their own room where they can hang out between free classes or breaks :)
Schön wärs gewesen 😂😂😂 das ist leider nicht immer so
For us it was the cafeteria of the tax office across the street. Students from grade 11 on were allowed to leave the school grounds during their breaks (we also had to do it because our school used some classrooms in a nearby school for the blind as we were running out of space). With the younger students it was a legal matter, as they had to be supervised by an adult.
For my school students from 10-12th grade were allowed to stay inside and we had in the entryway like 10 sofas each being able to seat 3-4 student. The thing is that were were at lest 150 students per grade xD
She looks very German
Of all nationalities, the greatest percentage of Americans have German ancestry.
Thought the same
:D I think you're the first who invented the word "Dumpfnudel" Love it! Great video! Always good to see your own world from a new perspective.
I was really surprised that you don't have breaks in the US. I live in Chile and we have 15 minutes between classes, plus the lunch break that's usually 45 minutes.
45 Minutes seems very short. I come from Switzerlad and lunch break is usually from around 11:50 to 13:30. Most students go home for lunch.
@@Leenapanther I usually took 30 minutes to eat and some kids that lived close also when home to eat, an hour would've been nicer to them probably, but that much time is kind of crazy to me hahaha what do you even do with that much time?
We started switching classrooms in the last two years, but we didn't have classes in our regular class like before: We chose our different subjects and had other classmates (and rooms) in each subjects. All in the 90s..
Hey Caroline, just found this video and its very interesting!
I myself was a german student in a Gymnasium till this year and I finally graduated. And I can tell you, the german Abitur is one hell of a ride… In what grade are you in? Usually there are two different systems within the Gymnasium, from 5th to 9/10th grade you have a classroom, your specific classmates and a classroom teacher. You stay in the room (except for sciences) , the teacher comes to you. Also its more common to have single 45 min classes after each other. In the other system, the „Oberstufe“, from 10/11th to 12/13th grade, you will only have subject courses, switch to different rooms and different teachers. Here, the subjects will be always paired together in two hours each, a „Block“ as we call it. At my school, we had a 15 min break between each Block for eating and switching the rooms. In the Oberstufe I often had 8 hour days, so these breaks were really important for my concentration.
In Germany though you can‘t say the schools are the same everywhere in the country, each state/Bundesland has a different rules and expectations with how a school should be and what the students need to learn. The Abitur in Bayern is known for being the most difficult, while the Abitur in Schleswig-Holstein is not as hard.
I hope you have a great time here! I will watch your videos :)
Thank you so much! And I’ll answer some of these questions in my next video :)
Really? We see the abitur as being rather easy for most parts of germany at least
@@freen773 It was "one hell of a ride" perhaps 30 years ago ... but today? Nahhh ...
Some years ago the final grade for the Abitur as set by a committee from the state education authority which visited each school and conducted an oral examination of each student, covering the classwork. It made, at least in Hessen, for a standardized system, with confidence in the uniformity of the degree.
From what state are you?
My Gymnasium is really relaxed with phones. We are allowed to use them in the breaks and also at the lessons. So its absolutely fine to pur the phone on the table in lessons.
And we also have an cafeteria, where we can buy Nuggets oder Pizza e.g. But also real food like fish with potatos or sth like that
1:15 This just depends on the school
I love the first point of the list because here in Portugal (where I’m from) it’s the same way! In Europe we don’t have a big culture of athleisure (spelling???) so most ppl dress “nice” for school!!
Ah well the school experience can be so different all over Germany. Mine is also already some years back, so i would not start to compare without having an hours long forth and back.... but i love to remember how i started playing drums because of a friend did, but we did not have a proper music room in our small school. It was a normal class room, mostly used by teachers for brakes and do some out of class work most of the time. We had two drum sets there, and some other instruments, but nothing like a big school can provide. Anyways, after a while my friend and i practiced there, teachers were listening, and started to bring their own instruments, and it developed to proper jam sessions over time. We even met at the afternoons, when the school actually was closed. And at some days, even on weekends, the school director who lived only a few houses away would let me in to practice playing drums for some hours alone. That was very cool, and mostly the only times i really enjoyed going to school, alone, and making noise... Haha
Welcome in Germany! Your experiences are very much connected with your specific school. In the Gymnasium my kids went, for example, there is a cafeteria since 2010. Telephone rules are established by the school, so they can be very different even in the same city. As well as the switching classes, or opening windows before or during the class. Every region in Germany has different ideas how school should be done and leave a lot of freedom to the school itself for the normal day managements.
