Piano, painting, dancing and other courses are all studied in Japanese schools, so parents don't need tutors. The content of moral education is similar to the "Eight Honors and Eight Disgraces" advocated by China. Starting from the most subtle point, teachers ask students to protect the environment, help each other and unite with each other. The teacher's teaching method is heuristic, telling classic stories about moral education. Sometimes children will consciously improve their ideological and moral level while playing games.
Students must enjoy the high-quality nutritious Chinese food provided by the government at noon, finish class at 2: 30 pm, and it usually takes half an hour to go home. After you go home, you can finish your homework in about 40 minutes with one Chinese and one math, and the rest time is at the students' disposal. Students can have fun in various ways!
Japanese students are required to enter kindergartens from the age of three, and they have to pay for their life and study in kindergartens. But how much is the reward? Implement flexible charging standards, that is to say, tuition fees are determined by parents' income, and the higher the parents' income, the higher the payment; Earn less and pay less. If your parents don't have a job and enjoy the minimum living allowance, the kindergarten education expenses will be paid by the state.
Japan implements compulsory education from primary school to high school. All students have equal status, and there is no distinction between high and low.
First of all, all students in Japan wear school uniforms issued by the government. What is even more peculiar is that the names of students are embroidered on the left chest of each school uniform, such as "Tammy, Zuo Zuo Wood, Xiao Li Huizi" and so on. The advantage of embroidered names on clothes is that they are very binding on students. For example, if a student violates school rules at school or in society, you can know which school he belongs to at a glance. In our country, I heard a joke: in a vocational high school, several students violated school rules and the principal took care of them. After the students rudely abused the headmaster in dialect, they turned and ran away, but the headmaster could never find out which grade these students were in and which class they were in.
Secondly, the Japanese dress is the same from primary school to high school. Boys are all chestnut heads (that is, flat heads), which look particularly energetic, while girls are all short-haired, giving people a feeling of vigor and vitality. No one can wear strange clothes. From primary school to junior high school, lunch is provided by the state at noon. The food includes: half an egg, a meat pie, two pieces of sea fish, a dish of lettuce (many vegetables in Japan are eaten raw, even Chinese cabbage, which I really can't get used to), a dish of sauce, half a bowl of miso soup, and a bowl of rice (Japanese rice is more delicious than Thai rice, full of granules, soft and delicious, and full of saliva when chewed).
Finally, from elementary school to high school, Japanese students walk or take buses to and from school. They have never seen their parents pick up their children by car. There are no parents at the gates of various schools.