ひとみさんの高校は七時半午前にはじめて、五時午後におわだと言っていました。volleyballを してから、高校はたのしです。ひとみさんのクラスはつまらないですから、何もべんきょうするのがすきでしたと言っていました。それから、ひとみさん高校でちょとしゅくだいがありませんでしたと言っていました。でも、ひとみさんはべんきよするから、しけんはやさしかったと言っていました。ひとみさんはアルバイトがありませんでしたと言っていました。それから、しゅまつはたいていえいがに行ったと言っていました。ひとみさんの高校はよかなかったでしたと言っていました。dress codeはわるかったでしたから。ひとみさんはアメリカに行ったといたいました。
Japanese highschools are often viewed as being incredibly hard and incredibly strict when compared to American schools, but looking back on what hitome said about her school, i don't believe they're all that different after all. In America we have many privat schools with, what i would call, a bad dress code. And i believe that most American high schoolers can relate to Hitome when she said that none of her classes interested her. Essentially all of what Hitome said, i can relate to. what i would like to know is about different traditions the students go through every day, and how the details of Japanese day-to-day life in school differ from the American life.
Monday, September 27, 2010
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interesting that you found some commonalities between US and Japanese high schools!
ReplyDeleteI think that one of the big differences is that there is a lot more competition to get good grades, because it was hard to get into a good high school and will be even harder to get into a good college. That pressure is one of the reasons why a lot of Japanese high schools have dress codes, or don't allow their students to have jobs, but if you think about it, that is probably what some of our more competitive private schools are like. Students who are aiming for Yale, Harvard or MIT are going to put more effort in than someone who wants to scrape by and get into a local tech college.
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