I live in Austria and my sister was an exchange student in the rural US for a year in the 1990s. Her French teacher there had such a terrible American accent when speaking French that you could hardly understand her. But worse, she also required her students to speak the same way! When my sister came back to Austria, I had to practice the correct French accent with her because she'd often fall into "American French"...
Who cares
@@salmathecopt7969 obviously you, as you replied
The Gymnasium I was on in Germany had a great lunch-room, excellent kitchen with healthy food, several options which were different each day. Back in the day it cost a few Euros (maybe 4 DEM, which is little over 2 EUR) and fast food joints in the vicinity of the school offered their food for students at exactly the same price (while everyone else payed regular = higher prices). And yeah, smoking is considered an important "human right" in Germany, horrible and sad . . .
I was an exchange student through AFS in Schorndorf, Baden-Wurttemburg in 2017-2018! Your video made me really nostalgic for my time there! Enjoy it to the fullest! It will go by so much faster than you think, and the friends you make will be lifelong!
That’s amazing! Thank you!
Enjoy your stay. 🙂
Just a quick info that you might appreciate. - Plural of Gymnasium is Gymnasien.
As you will notice, you will learn a lot more in less time over here in general, and this not only in language classes, but in math and science classes too.
Because of the devided school system, it's possible to learn faster, and a lot more advanced stuff.
it's so interesting to hear about you experiences. I'm German, so I never thought any of that is strange. This video gave me more perspective, thank you!
In both of my US high schools, we had a short day once a week. On this day we usually had activities after school, like band or sports practice. A few of my schools also did not have AC, but this was many years ago. I did experience the same thing with language learning in the US. I took two years of Spanish and did not learn much even though I received high marks.
In my school we do actually switch classrooms every time or almost every time. Every 45 minutes we have a 5 minute break which is either there to just chill or to switch your room if you have to and after second and after the fourth period we have a 20/25 minute break which is like lunch break, on the campus. And after that it’s all very wobbly wobbly with the time and breaks because sometimes you have like two free periods and then another one and then it’s just chaotic usually
In the late 1990s die "Raucherecke" was a very important place at our school. In Germany there's a tradition that students on the way to the exams were treated as adults. All students older than 16 and being 11th -13th grade (the last 2.5 years on the way to the Abitur) were allowed to smoke in the "Raucherecke". Also Theachers. The "MSS-Parties" were also a very important institution. These parties were organised by all students of 13th grade for earning money to pay the bills for the prom and everything after the prom. These parties took place in a local club and yes, there were a lot of teachers, and yes, beer was cheap. "Everthing after the prom" means that you finish school on wednesday, friday is prom night ("Abi-Ball") and saturday till there´s no beer and no food left you´re having fun on a camp site. Sleeping in tents, barberque and beer and everything else. Back in those days you finished exams aroung 24th of june. Party until 30th june, starting military service 1st july...(Germany stopped conscription in 2011). The first day basic training was funny...Around 70 % of the draftees finished "Abitur" and were in a bad condition....
Would you like to change the back of the picture nicely, I'll delete the back of your picture nicely, you hired me
background removal: file format is png, jpeg,
• Model photo background removal
• Pure white background
• Remove background
you can hire me
What you're describing is so close to my experience in a swiss Gymnasium (I'm swiss myself)! I graduated in 2016, so not that long ago. Admittedly is was a private school and smaller than other Gymnasiums in Switzerland, so traditions are generally easier to uphold. In Switzerland the smoking an (beer) drinking age (or, when you're allowed to buy cigarettes) is also still 16.
@@theRealJohnnyG. what do you mean 😂
In Germany you switch the classroom every lesson, because you often have lessons in subject-specific rooms (like biology, physics or chemie). So we also need the break for going to the other room.
