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  1. Jan 2, 2024 · Schools in Japan often open at, or shortly after, 8:00 am, with students arriving between 8:00 and 8:30 am. All levels of schools have six periods per day, with the first period usually starting after 8:30am. In Japanese elementary school, each period is 45 minutes, while in junior high and high school, each period is 50 minutes, with a small ...

    • Ellen Freeman
    • Dress Code. While only about 20 percent of public schools in the U.S. require uniforms, nearly all Japanese public school students suit up from junior high school on.
    • No Janitors. You won’t find a janitor in any Japanese school. Instead, industrious students and teachers roll up their sleeves and spend a few minutes every day mopping the floors, clapping erasers, and even scrubbing the toilets.
    • No Substitutes. Leaving 30 teenagers unsupervised in a classroom would be the stuff of nightmares in an American high school, but that’s exactly what happens when a teacher calls in sick in Japan.
    • The Sasumata. Even in a country as safe as Japan, schools have to prepare themselves for the possibility of a violent intruder. Enter the sasumata: an aluminum pole with two curved prongs at one end which is adapted from an ancient samurai weapon—and found today hanging in schools all across Japan.
  2. Aug 21, 2023 · Yokohama, JAPAN – As each new school year begins, students worldwide likely wonder what school is like on the other side of the globe. Familiar classroom settings and routines can feel like just a small piece of the puzzle, a microcosm of the vast and diverse educational landscapes that span continents. Stepping into Kanagawa Sogo […]

  3. Jun 10, 2024 · A significant difference between schools in Japan and America is that schools across Japan don’t have janitors. Instead, students spend 10-15 minutes cleaning the school at the end of the school day, with each class responsible for cleaning its own classroom and two other places in the school, for example; the nurse’s office and the library.

    • The School Year. The American School Year. Most schools in the west begin their school terms in September after a long summer break, with the school year running from September to May or June.
    • Holidays. American schools definitely carry the advantage here (if you’re asking the kids of course) since they get more holidays than schools in Japan.
    • Extra curriculars. It would seem that the approach to extra-curricular activities is different too, according to most students who have had experience with both.
    • Uniform (and slippers) In Japanese public schools and American school kids can wear their own casual clothes, but starting in Junior school, Japanese kids must wear a uniform, while most public schools in America have no uniforms at all.
  4. Apr 7, 2020 · Well, that scene was accurate. Uwabaki are Japanese slippers meant for homes, offices, and buildings where outside shoes aren’t allowed. Japanese schools also don’t allow street shoes inside classrooms, so students have to use the slippers to get in. This custom is only apparent in the country and is utterly uncommon for western schools. 5.

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  6. At this point although the Japanese system is a bit odd to us westerns, Japan is ranked #2 in schools in education in the world (from 2014) just under South Korea, whereas America was ranked #14. So either way you want to look at it, Japanese students and the way they teach seem to be working much better then the American standards.

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