School Exams! British VS American | Evan Edinger & Jack Edwards

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2019
  • Which is harder? GCSE’s or SATs? What about AP Exams and A-Levels? It’s time for a new British VS American about school exams!
    Jack’s Video: • american vs british un...
    Thank you so much for watching! Hope you enjoyed it!
    Jack's CZcams: / thejackexperience
    If you're new to my channel and videos, hi! I'm Evan Edinger, and I make weekly "comedy" videos every Sunday evening. As an American living in London I love noticing the funny differences between the cultures and one of my most popular video series is my British VS American one. I'm also known for making terrible puns so sorry in advance. Hope to see you around, and I'll see you next Sunday! :)
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Komentáře • 15K

  • @evan
    @evan  Před 5 lety +3672

    Dang y'all are absolutely living for this video! Thanks for all the interest and support!
    I'm gonna be filming a video with my token Scottish friend to clear some things up for the angry Scots in the comments and I just invested in an overhead camera rig to film myself taking... a past GCSE paper!
    Hope you're surviving exam "season:"!

    • @eilisminchin1
      @eilisminchin1 Před 5 lety +30

      You should do Ireland too! On the leaving Cert 👀

    • @missallsundayx
      @missallsundayx Před 5 lety +4

      Look forward to the video

    • @shanc1532
      @shanc1532 Před 5 lety +18

      Evan Edinger literally have done 11 exams so far , I’ve got 12 left to do in the space of 10 days🥵

    • @eleanor1427
      @eleanor1427 Před 5 lety +22

      NOW YOU CAN SEE HOW WE SUFFER WHEN WE ARE 15/16 😂😂😂😂

    • @shanc1532
      @shanc1532 Před 5 lety +13

      TinyDoughnutElle literally ! Damaging my mental health and no one really understands how hard they are !!

  • @thefemaleweszy
    @thefemaleweszy Před 4 lety +5921

    American tests are literally a Kahoot quiz
    edit: to all the Americans explaining the nuances of their education system, you'd think such 'vigorous' institutions would also teach you how to take a joke

  • @kyium_
    @kyium_ Před 4 lety +14645

    America: We get cheat sheets.
    U.K: NO LABELS ON BOTTLES

    • @funkyfranx
      @funkyfranx Před 4 lety +790

      Oh my god, so true!!! I completely forgot how dick-ish invigilators would get over labels on bottles

    • @yuehagime8302
      @yuehagime8302 Před 4 lety +917

      Toothless don’t forget how your not able to have the lid on your calculator

    • @roche8395
      @roche8395 Před 4 lety +451

      KYIUM no watches lol 😂 open your pencil cases

    • @ferddoesweirdthingsinlife1040
      @ferddoesweirdthingsinlife1040 Před 4 lety +627

      You also need clear pencil cases.

    • @ashaali1237
      @ashaali1237 Před 4 lety +34

      LITERALLLLYYYYY

  • @HannahMcInroy
    @HannahMcInroy Před 3 lety +2737

    "We use pens."
    "How are they graded?"
    "...with another pen????"
    I DIED 😂😂😂

    • @BeccaJaneAlderman
      @BeccaJaneAlderman Před 2 lety +18

      HAHAHAHAHA me too!!

    • @charliefern2719
      @charliefern2719 Před rokem +2

      Same 😂

    • @zenko247
      @zenko247 Před rokem +15

      Reminds me of Nasa Spending $10 million ( In the 1960s) on a pen that could write in space in zero G) when asking the Soviets on how they got around the problem , They said "We use Pencils" 🤣😂

    • @dylancode
      @dylancode Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@zenko247 It's such a good story... I wish it was true though.

    • @epicfail7874
      @epicfail7874 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@zenko247not true, NASA only bought the pen for 6 dollars per pen, the pen was made on a budget of 1 million dollars and Soviets bought the pens too

  • @Polyglot85to90
    @Polyglot85to90 Před 3 lety +1509

    In the UK, SATs are supposed to test how well the school is teaching you. By definition they are of zero use to students, but schools' reputations depend on them so they make them seem more important than they really are.