And of course we have a lunch room and a school kitchen
"Of course" - na also das ist schon noch eine neuere Entwicklung :D
Vor 10 Jahren noch hatte das fast keine weiterführende Schule - Gesamtschulen ausgenommen. Ich habe 2010 Abi gemacht. Da wurde es gerade umgebaut auf dem Schulgelände und eine Mensa gab es erst für die Unterstufe. In meiner Schulzeit gab es nur den Kiosk des Hausmeisters... mit Frikadellenbrötchen oder Schokoriegeln. Und es gab auch keinen Ganztag. Selbst in der Oberstufe war spätestens nach der 7. Stunde um 14.05 Uhr Schluss. Ausgenommen den nachmittäglichen Sportkurs oder wenn jemand einen Zusatzkurs belegen musste (Sowi/Geschichte). Mit G8 sah das schon anders aus. Und an Gesamtschulen gab es immer schon Langtage, wo dann aber am Nachmittag oft Hausaufgabenbetreuung, AGs oder sonst was stattfanden, nicht unbedingt reguläre Mathestunden. Eine wirkliche Mittagspause und auch die Möglichkeit eines Mittagessens jedenfalls gibt es soo lange noch nicht flächendeckend...
It's chemistry not chemie :)
Bin zwar aus Österreich, aber ich hatte auch erst auf der Uni eine Mensa. Im Gym gabs bei uns auch nur so einen kleinen Kiosk mit ein paar Tischen, aber nicht genug für sie ganze Schule.
@@Memories_in_Chains Unless you're British.
Thats how it was when I was in Jr. high and high school in America. Each class had its own room. Only in elementary did you spend the whole day in one room.
I learned French the same way- a Frenchman, who gave us all French surnames. all addressed as monsieur: Le Prix (me) Mr La Cloche (Bell) Mr Fils de Richard (Richardson) and from the moment we entered the class, everything was discussed and conveyed in French, and it worked wonders as nobody could "hide". It makes the brain operate totally in the language. Many years later, i still converse with friends in French, read in French sometimes, and enjoy maintaining the links and visits to France.
Wow! I really enjoyed this. I'm 60 years old now and I was an exchange student in Germany at a Gymnasium for one year in the early 80s. Not much has changed. Unfortunately the kids smoking, with everything that we know today about how bad smoking is for your health, was and is mind boggling that an educated population would still be smoking so much in 2021.
I am amazed that Germany , a very health orientated country , is still allowing smoking in public places. It has been banned in britain for many years indoors in public places , uncluding restaurants. One of my sons smokes , and he says that the looks he gets from the 82% who do not smoke (including me) makes him feel lik e a criminal. In High Schools , students and teachers are not allowed to smoke at all in hospitals they give in -patients nicotene patches as smoking is not allowed even in hospital grounds. In Britain the air is free from cigarette smoke ,
The smoking thing usually only is allowed when you’re over 18. When under 18, teachers will require a paper from your parents, so that it’s clear that your parents know that you’re harming yourself.
I have been living in Germany for seven years so far (this time). But I have never had any experiences with the education system. Thanks very much for this video! I hope you're enjoying your time here!
This video randomly popped up on my feed and I just had to watch. But interestingly enough, I studied abroad in Heidelberg for college from 2006-2009. It was my first time in Germany and I basically did it on a whim with little more than 2 months preparation. It was initially supposed to be for a semester and I ended up staying for 3 years. I'll be honest, it was the best decision I'd ever made. Enjoy your time in Germany and stay away from the Lucky Strikes and Stella's.
When I was in high school (40 years ago) we had specialised classrooms for things like biology, chemistry physics, arts and music. The ones for the sciences were actually labs, where you could do experiments and had store rooms for chemicals and equipment, and the one for arts had work benches and cabinets for supplies, we also had a printing press in there. And as for music, one wouldn't expect the teacher to lug a grand piano around. So there was a special classroom just for music, with an attached closet for musical instruments.
That’s so cool!
Well I went to elementary and highschool from mid 90's to mid '00 and I second that... All the more specialized subjects that need special equipment etc had their own rooms which you would go to in your selected class band (let's call it that) and German, Math, English, Politics, History you get the gist were in our designated class rooms ... also Religion was split into catholic or protestant or ethics/philosophy (for non christians or everyone who didn't want to learn about religion)
Back in the seventies, I was invited to spend a day at Gymnasium with a neighbor of my grandparents. Smoking students had an ashtray at their desks and during lunch break we went to the local wirtschaft (pub) to have a beer and bratwurst.
