Saturday, October 12, 2013

School Uniforms


Previously, I have detailed the structure of how students begin and end class, using set phrases to fetch their respective teachers and commence with instruction. Here I will detail some observations I have noted about school uniforms and their regulations.

School Uniforms
In Japanese public schools, students must wear a uniform in junior high school and high school. Elementary schools and kindergartens do not have set uniforms, but they do have required P.E. attire that must be purchased through the school, and thus is all matching.

The uniforms for junior high school students are gender and seasonally segregated. Girls wear pleated skirts, usually navy blue or black, though some schools may pick out plaid or another design. Boys wear black pants with a black belt. The skirts must reach below the knee. In high school, girls may wear their skirts above the knee (which is what people often see in anime shows). In summer time, students wear a white button down shirt, either long or short sleeved depending on their individual preferences in regards to daily temperature fluctuations. These white shirts must be tucked in at all times. At some point during the fall, the school deems the weather cold enough to don the uniform jackets, which match the skirts and pants in color. The students are given about a week in which either the white shirt or the jacket is acceptable before they must wear the jackets, lest grade points get docked. The same happens in spring when the weather begins to warm, and they are given a one-week grace period in which they may wear either the shirt or jacket. Although I have not personally priced the uniforms, I heard from another ALT that a single uniform purchased as a set (all pieces included) totals around 50,000 yen (~$500).

Track Suits
For P.E. class and cleaning time, the students wear a “track suit” that is school specific. These P.E. uniforms have much more variation between schools than the regular class uniform, often with varying colors and patterns, and are reminiscent of sports attire. The track suit consists of a white t-shirt with the school logo, shorts, pants, and a jacket which also bears the school logo. Unlike the class uniforms, it seems the track suits are not regulated, and the students may wear either pants or shorts, depending on the weather and their personal preferences, and usually only wear the jacket if the weather is cold. The t-shirts for the track suit must also be tucked in at all times. Occasionally the students will wear their track suits to class, perhaps if they have just ended their P.E. class for the day and did not have time to change back into their uniforms, or if there is only one class between P.E. and cleaning time.

P.E. class also includes swimming, so students are required to have proper swim attire. The swim attire is not regulated as long as it is appropriate. For boys, this entails speedo-style shorts, and for girls, a speedo-style one piece, or a tight-fitting shirt and shorts made of swim material. In Japan, it is also a requirement to use a swim cap and goggles for both boys and girls at any time they are in the pool. Since most schools’ pools are outdoors, swimming usually only happens during the summer months, and the pool is drained during the winter months.

The students change frequently between their uniforms and track suits, depending on what class they have next. They use their passing periods between classes to change. Girls use a separate classroom with curtains drawn across the windows. Boys are also supposed to change within the classroom, but occasionally, a rebellious boy can be seen dressing or undressing in the hallways. The teachers don’t seem to mind this, and the boys are never reprimanded for being half naked in the hallways.

Accessories
Along with the clothing parts to the uniforms, there are several matching accessories that the students must all possess. These items include matching book bags or backpacks, matching bike helmets (white with a color-coded stripe to denote grade), indoor-use-only sneakers (also white with the color-coded stripe), and name tags which must be worn on the white shirt or jacket on the left breast pocket. In general, sports uniforms are owned by the school, so students do not have to purchase those. The number of the uniform is assigned via seniority, and the number “one” uniform goes to the team captain.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Learn by Losing


You learn something new everyday. Today, the thing I learned was perhaps one of the most profound things I could ever hope to learn as an English teacher and educator.

Recently I watched a video online of a slam poem performed to criticize America’s “No Child Left Behind” policy, specifically in regards to school children who are in American classrooms as ESL (English as a Second Language) students. I agreed with all the criticisms the young man argued from an educator’s perspective. But, just as he is, I am an American-born Caucasian whose first (and possibly only throughout compulsory education) language was English, so for us to criticize the system, we come from the winning side arguing for the losing side. But today, I came to understand this plight from the losing side.

I am an Assistant Language Teacher at a junior high school in Tome City, Japan. I got this job through the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program. I applied for this job because I took three years of Japanese language courses at my university, and am very interested in Japanese culture. I wanted to live here for an immersion setting, with the original goal of becoming fluent in Japanese.

Today, my second period English class with our 7th graders was cancelled and replaced with men’s morale education, but the teacher invited me along. The lesson was “Learn by Losing,” and as it was not English class, it was entirely taught in Japanese (our English teacher is also the school’s morale education teacher). The structure of the class went like many American classes: opening lecture, handout/reading of a passage, more lecture, another reading passage, a little more lecture, and then finally the student response in which students write their personal opinions about the two passages and lectures. As such, there is no “right” answer to the response prompt, so long as the students supported their ideas with logical claims. But despite three intense years of study, and over a year of immersion in the country, I barely caught a few words here and there. By the time the response papers were passed out, I panicked. After all, I was a straight-A student growing up, and I never failed an assignment. But suddenly I found myself being asked to write my opinion about something I could not understand (indeed, it was a miracle I was able to deduce the prompt of “write your opinion” in the first place).