    • @ibbybibby
      @ibbybibby Před 3 lety +50

      Yeah, average grade and in my school your SAT score determines which set you are put in for classes.

    • @lou7707
      @lou7707 Před 2 lety +5

      isn’t that the exam every student in Europe has to take so they can compare the countries?

    • @2yeon
      @2yeon Před 2 lety +20

      @@lou7707 nope in the UK you take the sat at 10-11 and nobody except your primary school teachers and maybe your high school cares (my secondary school made us take exams at the start of the year and barely mentioned sats) they arent compared since all European countries don't do sats as they have their own rules and regulations in place in there primary and secondary schools (or equivalent schooling systems)

    • @precious6727
      @precious6727 Před 2 lety +1

      In America we have separate tests for that. In the state I live in it’s called PARCC I believe you start taking them in either 3rd or 5th grade, I can’t remember. The older you get the harder they become and then when you enter high school you stop taking them but you have to take a new test called HSA (high school assessments) and if you don’t pass them then you can’t graduate. And then as you probably know we take the SATs in 11th grade in order to hopefully get into a good college although this year and last year most schools have thankfully switched to being test optional because of covid.

    • @oscarpeters5309
      @oscarpeters5309 Před 2 lety +5

      that explains why the teachers went around and told you when to change your answer at my school

  • @freezycow89
    @freezycow89 Před 4 lety +8810

    Legit I swear if a Brit took an exam in America, they’d be treated as a damn genius

    • @dreamerrsss
      @dreamerrsss Před 4 lety +268

      True...I agree with that

    • @faizalogwell_casual
      @faizalogwell_casual Před 4 lety +853

      My friend who moved to the US is doing basic factorisation in his last year of school

    • @freezycow89
      @freezycow89 Před 4 lety +115

      Crikey

    • @Lily-xd1tg
      @Lily-xd1tg Před 4 lety +797

      Faizal Ogwell Jesus, if theyre just learning factorising, American high school students would faint if they saw my further maths gcse.

    • @nostalgia-2854
      @nostalgia-2854 Před 4 lety +48

      Except the United grading scale are extremely different

  • @rachelgreenwood6836
    @rachelgreenwood6836 Před 4 lety +4481

    YOU"RE TELLING ME that I had to memorise quotes, characters, important events, structure, etc. of a book, with no cheat sheet and you guys just have MULTIPLE CHOICE ANSWERS

    • @lowkeybuckley
      @lowkeybuckley Před 4 lety +62

      I never personally had a cheat sheet for English class. When we had tests about the book, we had the book with us for the essay portion and we didn’t have it for the multiple choice portion. The essay takes place after the multiple choice part, so either way we’d have to remember everything about the book like you did. The tests usually take my class two to three days because the multiple choice questions have truck answer where it can be more than one but is only one true right answer. Plus we also had matching and had to state what quote belonged to what character. Which is difficult if you don’t remember every tiny detail of the book. The only time I ever got anything like a cheat sheet is a piece of paper with a couple of formulas and maybe two definitions for my math classes. They were no help at all anyways.

    • @boulshyte8932
      @boulshyte8932 Před 4 lety +97

      I took history, omg memorizing every event with the year and duration fml

    • @sofh784
      @sofh784 Před 4 lety +72

      @@boulshyte8932 DON'T I swear trying to remember the names and dates for every single event in the cold war and WW2 almost killed me, I'm sure I calculated I knew 200 dates alone by the end of my exams

    • @boulshyte8932
      @boulshyte8932 Před 4 lety +5

      @@sofh784 😭😭😭 I dropped it

    • @ajayannamalai3623
      @ajayannamalai3623 Před 4 lety +15

      It mostly depends on your teacher and state here in us of a

  • @Mizukisupremaxy
    @Mizukisupremaxy Před 3 lety +670

    Americans: These exams are killing me
    Americans: *Sees Britain. *
    British: You were saying?

    • @thegyloraptor
      @thegyloraptor Před rokem

      @@luffy5246 correct me if im wrong but is the american college the same as British college? As in GCSE/SATs then college then university?

