My Japanese Education

One day, even though I had plans to hang out with my friends Johnny Depp and Orlando Bloom, Professor Anderson gave me some homework: “Make one million sentences in English.” About that time, they both of my star friends were really busy filming the “Pirates of the Caribbean,” so it was my only chance to go out with them both together at the same time. Nevertheless, I chose to do my homework instead of going out because I was so diligent. I am still proud of the moment I made that decision.

johnnybloom(My Ideal Guy: (Johnny Depp + Orlando Bloom)/2 drawn by Mami)

This sounds like a dream, doesn’t it? I wish this was true, but unfortunately not…

“Tell me about your greatest moment as a student.” That was my homework from the ESL school that I used to go to. As you can probably tell, I wasn’t particularly ‘diligent’ and that is why I made up a silly short story for my homework. Getting a high grade or making a great presentation could be thought of as a “great moment” for most students, but honestly I couldn’t come up with any good examples at the time no matter how much I thought about it.

Education is often analyzed in terms of outcomes, results, or as a process. But here I would like to put this assumption aside, and just concentrate on the experience itself, specifically in Japan. Wouldn’t you like to know what it is like?

Educational system in Japan

japanese-schoolgirl

Japanese Schoolgirl photo by Shutterstock

In Japan, the educational system in is the same as it is where I am now (Canada).

6 years of elementary school
3 years of junior high school
3 years of high school
4 years of university

This was actually reformed after WWII from the old 6-5-3-3 system to what you see above. Of these years of education, high school and university are not mandatory, though high school enrollment is over 96% nationwide in nearly all cities of Japan. Around 46% of Japanese high school graduates go on to college or university.

Most schools operate on a three-term system with the academic year starting in April when the cherry blossom bloom, and end in March of the following year. So in March there is a graduation ceremony, and I remember a lot of students were crying because of hay fever creating a very grave atmosphere.

There are some people who claim that Japan should change the school-year system to be the same as North America, because this difference sometimes causes inconveniences to students who wish to study abroad in places such as the US, Canada, and so on. The same problem would happen to foreigners who wish to study in Japan as well. They graduate from their school in June or July, but have to wait until April to go to a Japanese school.

Personally I would be a little sad if the Japanese school-year system was changed. It’s such a beautiful moment to say goodbye to your friends underneath the cherry blossoms in full bloom.There are so many good songs about graduation and cherry blossoms, too, and they would all be ruined! Although I understand the student side of perspective, I’d like them to leave that system as a Japanese culture.

「さくら(独唱)」/森山直太朗

卒園式の歌(さよなら僕たちの幼稚園) 号泣

Too Many Study Hours

school-girl2

Japanese Schoolgirl photo by Shutterstock

Other than the lower grades of elementary school, an average school day on weekdays in Japan is seven to eight hours depending on the school and what grade you’re in. That’s one of the longest school days in the world! Despite this, a student’s studying doesn’t usually finish even after school lets out. Not only do they have drills and other homework after school, but there’s also extra classes to attend at their public schools or at private “cram schools” known as 塾 (じゅく/juku). Especially with junior high and high school students, much extra time outside of regular school is spent studying and preparing for their entrance examinations. Even during vacations (six weeks in the summer and two weeks for both winter and spring) there is often homework to be done and jukus to attend. Hours outside of school hours are spent at juku.

If my memory serves me correctly, I started going to a cram school in my third grade of elementary school. I still remember when we had a “New Year’s Eve all-night studying (年越し徹夜勉強会:としこしてつやべんきょうかい/toshikoshi-testuya-benkyoukai)” event in my fifth grade. Teachers encouraged us not to fall asleep but to keep studying until the morning. It would have been very fun to stay up later with friends, if only we weren’t studying. However, 初日の出 (hatsu-hinode), which means “the new year sunrise,” was quite memorable and made everyone’s new year resolution the same: achieve better grades and study hard. I found it pretty fun at first, because teachers actually prepared a little games for us, too. However, maybe around one o’clock, my eyelids started getting more and more heavy. I tried to study but couldn’t concentrate on it anymore and I doubt that it was only me. It wasn’t a efficient way to study at all. It was all about discipline.

