J-List is a wonderful toybox of things from Japan - come see
Every time you don't click over to J-List, God kills a kitten

The personal log of Peter, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

The Reason Japanese Are the Way They Are: Junior High School

The question of "What makes the Japanese the way they are?" is an interesting one, and I'm certainly not the first gaijin to ponder it. While the U.S. is viewed by Japan as a "horizontal" society in which everyone is more or less equal, Japan's society is considered "vertical," with relationships that change based on relative age or status in a group. One example of this are the concepts of senpai and kohai, words that describe an upperclassman in a school or senior member of an organization, and underclassman or junior in a group, respectively. Another example is how the concept of, say, "brother" is split into separate words for older brother (oniisan) and younger brother (ototo), and it'd be difficult for the Japanese to think of the idea of a "brother" without classifying older or younger in his mind. (In the case of twins, by the way, the one that pops out first is the older brother.) My personal theory is that the the majority of Japanese social imprinting occurs in Junior High School, a unique period of three years in which students are first exposed to the strict reality of these top-down relationships for the first time. It's in Junior High that kids are forced to join clubs and engage in "club activities" with older kids, which includes greeting senpai in a loud, clear voice, showing respect at all times, and putting up with some hazing, no doubt. This period of intense social pressure seems unique to Junior High: in Elementary School, kids are still treated as kids and almost never interface with kids at other age levels, and High Schools function like a miniature version of the university system in Japan, with students choosing which school fits their study goals and academic abilities, so there's less social pressure (although there are plenty of other pressures, like college entrance exams).

This picture appears to be girls cleaning a boy's restroom in bare feet -- pretty gross. Or are they male students?

Clean those toilets, clean!

5 Comments:

Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Who can tell at that age.

So does anyone else think that American students should be responsible for cleaning their own school? They'd feel differently about if if they did.

12:24 AM

 
Blogger PeterD said...

Maybe it would be good to have students clean their own bathrooms, but I must say I am glad that they didn't do this when I was a student.

Especially without any gloves...

2:05 AM

 
Blogger SailorAlphaCentauri said...

I had to clean my classroom when I was in elemetary school [The class would have to do it together and the teacher would assign each of us a chore to complete], but we didn't have to touch the bathrooms.

The problem was when I switched to a school with 4th-12th grades all in one building; the girls' bathroom got so bad on the 2nd floor that it could only be used with a key (which limited the 7th-12th grade girls to use one small bathroom on the first floor). If people were forced to take care of it, there would be someone who would try to ruin it for everyone else. It would require an entirely new way of thinking & start when the kids are very young before it could work.

2:18 AM

 
Blogger Vicky said...

That actually makes me think of my secondary school. The Year 11's made it a project to redecorate one of the toilets on the science floor, all in pink and purple with new doors and everything. It was one of the few toilets you could venture into without worrying about what you might encounter. So there is something to it.

7:48 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

I just remember all the rude comments the white kids made or thought about the janitor, how if they didn't study that'd be the job they would have to do, and so on, which was really rude since that was this guy's job. If we'd had to do his job ourselves, and if we couldn't go home until the classroom was clean, we'd have had more humility, I think. There's a lot of character building stuff that goes on in Japanese schools.

10:06 AM

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

 


,