The special day schedule |
If there’s a special class schedule, I’ll find a paper on my desk with that day’s schedule. Sometimes there are 45 minute classes so the homeroom teachers can have their individual student interviews. Special things are also written on the blackboards or marked on the school calendar. My visit school is the only one that tends to switch up when I’m teaching. If it’s business like usual, my schedule looks like the following:
My schedule - 25 classes |
The first class starts at 8:55 am. I follow my Japanese teacher of English (JTE) to class, both of us greeting all the students along the way with good mornings or good days, hellos in my case. Class is fifty minutes long. Classroom have large air conditioners in them and a heater near the windows, and fans on the ceilings. Now that it’s colder, the students carry blankets with them and cover their legs. Between classes students can eat, hang out, do whatever, but they aren’t allowed to use their phones or gaming devices at school. Everyone brushes their teeth right after eating at the sinks in the hall just like the teachers do in the staff room. All the windows and doors slide open in the classrooms and hall. The classrooms all have an outer balcony. It helps with regulating the temperature. Almost all the rooms here have chalkboards. Students have a row of drawers and a shelf in the back of the room where they can store their things: gym uniform, outdoor shoes, textbooks, etc. The desks have an open slot to store things during class, and hooks on the side to hang your bags from. The chair is separate.
The yearly schedule |
For lunch, we get 45 minutes. As teachers, we can leave to get lunch or run errands during this time. We have a bread truck that comes by and the teachers can order a lunch that gets delivered. Some teachers eat at their desk and others around the lunch table. Sometimes the teachers make a big pot of soup for everyone or lay out food around the table like homegrown fruit or veggies. Students eat in the classrooms, on the balconies, or anywhere on the school grounds really. They aren’t allowed to leave school during school hours. Two out of three school gates are shut. Some students practice their club activities or get help from the teachers during lunchtime.
After school comes cleaning time. For twenty minutes, all the students are supervised by teachers at different areas to clean. Sweeping, mopping, cleaning toilets, emptying trash - they do it all. It’s amazing! We do also have school caretakers though. Clubs usually meet after school, sometimes during lunch and before school. My school doesn’t require that students participate in a club. I can often hear choir practice and kendo. The intense teams can be here till 10 pm at night! No wonder a lot of students can’t finish their homework on time and drift off to sleep during class. One girl turnt in her summer homework about two months late. In that case they have to apologize profusely and bring it all the way to the staff room, not just hand it off in the hall.
The full teaching schedule for all teachers |
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