Although studying itself is good for everyone, studying too much can make people stressed out. Therefore, if I could change the Japanese school system, I would remove the big entrance examinations and cut down the amount of private school education, because I think that is an overload of work for children. Second only to bullying, the number of children committing suicide due to “anxiety for the future” is increasing. Most of this is due to worry about how one will perform on examinations.

Japanese Classroom System

japanese-classroom

Japanese Classroom photo by Shutterstock

I was surprised that many schools in Canada don’t seem to have fixed classrooms because in Japan every class has its own fixed classroom. In most cases in Japan, the students take all the courses in the same classroom with the same classmates, except for practical trainings and laboratory works. In my case, grades 3-4 and grades 5-6 were 2-year fixed classrooms, though it’s usually just a 1-year fixed classroom system.

In elementary school, one teacher teaches all the subjects in each class, whereas the teacher changes depending on a subject in junior high and high school. Instead of the students moving around to the teachers, the teachers move around to the student (besides the exceptions I mentioned earlier).

Another thing that’s different about the Japanese classroom system is that most elementary and/or junior high schools provide lunches on a standardized menus known as the 給食 (きゅうしょく / kyuushoku). The students are all divided into groups called 班 (はん / han). With lunch, this is important because one han is the 給食当番 (きゅうしょくとうばん / kyuushoku-touban). This particular han’s job is to take responsibility for the 給食. They pick up their classmates’ lunches in the school kitchen / lunch delivery area, carry the lunches to the classroom, serve their fellow classmates, makes sure that the food settles down into each kids’ stomachs, and then carries everything back. There is usually about a week rotation for which each han is the 給食当番.

If you’re not on the lunch duty han, your han could be doing something else that’s helpful. For example, students in a Japanese school are responsible for doing the cleaning of their own school. Sometimes there is a han that takes on the duty of cleaning (掃除/そうじ/souji), and they are known as the 掃除当番 (そうじとうばん / soujitouban). I think this is a great system because it is a good way for kids to learn how to socialize and be responsible. It also makes them more aware about causing a mess, since either they or a friend will have to clean it up!

School Uniforms

school-uniform

Some elementary schools and nearly all junior and high schools require their students to wear school uniforms. In my case, I wore school uniforms from kindergarten to high school.

Although some people believe that students, or at least high school students, should be able to choose the clothes they want to wear in school, I’d say that the best policy is that they wear uniforms because it’s more affordable and convenient.

Students tend to be very concerned about fashion and fitting in, so if they can choose the clothes they want to wear at school, they will prefer to wear brand-name clothing. For example, I remember that girls put a lot of money into brand-name socks or loose socks, which are a style of baggy socks. A pair of socks are sometimes 1,000-2,000yen. What a rip off! Thank goodness socks are the only brand-name thing for us to put on due to the uniform. If we were allowed to wear whatever we wanted, people would have certainly added hundreds of thousands of yen in clothing costs in a single year.

Also, uniforms are very convenient. Students do not need to worry about what they will wear to school. For instance, they do not need to consider what colors match with what, which style looks best, and what their classmate will think of their clothing. If everyone wears the same uniform, all of these choices are made in advance , so you don’t have to feel self conscious about your clothes. It saves more time for students and they can concentrate on studying more, though it just gave me longer sleep in the morning.

Furthermore, uniforms tend to be made of strong materials and they are easy to clean. I wore uniforms from kindergarten to high school and I had two uniforms for each warm season and cold season. When one was dirty I would wash it and wear the other one. This way my school clothes were always clean and ready to be worn. Uniforms are very practical!

They are not good all the time, though. As in many countries, uniform policy is strictly adhered to. There is a set length for skirts and teachers would take out tape measures to check. Japan has four seasons and its weather and temperature can vary greatly. However, uniforms usually only come in two varieties: winter and summer. Anything in-between can be a bit uncomfortable.

I also remember that my teacher wouldn’t allow me to put pants on because of the uniform policy, even though it was a freaking cold day. It might become less practical and ununified, but I think it would be good for students’ health to wear warmer clothes on cold days and lighter clothes on warmer days. Heck, let the boys wear skirts in the summer if they want to! I still believe that I have bad circulation because of the school uniforms.