As a German I really love the way you pronounce _Gymnasium_.
Its very close to native speaking, but also unique :)
Hi Caroline, smokers are actually on the decline in Germany. I am amazed that you noticed that teenagers in particular seem to be smoking more and more again. It was different a few years ago.
From my own school I can say that it‘s not necessarily that many people smoke, but the ones that do, do it very openly (and as she mentioned sometimes alongside the teachers). I think that might be what she picked up on?
The totala mount of smokers is on the decline, but if you look at the percentage conpared to the US there are way more smokers in Europe in general. (Hint Germany is the only 1st world country allowing tabacco advertisment on the streets/bilboards). I smoked as a teen and in my Gymnasium we had to typical smoker spots. One was changing all the time, since the teachers didn't tolerate smoking for under 16yo, the other been at the the same gate all the the time, where the smokers from the Oberstufe (grade 10-12 or 11-13, depending on your state) smoked, often with the teachers. I never heard of smoking in the toilets in Germany though. It also doesn't make sense to me, if you can just leave the school ground/area where your school makes the rules.
Vaping wasn't a thing 10 years ago, when I grafuated, but I also don't see a lot of teens smoke anyway. Which I can understand, since inhaling the smoke of any addictive chemical isn't a good habit to pick up.
Due to Covid and the lockdowns, stress etc. there´s a rise in smokers again.
There are too many of these braindead smoking people, not only in schools, but everywhere. I cant stand to live in Germany anymore and be constantly annoyed by braindeads. Moving out is already in progress.
I’ve noticed that about Germany as well. I often wonder why there are so many smokers around - given how health-conscious they always think themselves to be. You see so many people outside and living active lifestyles, yet nearly every teen or especially tween, seems to smoke. It’s really weird.
I'm way past high school so I can't really relate, but I am impressed that you traveled across the world to get a new school experience. I wish I had done that back in school.
I’m studying in a Slovene gymnasium and I’d say that German schools are pretty similar to ours.
In my school, classes start at 7: 10(ofc, it depends on a school) and usually last till around 12: 45(6 hours), 13: 35(7 hours) or 14: 25(8 hours). But, every other Thursday, my first class starts 2 hours later than usual(our class is divided into two groups at that subject for easier work).
In normal conditions we would switch classrooms but because of COVID we have a designated classroom in which we stay through all lessons. Our school offers lunches as well but because we don’t have a kitchen, we’ve to walk to a nearby primary school in which we also eat(it’s only like 100 meters away so it’s not a big deal)
Our main break lasts one school hour(45 mins) while breaks between lessons only last 5 minutes(except when we have double sessions and work the same as in Germany)
About phones, our school allows phones through breaks. You’re supposed to have your phone silent or turned off during classes but if it accidentally goes off, professors usually don’t cause a big deal about it(unlike in Slovene primary schools)
7:10? Thats even worse than ours
American living here for 12 years. I watched some videos over the years, from others, to get an idea of their experiences.
Most were cringe level and I was hesitant to watch another. To my surprise you had great takes and you seemed comfortable
with the changes. Thanks for the positive review and hope you have FUN while you are here. ;)
It's just very pleasant to listen to you. I used this to wind down, although my school days have been over for some time xD
I noticed the smoking culture as well in Germany and it does seem to be out of hand for a visitor. We went to Zugspitze and we really had to find places where we werent smelling the smoke. It just sucks that people will go all the way up and not enjoy the fresh air.
Smoking rates absolutely plummeted during the last 20 years though. When today's teenagers with their low smoking rates will be in their 30s or 40s, the teens of their time probably won't smoke at all. This process just happened earlier in the US and is already completed, basically.
But Germans don't vape as much which is good considering vapes, especially the ones that are legal in the US, can be just as damaging if not more damaging than cigarettes
It's similar here in Slovenia 😊 They do say we are using "German school system". And for changing classrooms: We currently don't change classrooms, because of the virus, but usually we change them for every class. Oh and we do have a cafeteria or at least special place to eat lunch.
In my school we switch classrooms for different classes. Every teacher has an own classroom which they can also decorate and the students go to the teacher‘s room. We also have a cafeteria where we can sit down to eat. But unfortunately the cafeteria is closed because of covid and now we only have a kiosk :(
Hi, jenni
I am looking for text friend. I want to improve my English level. Would you like to be friends with me?