At that very moment, the slam poem I’d watched so many times came to me. And then I remembered growing up in Southern California, where our classrooms had ESL students, mostly from Hispanic or Latino backgrounds, whose first language was Spanish, and they consistently scored lower on tests, assignments, and in grades until finally they were weeded out by junior high school and placed into the “lower” classes, and I into the “advanced” classes. They were not given special consideration for the fact that they may have scored poorly because they could not comprehend. In order to uphold equality, they were held to the same standards as all the Caucasian children who natively speak English.

In one brief class period, I came to realize the plight of second language learners in classrooms. I didn’t know what to do. So I thought, if I had been an ESL student growing up in a real classroom, where I wasn’t just a teacher sitting in but was actually being graded, what would I do? I stressed as the realization that I would completely and utterly fail no matter what I did set in. Despite that, I was interested in learning, and also wanted to show the teacher that I cared. So I did the only thing I could do: I copied the prompt question from the board onto my paper. I hoped to take that paper with me to look up the kanji/words and attempt to answer the prompt later, when suddenly all papers were collected and class was over. The only thing I took away from that class were the reading passages, but my chance at completing the assignment was gone.

After three intense years of study at the collegiate level, and a full year of immersion into the Japanese language, the only thing I could do for this 7th grade assignment was copy the prompt. A prompt that I could not comprehend. I learned by losing today, but I don’t think it was quite the lesson the teacher had in mind.


"Rigged Game" by Dylan Garity:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bo3KFUzyMUI

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Shizuoka Reptiles Show

Sunday, August 4th, saw the conclusion of the 2013 Japan Reptiles Show in Shizuoka, Japan. I moved to Japan just a week before the 2012 show, and as such, I was unable to attend due to the business of getting settled into my new life in northern Japan. But I read Bob Applegate's online memo about the show, and watched SnakeBytes TV's highlight on the event, so I decided to go in 2013. I also spoke with the owner of the reptile store in Sendai, the closest reptile shop to me, and he mentioned that famous German breeders attend every year with booths at the show as well. After hearing about and seeing so many photos, videos, stories, and highlights, I had high expectations. It did not disappoint!

This was from the lookout above the show where people could eat lunch and sit while observing.




Snakes and Lizards




The author holding a whip snake.
The author holding a ball python.

There were several cages of albino green iguanas.
This guy was the size of a dinner plate.




This was goldfish scooping (金魚掬い) with salamanders instead of goldfish.

Freshwater eels for sale. I've never seen that before.

This guy was advertised as the highlight of the show:
An American White Alligator.







Despite being native to Japan, this was one of only a few
aodaisho hebi (Japanese rat snake) at the show.






Turtles and Tortoises

The Petting/Feeding zoo for kids.















Stage Demonstrations and Show

Guy who runs the show (I'm guessing) showing off a snapping turtle.




This lady is famous, and everyone in the audience knew her but me.
She's a famous t.v. personality, and I think someone told me she is
the Prime Minister's wife.

Second to last of the demo, the guy plopped a rattlesnake on stage, then provoked it so it would rattle. There was no barrier between him and the audience. Luckily, he got it back in the box okay (after dropping it once).

The finale of the display was Bob Clark's 6-meter reticulated python.



Invertebrates


Millipedes that looked like armored tanks. I'd never seen that before.



I found myself gravitating towards the
centipedes and millipedes after getting over my
fear by keeping a S. japonica.

This guy was huge! But I couldn't tell exactly what
kind of Scolopendra. The Japanese on the label was
very vague.
This guy was nomming down on a millipede.




This booth was selling ant colonies.
Silk worms are a common pet here as the leaves
they eat are readily available in Japan.




Mammals and Avian

Somebody brought their pet pot-bellied pig to the show.
Personal pets are allowed in the show.

This cat looked very interested in eating this bird.
Just below him there was a falcon looking very interested
in eating him.

This barn owl was this man's pet. 

This sloth was rather adorable. But also expensive.

The fennec foxes were among the most
expensive of the animals.

These porcupines got a lot of attention.
Meerkats are sometimes seen in reptile stores and were at several expo vendors.
A male fruit bat who showed off his erection at one
point. Or maybe he just hangs that way.
A hornbill. The price on him was almost as
high as the fennec foxes.