A Great Difference

japanese-group

Photo by gwaar

A great difference between the Japanese school system and the North American School system is that the North American people respect and encourage independence whereas the Japanese people control individual responsibility by maintaining group rules. This explains one characteristic of Japanese social behavior (or maybe even Asian social behavior).

I realized this fact in ESL school in Canada. There were students from all over in the classroom: Saudis, Brazilians, Spanish, Chinese, Korean and me, Japanese. While the teacher was talking, myself, the Chinese, and the Korean students never butted in to ask questions or to announce our opinions. We waited until the teacher was completely finished, whereas students from other countries spoke out anytime.

We talked about this in the classroom once and figured out that this difference was caused by each country’s school system: in Asia, we mostly have lecture style lessons and in other countries, they spend a lot of time doing discussion style lessons.

A Joke

To finish this article, I wanted to end with a famous joke called “A Brilliant Japanese Student In An American Classroom.” I wonder if you find an odd bit in this joke… you got it? Yeah, the Japanese guy named Hideo speaks out too actively, doesn’t he? Which is pretty different from what you’ve learned about Japanese students from this article today. I don’t think the average Japanese student puts his/her hand up as much as this guy, either.

A BRILLIANT JAPANESE STUDENT IN AN AMERICAN CLASSROOM

It was the first day of school and a new student named Hideo, the son of a
Japanese businessman, entered the fourth grade. The teacher said, “Let’s
begin by reviewing some American history.”

Who said “Give me Liberty, or give me Death?” She saw a sea of blank faces,
except for Hideo, who had his hand up.

“Patrick Henry, 1775.” he said.

“Very good! Who said ‘Government of the people, by the people, for the people,
shall not perish from the earth’”? Again, no response except from Hideo:

“Abraham Lincoln, 1863.”, said Hideo

The teacher snapped at the class, “Class, you should be ashamed. Hideo, who is
new to our country, knows more about its history than you do.”

She heard a loud whisper: “F-k the Japanese.”

“Who said that?” she demanded.

Hideo put his hand up. “Lee Iacocca, 1982.”

At that point, a student in the back said, “I’m gonna puke.”

The teacher glares and asks “All right! Now, who said that?”

Again, Hideo says, “George Bush, to the Japanese Prime Minister, 1991.”

Furious, another student yells, “Oh yeah? Suck this!”

Hideo jumps out of his chair waving his hand and shouts to the teacher, “Bill
Clinton, to Monica Lewinsky, 1997!”

Now, with almost a mob hysteria, someone said, “You little sh*t, if you ever
say anything else, I will have you killed.”

Hideo yells at the top of his voice, “Gary Condit, to Chandra Levy, 2001.”

The teacher fainted

Hope you enjoyed the joke! For me, the Japanese education system is weak because it makes Japanese students get more and more conservative as time goes by. I think Japanese students should be more vocal and participate in a conversation like Hideo. Well, maybe Hideo is too much, but at least a little more. Many of them don’t have curiosity about the world or ambition to study overseas, either.

I think that this problem has been caused by the big examination system because they are forced to be in a competition to get into the better school from very early in their life. Their end goal is often set up to get into the best university by their parents and/or teachers. Hence, many of them don’t gain curiosity about anything other than getting a good mark and they become like drones.

I’m pretty sure that you all probably have such interesting personal stories about your own educational experience. Tell me about your country’s education system. How is it different? How is it the same? What do you like / dislike? I think all educational systems in the world have good parts and bad parts, so maybe if we learn from each other we can make education better around the world! Arigatou.


Bonus Wallpapers!

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[2560x1600] • [1280x800] • [1280x800 Animation] • [700x438 Animation]

  • Susana

    I don’t know where they came from either. I use to say they
    were ugly, because I look really fat on them but they are practical.

    What I wish to copy of your customs; is the cleaning in schools. Maybe that will
    make students appreciate and care more about the school property.

  • Mami

    That’s really true! Although some students (especially boys at those ages) wouldn’t care, many of them could think what they have to do if they mess up.

  • Yoshi Kirihata

    Mami san, what’s “Ojiya gag”? ( ̄ー+ ̄)

  • Mami

    ojiya tabetai….