    • @lol-bg4wh
      @lol-bg4wh Před 6 měsíci +1

      I’m telling u now British exams aren’t that hard

    • @kebabz5856
      @kebabz5856 Před 6 měsíci

      @@lol-bg4wh compared to USA?

    • @lykos..
      @lykos.. Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@lol-bg4wh You’re living in a fantasy

    • @secretmanPFD
      @secretmanPFD Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@lol-bg4whive seen you under every comment insisting you have it worse. american school is soft. cope harder.

  • @daniel_3221
    @daniel_3221 Před 3 lety +599

    No one:
    GCSE exam women: I CaNt TeLL yOu the AnSwER bUt I CaN rEaD tHe QuEsTiOn Ok? .. oK *continues to spit everywhere and not read to you like your 2*

    • @lucyclay2724
      @lucyclay2724 Před 3 lety +21

      Ikkkkrrrr and they split all over your paper and it gets all wet!!! 💀

    • @Wondering..
      @Wondering.. Před 2 lety +4

      I HATE THAT SO MUCH, when i was doing my exams so many people including myself asked the teacher for help, and they just said that they would read the question out loud and when i still didnt get it they would tell me to read out loud and think i would get it then, HOW WILL THAT MAKE A DIFFERENCE???

    • @yogavathanikirubakaran6839
      @yogavathanikirubakaran6839 Před 2 lety +3

      no this is every teacher in every exams i did its not only the women that do it its also some of my male teachers

    • @BubblegumKoi
      @BubblegumKoi Před 2 lety

      Thats just the teachers in the US when you ask them for a hint or something of that sort

  • @TGMowatt
    @TGMowatt Před 4 lety +4643

    Learning that a “cheat sheet” is a thing is actually disturbing.

    • @littleangpao1322
      @littleangpao1322 Před 4 lety +337

      Right? Our pencil boxes had to be clear or just carry as many pencils in each finger as possible and theres's such thing as a cheat sheet??

    • @shipsarebeautiful
      @shipsarebeautiful Před 4 lety +158

      @@littleangpao1322 in my school, you can't even have that. Legit, you can take ONE thing into the exam hall with you and that is a clear bottle of water with no label. The school supplies all stationary during the exam, because apparently they can't even trust us with our own basic equipment. I get it for maths, since no one is gonna have tracing paper on them and a protractor/compass is rare, but you basically only need a pen in every other subject, which we all have a basic responsibility to bring in yet we're still crossing the line there?

    • @brandonbeck823
      @brandonbeck823 Před 4 lety +102

      US student here, was never allowed a cheat sheet in my four years of high school. And as for the standardized testing like the SAT or AP exams the testing regulations seem similar to British schools

    • @samanthal2763
      @samanthal2763 Před 4 lety +82

      As an American student I can say that I have never gotten a cheat sheet. It really depends on the school u go to and where u live. My exams are so different then what he is saying

    • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
      @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay Před 4 lety +61

      A cheat sheet usually contains formulas that you can quickly acquire while taking tests in math related subjects.

  • @elliejohnstone943
    @elliejohnstone943 Před 5 lety +12420

    doing my gcses now and hearing that Americans have basically all multiple choice is making me tear up

    • @sebastianmoon7811
      @sebastianmoon7811 Před 5 lety +880

      I mean honestly a question would go like this
      *what year did world war two start?*
      A. Orange
      B. Paper
      C. NASA
      D. All of the above

    • @elliejohnstone943
      @elliejohnstone943 Před 5 lety +149

      Sebastian Moon exactly rip us

    • @backupacc8167
      @backupacc8167 Před 4 lety +356

      ellie johnstone watching this made me want to move to America.