Usually, we have Cafeterias where you can buy DOnuts, Bretzels, Tea, Coffee etc. and another area where you have to register yourself and pay a monthly/ yearly subscribtion and you'll get lunch + 1 dessert daily (unlimited refill). At least it was like that in my schools, though I have to say i went to a private elementary - middle school before i switched to a public school. but my new school still has those things (js with fewer options to choose from daily)
In Belgium phone rules are very strict! And in secondary school clothing rules too! There are even some schools that keep a school uniform ! Food (lunch ) is also regulated ; not all items are allowed (certainly no warm items). And there is no smoking at or near the school! Beer is not so strict ;-) I do not have numbers but I do belief there is less smoking over all in Belgium.
This sounds very similar to Russian school! We have 5-10 minute breaks after each 50 minute lesson and we stay in one class for most of the time, so instead of there being a math classroom, history classroom, etc. we have a class 7a room, a class 10b room.
yes exactly!!! i’m russian and my school works the same!! Я из екатеринбурга:)
Well, Smoking is "common" under teenagers, bacause, as I know, on every class ther is someone, who is Smoking cigarrets, but all in all only a few are smoking.
"As Long As We Weren't Calling Someone." 🙏
As being born and educated in Germany (Gymnasium and University of Applied Sciences), I'd like to point out that "Gymnasium" in Germany is more of an equivalent to a College Prep school in the US.
It's a different form of high school, which prepares for an academic career and university. There is a comparison of the abitur to something close to an associates degree in the US. When students graduate from the Gymnasium with the Abitur, they can enter university and chose their degree major from the beginning, while the US high school student is entering college and the first two years (4 semester) are covering what you learn in the Gymnasium, before you chose your major.
It depends on the school. Each school has its own rules. You are only allowed to smoke on school grounds, if you are old enough, and even then it depends on the school rules. Mobile phones aren't allowed during the lessons and can get confiscated. In my middle school I had to switch rooms.
I haven't had a schedule like that since elementary school, it's so short :0
From 5th grade, we had afternoon lessons 4 days a week (usually til 3:30 pm) and then til 5 or 6 pm in higher grades.
Oh no :D
Even in the last grades, aged 17 or so, I mostly finished around 1 or 2 pm. Except sports lessons in the afternoon. But there was no lunch breaks, no longer breaks in between... a lesson of 45 minutes is common in Germany. After each you got 5 minutes as a break. Sometimes you stay in your classroom and the teacher changes, so you can chat and such. Sometimes you have to change rooms, so the break is needed for that. Every two lessons there is a larger break of 15 minutes and you have to leave the classroom and be outside on the schoolyard for this. A regular schoolday counts 6 lessons, sometimes 7. Including two of those longer breaks. But no lunch break. That changed for most schools some years ago, so they offer a lunch and also end later in the afternoon. I'd say maximum at 4 pm though. A longer schoolday is reserved for the college students in some cases or for voluntary activities like a sports club or choir or acting class.
6:29
“People will mostly vape in the bathrooms”
LOLLLLL TRUUU
It´s funny to find sooo many similarities with school in Spain. Are you planning on posting a vlog, Caroline?
Yeah! I’ll probably do some travel blogs soon. Stay tuned!
@@carolineruby I will!!
In my Gymnasium, you can take out your phone in class and break from 9th to 12th grade. We also have something called "Mittagsbänder" where you can do activities like watching movies, go out, study for exams, play table tennis etc..
As a German guy who did an exchange in the US this is very interesting to me.
I would really be interested on how you will see difference’s in ours behavior. Like are people more open, funny, ambitious, plans for having a family and stuff.
Sheeesh
1:35 for some classes you change room
You're class should be really happy with this schedule, in my school we had at least one day a week until 16:15 since 6.grade, later even school days from 7:00 to 17:00
Is it even allowed to teach kids from 7:00? I've never heard of it.
Sounds familiar. In grade 12 my schoolday on Friday was from 7:40 to somewhat after 5pm. I did have third and fourth period off....however it was boring because there wasn't much too do during this spare time. I eventually used it for my motorbiking classes sometimes. We also had school til at least 03:30 once a week since grade 5 and later one it was rather normal. We barely got out of school at 1pm. And I had 13 years. The younger ones with Abi after 12 years had even worse schedules.