  • http://zoomingjapan.com/ zoomingjapan

    I’ve never been a student in the Japanese education system, but I’m a teacher here in Japan, so I think I know the Japanese education system well enough.
    And I have to admit that I’m not a big fan of it. There are certainly good points as well and most of my students say they’re happy, but I just doubt it. The kids are so busy. They have to stay in school and like you said even young elementary school kids have to attend piano lessons, juku and whatnot after school.
    I had a 6-year old girl who stayed for extra lessons until 9 p.m.!!!! When I was her age I had to be in bed by that time!

    She didn’t even have dinner yet.

    I also think that the whole system is very old-fashioned. Japanese kids need to learn to express their own opinion.

    I think it’s not good that all they learn is to sit and listen to the teacher (or fall asleep in class).
    Especially for learning a foreign language (like English) they need to actually LEARN HOW TO USE it rather than studying grammar rules and vocabulary. Most of my high school students can’t even write a simple short essay in English.
    If I compare that to my high school time we had to be able to do almost everything in English (I’m German).

    The German school system is very different from the one in Japan and Japanese people are always very surprised and interested when I tell them about it.

    I’m not a fan of either school system to be honest.

    I think that the huge class sizes might be a problem in Japan as well as bullying.
    Tests are only held during certain times a year. In Germany we had tests almost every week, so we could never stop studying.

    I could go on forever about this topic as there’s so much to say, but I’ll leave it for another time. :)

  • Lưu Vĩnh Phúc

    It makes me surprised that Canadian schools don’t have fixed classrooms too. In Vietnam high schools and below classes are all in the same room for one grade. At each level of school classmates are often the same too. That means I’d study my 3 years of high school with my same friends.

    Except for the educational year, the others are relatively similar. Vietnamese elementary school is only 5 years. After that 4 years of junior high school, and 3 years of high school. All schools from elementary to high school require the student to wear uniforms. One of the reason is for diminishing distinguish between the rich and the poor, beside the reasons you mentioned in the post. But kids in kindergarten don’t wear uniforms like in Japan.

    In elementary each class is in charged by one teacher while in junior high and high school each teacher only teaches their own subject. We have “juku” too, so after school students often return home very late.

    Vietnamese social encourage groups rules too, typical Asian behavior right? In class Vietnamese students are unlikely to ask or express their own opinions during lectures very much

  • Sarah

    Hey, just thought I would share that the Canadian school system is different from province to province. In Saskatchewan anyways, we don’t have any middle schools. Elementary school is K-8(9 years), and high school is 9-12 (4 years), with university usually being 4 years. I lived in a small town for a while and they had an elementary school K-6 (7 years) and a high school 7-12 (6 years) which I thought was unusual. This might only be in Saskatchewan that it is like this though.

  • Saimu-san

    Scottish schools have no Middle School. You go straight from Primary School to High School at 11 (if you were born between September and March, starting primary school at 4) or 12 (if you were born between March and September, starting primary school at 5) and if you bunk off too many times before turning 16 (and therefore old enough to leave of your own accord) your parents can get arrested. If you decide to stay on you can leave at 17, 18 or 19 (if you repeat a year). So in the same building you have 11 year olds and 19 year olds… Absolute recipe for disaster in my opinion.

    There’s a smart and casual option for uniforms in both High and Primary schools. The smart option has a blazer and dress shirt and the casual option is a jumper/sweater with a polo shirt or cardigan (some high schools insist in dress shirts being worn underneath for both options like mine). Skirts and trousers are usually the same and both boys and girls can wear the latter especially in the colder months of the year (or in the case of my high school, teacher fears of girls wearing thongs exposing themselves as they walk up the stairs).

    Ties are optional in primary school but in high school they are compulsory. Trainers/sneakers are the opposite. Wear a pair of those to anything other than gym class in high school (or not wearing a tie) and you’re either forced to go home and change (risking being told off by your parents because they had to stop work to come and pick you up) or get something from lost property to wear for the day.

    As for hours, in primary school you start at 9am and finish at 3pm, in high school you start at 9am and finish at 3:30pm, though I’ve heard it depends on the school and some can finish as late as 4:30pm or as early as 2:30pm. But if you’re doing supported study classes or something after school that can finish at 5pm or 6pm. Those were usually on at my school during the winter months up until exam pressure time. When you’re supposed to drop everything you care about and basically become a hermit between the ages of 14 and 16, staying up until 2am to make sure you’ve finished all your homework for all your classes for the next day.

