28 September 2011

school lunch, brushing teeth and cleaning time

As I spend time in Japanese schools I often find myself taking note of the differences between Japanese public schools and American public schools. Some examples that come to mind;
1)    A formal greeting by students to teachers at the beginning of each class period.
2)    The teacher’s room where every staff member has a desk and meets daily, plans and takes a tea break throughout the day.
3)    Every student eating the same school lunch, a homemade balanced meal including milk, protein, carb, fruit and/or vegetable. The lunch is served and cleaned up by the students. 
4)    Then students and teachers all brush their teeth.   
5)    There is no supervision during recess where students peacefully play soccer or mill around the dirt field appreciating a time to play. 
6)    Teachers don’t meet students, students meet teachers without lining up.  Students are just in the classroom.  It is the student’s space. 
7)    Each day there is a cleaning time where students clean the whole school (mop, windows, classrooms, bathrooms, etc.)  
This is not an extensive list of the differences between Japanese and American schools. Instead it is a list of things that I have appreciated that makes it different to go to school in Japan. 

It makes me wonder if we would have a more independent, responsible American child if we gave them more control over themselves, their choices and their environments.  How would they view themselves as apart of a community? What contribution would they have to make?  

16 September 2011

Trains, Ferries and Automobiles

 




















  


Sorry to be a bit absent lately.  Japan life has picked up since we arrived a few months ago.  I have less time to write and haven't been taking pictures but I am spending lots of time at schools.  I am especially enjoying my visits to elementary schools.  

Tomorrow we leave for a week adventure to Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan.  We are going to travel around the island in a rental car.  We plan to hike, camp, eat, bathe at onsens, relax (and squeeze in some shopping in Sapporo!) We will have lots of great stories and pictures to post when we return.  Enjoy this map of our planned trip.  

07 September 2011

PE and the latest



This is what PE class looks like at a public Junior High.  The students are all uniformed and lined up.  Instructions are generally shouted through a megaphone and a whistle is used.  The students shout responses in unison and do most of the activities together.
The other week they had "sports day".  The preparation took place all day Saturday, then sports day on Sunday, and generally the schools had Monday and Tuesday off.
During sports day the school was split into 3-4 teams and they competed with team work.  Everyone had to participate (it seemed).  One of the events I watched outside of the fence with many of the parents involved a race where one student walked along the backs of other students who would bend at the waist, get stepped on, and then run to the front of the line to get stepped on again in a continuous centipede-like motion until they reached the finish line.
In another event, 4 groups of 3 boys holding another boy on their shoulders would go up against another group of 4 boys from the other team and the boys being carried would try and rip the opponent's hat off their head.   ....all the while with intense, competitive music in the background.
It was interesting.
We just returned last weekend from Aomori city where Amber had 3 days of "orientation"--a month after she's already been working.  It was nice to get out and see the city on the water in the bay surrounded by peninsulas of mountains.  They specialize in scallops and we ate our share of fried, grilled and fresh raw scallops.  yummy!
We also got to know a lot more english ALT teachers from the area and will spend this weekend 'camping' and bbq-ing with them.
     Just this past weekend we took a day trip to Misawa Air Force Base for their annual air show.  Drinking in public is ok in Japan, so it was fun to carry a beer onto the runway and inside of a C-17.
The weather turned out well and the tactical maneuvers were impressive.  It was interesting to see the base....burger king and all.
I started a part time job last week to break up the monotony of shopping, cleaning, exercising, cooking, reading, drinking and watching movies.  It's been a good time for us so far and we have a big trip scheduled in 10 days to the northernmost island of Hokkaido.  ....backpacking, Sapporo brewery, bears, hot springs, cheese factories, beaches, mountains, lakes, and winery photos soon to come!