@@celinesiebert4858 yes, its the 0. lesson. in my school that lesson was sometimes used when teacher and students agreed to have it in the early morning instead of the 9/10th lesson on a friday
My "Gymnasium" always started at 7 in the morning...
1:24 thats actually a thing in Germany aswell ! We had to switch rooms aswell for like Biology or Physics or Chemie and music :D
hey, I'm from Berlin and my school is really different than yours. I also know other schools and just wanted to add that the schools are all so different here (in Germany). The rules are so different depending on the school. The Gymnasiums are in general different than the Sekundarschulen.The Gymnasiums are stricter and more intense than others. For example: I am changing clases and we do have a cafeteria.
really love your videos
Very well done video! You dont speek to fast like many language video makers do. You also speak clearly, so keep up the great work! )
Hope it’s going well for you! I can’t wait so see you when u come back with your lil German accent😍
Thank you so much! Yes so excited to be a German girly😋😋
Super interesting, thanks for sharing! I’ve always wanted to visit Germany
Thank you so much! You definitely should, it’s a beautiful country :)
Love two things….first, the teachers change rooms, NOT the students !! Second, the different class day schedules and designated breaks !! We should adopt those practices here in the US.
...teachers changing rooms means the classrooms are broken, vandalized, without material or only a little. Teachers teach at least 2 to 3 subjects in different grades from grade 5 to 13.
Weird - my American high school was so much stricter on phones (they collect them every morning - you have to hand it in to get in the door) whereas in Germany, it was just kinda required to not use your phone and students just try not to get caught. Hope you’re enjoying your year!
What a great experience! The fact that you uploaded this video could be helpful to people who are also going on an exchange to Germany. I could also notice that german schools are very similar to those in my country, Argentina. Greetings!😁
In Germany you are not allowed to smoke under the age of 18 and my school for example has a very strict policy abt that so if you see students smoking outside of the school (on the street) they are probably over 18 because underaged students would not do that publicly. Drinking however is a different topic.
Also auf meiner Schule haben wir einen extra Raucherbereich und der ist immer rappelvoll, ist auch egal wie alt du bist
I think thats interesting in my school for example no one smokes during school we have no area or something and even outsight in the City where we sometimes go during break I see no one smoke and as far as I know for us it is pretty out
And we are the oldest for us Smoking is something unhealthy and not very accepted
just because it's not allowed doesn't mean nobody does it. at my school smoking started around the age of 15. because only 18 year olds are legally allowed to smoke, they were the only ones permitted in the raucherecke, which meant that it was only the younger kids who were smoking outside the school grounds
the strict phone rule is actually pretty rare in germany like at my school or the one my friend goes to, nobody cares if you have your phone out 🥰
I graduated a couple of years ago but literally every school I know was so strict concerning this matter. Once I went back to my school after I graduated to get some documents and a teacher saw my phone literally just in my hand and nearly kicked me out like wth I don't even go here😂
@@Cupcakiiiii i never really heard of phones getting taken away at school in germany lol i guess it’s just where i live then
Uh…I don‘t know where in Germany you are, but in my area phones being „banned“ at school is the standard.
@@samiraansari5686 im from nrw and i know quite a few people who go to schools in different areas and none of their schools have strict rules about phones but i dont know about any other area so i guess its kind of mixed
It used to be really strict in almost all schools back in my day in the 2000s. At least everyone I ever talk to about it had the same experience. However, at least in my old school parents complained about teachers taking phones away and now they are no longer allowed to do it and without a good way of enforcing the rule, it has been getting weaker and weaker.
Hi Caroline, I had your video in my recommendations and as a German, I find it really interesting to get to know your perspective in our school system here! I've got a question about the American system: You said, you always have the same subjects each day for half a year, and then they will switch. And you usually have 4 subjects each day. Does that mean that each day, you will have for example Biology in first period and Social Studies in last period? To me, from a pedagogical perspective that does not sound so good, as then, kids would probably start to hate the subject that they have at the end of the school day more, as then they are tired already. Is it like that? Here in Germany, we usually make sure that a subject ist not being taught only in the last periods. For example, if you have 4 periods of Math per week, and two of them are on Monday in 5th/6th period, the other two will be on another day in an earlier time slot, as students are much more likely to be more tired and lose motivation at the end of the school day.