    Each day has 4 classes divided equally for time (in primary school one teacher has a whole class to themselves all year with the occasional additional teacher for specialized classes (I had a separate teacher for music, french and science. But music teachers changed around a lot and one of my ex music teachers turned out to be a paedophile that flashed at young high-schoolers from his car.) so you’re basically carrying the textbooks for all of those classes in your bag at once.

    Maths and English homework were for every day since there were no days in the week you didn’t have them, Each other class was one or two days apart and they’d often ignore that you’d been given a lot of homework by other classes already before giving you more.

    I went through about three bags per year in HS because of all the weight I had to carry every day. The straps would often break and the bottoms would split even on the toughest carriers my parents could afford. Since I had spare time at lunch I’d often do the odd day’s homework at school like everybody else and carry the whole week’s worth of books everywhere with me. I had a locker but because mine was in the library and it was only open during class time and late lunch I could barely use it or risk having to go and get my books after class had already started.

    It’s no wonder that one day my back just locked during chemistry when I was 15 and I had to be stretchered down the staff stairs to my next class because I couldn’t stand with the pain.

    Why not an ambulance or sent home? Because I was such a promising student grade-wise that the school didn’t want me increasing my chances of failure by missing the rest of a school day. That’s why. Eventually I could stand up and walk but not after I’d lost the remainder of my dignity by crying in agony for help and screaming when they bumped me down the stairs.

    Before your main Standard Grade exams, you have preliminary exams or “prelims”. These are usually taken a year before and the results from these greatly affect your SG results if not overshadow them completely and make them worthless by themselves.

    Prelims should be euphemisms for hell or earth or slavery. Because at my school it took so long to get down the stairs to the lunch hall, vending machines or main toilets on the ground floor due to the crowds that it would be time for your next exam by the time you reached the floor ABOVE that. So for the whole day you would have nothing to eat, or drink or even go the toilet. For your prelim exams you were a grade-churning machine and only had spare time to cry (which happened to even the toughest of my bullies).

    I ended up sitting for prelim exams only to be pulled out of those classes (even ones I was proven to be good at like physics and chemistry) and not sitting them for standard grades. Out of eight classes I only got results for 4 so my efforts during my prelims were completely wasted.

    Luckily I had already been training my bladder for years to handle not going all day after being beaten up my an older girl when I was 13 and I had a packed lunch with a refilled cola bottle to sneak into corners and drink from when nobody was looking so it wasn’t as horrifying for me as it could’ve been. Still wasn’t worth it, though.

    In conclusion? Scottish schools are horrible. Not just for my generation, either. My dad says it was about the same
    when he went there before me in the 70s (except then they had “the belt” to punish whole classes for not knowing who peed in the teacher’s euphonium).

    Better sending your kid to a sweat shop because at least then they get paid despite the poor conditions.

    Maybe somebody reading this had a better experience with it? I dunno. But at least my school was bad enough that when the building shut down to amalgamate the town’s schools, it wasn’t surprising that it was victim to three arson attacks shortly afterward. One of which you can see on youtube.

    Even If I wanted to be transferred to a Japanese school (and I did) my hellhole probably wouldn’t have let me go because of me being their eccentric prodigy from my year. Then again I hate wearing skirts and haven’t worn one or a dress since I was 10 years old.

    I especially can’t wear them now since the rickets took hold of my right shin and it’s a bit malformed (Plus, y’know, I’m a decade older now). Guess it would’ve been a fair price to pay, though when I was in my early teens.

  • さなこ-ちゃん

    Wow, thanks for the reply! My school is starting to get more strict now so i might buy some of this temporary dye XD (i have red hair now)

  • Sarah

    Thanks for sharing your experience Mami!

