miércoles, 18 de enero de 2017

Japan vs America

I went to school in America. My knowledge of Japanese schools is from the massive amount of pop culture media that is about schools and a some years I was working over there.

So in the America. Students rotate classrooms and the teacher stays put. The classroom is basically the teacher's office also. If a student has a homeroom at his or her school. They might only ever be at homeroom a few times a year. Schools have a cafeteria the students have to use. All the students and teachers are quickly rotated through the cafeteria during a few lunch periods. students don't do any cleaning, unless they really trash the place the teacher makes them as punishment. Uniforms at public schools are rare, though dress codes are more likely. large fleets of school buses, almost no walkers or bikers, student's driving them selves, and lots of parents' cars. massive schools with 1000 or more students, covering huge areas.

In Japan the teachers rotate classrooms and the students stay put in their homeroom. Teachers have a desk in a large office with all the other teachers. The students' homeroom teacher will also be teaching them a subject the entire school year. only specialized classes like gym have the students out of their homeroom. students eat lunch in their classroom. sometimes students have to help prepare the meal. students clean their homeroom after lunch and at the end of the day. uniforms are very likely, especially in high and middle school grades. no school buses unless kindergarten or preschool. students walk, bike, public transit, or parents to school. student pop in the lower hundreds, smaller schools, more schools, covering a smaller area, and sometimes students don't live anywhere near the school.

now which do think is better? maybe you just prefer some features of both?



Submitted January 18, 2017 at 03:28PM by sl600rt http://ift.tt/2iKK4iw

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