It’s exactly like that in the US, I don’t think it’s good for the best learning opportunities, but that’s how it is
We had block schedule so you took 4 classes called "A" day Monday Wednesday and Friday then 4 other classes on "B" day Tuesday and thrusday if the week before had 3 "b" days then the next week had "2" b days and so the days switched from you taking your "b" day classes 3 times or 2 times and you ended up visiting every one of your 8 classes every other day for 1.5 hours each. Or 4 classes a school day. it made the classes feel like they lasted forever and you really only did one lesson plan or as much work as if you only had a standard time of 45 mins and just had a ton of time you couldn't leave but had nothing to do. Then once you get to the last two years you can apply for work program and if you have a job and enough credits you can do 1/2 day of school from 8am-12pm or 11am-3pm so just two classes would be a half day and you would always have your last class of "a" day be the last class of all "a" days and same with "b" day always having the same "b" class in the same time each"b" b day
It is important to realize that, like in Germany, not all U.S. schools do things the same way. Schedules and other practices vary widely from district to district, and state to state.
it too much work to customize school schedules like that lol. Remember Americans are lazy haha
The room thing is different in many schools. In my school we change the room and the teacher, but another school in the same city, they don't change the room often, they change the teachers.
(I've always gone to school in Germany)
The thing is, you can't say "German School" the systemsmare quite different in every state. For example, in my state, we will also change the rooms not the teachers and will also only have Short brakes in between to change rooms. It just depends on where in Germany you are
And yet you say “the US” even though the school systems in the different states are much more different than the ones between the Bundesländer
One thing I definitely find very interesting is that you only have half of your subjects for half a year. I've never thought something like that might exist. How does it feel if you haven't heard anything about a subject for half a year and starting with it again?
Dear caroline, I am a Geman student in grade 6, learning English. I like the way you speak, I understand you very well, because you speak clearly. Thanks, I learn a lot from you! Please keep up the good work!
Interesting I had to change my rooms for every subject, seems like its very different on many parts in Germany. I also had a cafeteria :)
It really depends on the school. In Germany each school ist different and has an other system. Some schools have a cafetheria and some don't. Some schools have longer lunchbreaks or rules like you can stay in classroom while breaks or you have to go outside. We also have special rooms for each class. But yeah, it's common to stay in one room but especially for Natural Sciences Subjects we have extra rooms.
Interesting side by side comparison. About the classes, you talked about 5:15 : Interesting concept of having a small amount of classes for the first half of the year and then switching them. I have heard that schools here in Berlin are trying a similar concept. Instead of having two hours of e.g. chemistry per week, you have like six hours per week but no physics or biology. And the week after, it swaps. The reason behind is, that you can teach a lot more knowledge in a row of six hours per week instead of a double hour per week. Unfortunately, I hadn't this concept during my school time.
Cool video! Loved how it was really simple and got to the point, I'd definetly watch more of these!
0:59 Almost nobody in Germany has air conditioning.
Wait? You have no breaks in between classes in the US???
I mean my school day goes like this:
Each lesson is 45 minutes
School starts at 7:45
Than:
1. lesson
5-minute-break
2. lesson
20-minute-break
3. lesson
5-minute-break
4.lesson
15-minute-break
5. lesson
5-minute-break
6. lesson
Either end of school day
Or 45 minute lunch break
Two times 45 minute lesson that don't actually have a break in between but most teachers let us have one for five minutes.
End of school day
But those 5-minute-breaks are not at every school, some schools don't do that and some schools have one big 35 minute break during the school day instead of those two breaks.
I could never get through the school day without breaks in between
How do you do that???
Wart mal ab bist du in die Oberstufe kommst . Da musst du an manchen Orten auch auf die große Pause verzichten
@@-Lazy
Stimmt, komme jetzt in die 11te.
Aber dafür fallen in der Oberstufe zwischen den Kursen oft Stunden aus. Hoffe ich jedenfalls 😅
You had no cafeteria that’s crazy. I couldn’t imagine my school without one. 😱
When you are from germany and this video is in your recommandations…
„I want to watch it!“ O_O