    A couple of things to point out: the opposite of unified in English is disunified, rather than ununified ;)

    Also, I’m curious whether different parts of Canada require a different number of years in school? I myself did 10 years of elementary, 4 years of high-school and am in a 4-year university program. Hmm…

    I really enjoyed the joke, so witty ^_^

  • lotolight

    here in Mexico we have some similarities: we wear uniform in every school, the system is the same (6years elementary, 3 years junior highschool and 3 years highschool, college or university vary depending on the major and can go from 2 to 5 years, except for med school), from junior highschool on the teachers change classes and the group just stays in one classroom (altough my old highschool tried the american way for a while…didnt work). We dont get prepared lunches, kids bring something from home or usually buy something a the schools cafe, which leads to child obesity because they only sell junk food in there :/ and we have no duties like the japanese students, but we DO have to play some sport and also pay some service to the community, like visiting old people or helping orphanages. They are very strict about uniforms in private schools, I dont really know about public, and I remember being overly annoyed that I couldnt wear pants during the winter. Oh, and also, most people send their children to private schools, because public education is really lacking on every possible way :(

  • lotolight

    and also the discipline is very lax: we discuss all the time on class, call the teachers by their first names, tell a joke aloud, etc

  • Yuki

    Thats interesting. Seems like a typical Asian education system, one similar to what my parents had.

    In ireland I went to a private school specifically geared to university entrance, so hours were 9am to 9pm, but there was no uniform. But all the public schools have a uniform to apparently create equality and fairness, especially among people of different income backgrounds. My public school for Junior high was overly strict on uniforms, like only red scarves and navy shoes (blue doesn’t cut it). Also, public schools are same sex only, only private schools like mine are mixed since theres a strong catholic influence.

    Japanese schools seem nice, from cute uniforms to lunch! We dont get lunch and uniforms are hideous, and theres no way we’d be allowed wear short skirts to school like Japanese girls.

  • Jenna Merritt

    I don’t know. I think I would have prefered the Japanese system while going to school. I would have know early on what I planned on doing with my life. That and we have so many slackers in the US school system its hard to get a decent education.

  • meneldal

    I haven’t seen any comments explaining the French school system so I guess I’ll tell a bit about it (even if it’s months after the article).

    In France the system is 5 + 4 + 3 years then uni is 3 + 2 + 3 (as most European countries) or 2+3+3 in some cases

    The years in elementary school aren’t too long, it’s usually 8h45-11h45 13h45-16h45 with a break around 10 and 15. We used to have school 4 days a week and 2/3 Saturdays mornings but they removed Saturdays a while ago

    Then in middle school you start getting one teacher/subject. You get usually 30+ hours of classes per week in 4.5 days and since usually teachers don’t tell each other when they are doing tests or giving a lot of homework some weeks can be pretty easy and other weeks can be pretty hard (though if you’re a good student since there is no real competition you can just go with the flow and get passing grade without much effort)

    As I said there isn’t much competition to get accepted in high schools because if you have decent grades you get in the high school linked to your middle school. If you want another you need to do something that you can’t do in the high school you should go to. For elementary school usually it’s the same and it’s really hard to get in a different middle school than the one you’re supposed to go in unless you go in private schools.

    For high schools it’s more or less like middle school, though in the end you have an exam to prepare to finish high school. For higher education you mostly get accepted on the grades you had during high school. There is not really a competition because it’s more like having a good enough grades and not being well-ranked that counts (though there are some exceptions).

    For higher education you can go for a 2 year diploma or go in more regular universities to get a bachelor (3 years) then a master (+2 years). University is often see in France as the easy way or the fail way because there are like no rules, the teachers don’t care about attendance at all and most people fail their first year. because they don’t come to class regularly

    Then there is a particular French way which is preparatory classes. basically you spend 2 years of full time studying (almost 40 hours of classes each week and a lot of homework) to take exams and depending on how well you do in the exams you get accepted in some 3 years school that give you a master’s degree. These two years are usually pretty hard for most people and are probably close (and sometimes worse) than what Japanese students get through in their last year of elementary/middle/high school studying full time for entrance exams. I don’t know how it’s like in Japan but in France there aren’t that many different exams (5 that last one week each with all the subjects each week) and you apply at the same time for a lot of schools. Some exams let you apply to different kinds of school and some are much harder than some others.
    I didn’t have to go through this myself because I used the sneaky way (some school let you do something close to the preparatory classes starting just after high school exams so if you keep decent grades during the two years you don’t have any final entrance exam to take) but my sister and some of my friends did and they said it was really two years where they didn’t have time for other things.
    I hope that wasn’t too long/boring