    • @elliejohnstone943
      @elliejohnstone943 Před 4 lety +46

      Dream Candyz can relate

    • @whooopsiesssssssss9770
      @whooopsiesssssssss9770 Před 4 lety +66

      Yup my problem rn and after my bio exam yesterday m fully done wiv life

  • @callmehkatie9518
    @callmehkatie9518 Před 3 lety +1087

    I feel cheated with GCSEs. I’m doing 10 subjects with up to 5 exams in each. If there’s any Americans here, let me explain ONE of my subjects:
    -21 poems to learn, learn all context, background, annotations, and 2 essays on any random ones and some poems we have never seen. We don’t even get the “cheat thing”??
    -Macbeth, learn all of the important lines, annotations etc, essay question on any random part of it
    -Same thing for an inspector calls
    -Same thing for A Christmas Carol
    No multiple choice, all 12-40 mark essay questions.
    -write a letter
    -write a story
    And then add all of the other subjects.
    I’m in pain 😀

    • @samcurtis6590
      @samcurtis6590 Před 2 lety +164

      Same except I'm doin Jekyll and Hyde instead of Christmas Carol. Here we have to write entire essays about the connotations of a word when Americans get *multiple choice*

    • @callmehkatie9518
      @callmehkatie9518 Před 2 lety +126

      @@samcurtis6590 we get lucky with one multiple choice on a physics test 🤣🤣

    • @mustachioisbae
      @mustachioisbae Před 2 lety +66

      You have to learn so much for english man 😭
      I dont have as much to learn as you but still.
      I have 15 poems to learn, the unseen poetry shit, Macbeth, a Christmas Carol, blood brothers (instead of inspector calls), and obviously the 2 really dumb English language exams. Idk if I'm missing something else.

    • @callmehkatie9518
      @callmehkatie9518 Před 2 lety +52

      @@mustachioisbae I didn’t even realise until literally 3 days ago that this was only English literature, there’s English language on top of this. I think it’s to do with exam boards, we do Eduqas not aqa

    • @mustachioisbae
      @mustachioisbae Před 2 lety +11

      @@callmehkatie9518 yeah I do aqa exams for english, at least I get 2 GCSE's instead of 1 I guess

  • @jennapercival5383
    @jennapercival5383 Před 3 lety +1319

    Americans: does exam for maths and English
    Me (uk): does exam for English literature, English language, maths paper 1, maths calculator paper 1, maths calculator paper 2, chemistry,biology,physics,music performance,composition and written, drama performance,coursework and written, art final outcome and a b tec sport exam.
    Sis bye-

    • @ahiliojha6607
      @ahiliojha6607 Před 3 lety +41

      Same here in India. But we aren't allowed to use calculators (not even in competitive exams which are very hard) ...

    • @casamity6755
      @casamity6755 Před 3 lety +36

      @@ahiliojha6607 yeah all the science and maths tests for oxbridge uni entrance (uk) are non-calculator (these are also ridiculously hard). tbf though, i take a level maths and there are plenty of questions they can ask you where a calculator wouldn’t even help

    • @KMCKLL
      @KMCKLL Před 3 lety +15

      So we do huge exams for those too but they are done at the end of every year in high school for every class you take as well as midway through the year. They usually take about two hours each and you work towards them the whole year with the last month devoted to studying for them exclusively.

    • @nahya8723
      @nahya8723 Před 3 lety +5

      RE and Citizenship is mandatory gcse in my school 🥴. I did 3 maths, English literature, English language, the three sciences, geography, German, history and additional maths(half a level and half gcse?). My hand was broken after ✍️

    • @amoolakhanshali2972
      @amoolakhanshali2972 Před 3 lety +5

      I mean that’s just finals and state testing

  • @emilylacey7838
    @emilylacey7838 Před 5 lety +4579

    “No we use pens”
    “How are they graded”
    * awkward silence *
    “... with another pen?”

    • @rhiannasaglani7404
      @rhiannasaglani7404 Před 5 lety +61

      I DIED

    • @redbullandspite
      @redbullandspite Před 5 lety +155

      They get scanned lol, blue ink doesn’t get picked up by the scanners

    • @matildas3177
      @matildas3177 Před 5 lety +49

      @@redbullandspite All ink colours get picked up by scanners. That's just a common and convenient "truth" that get spread around about many different things that gets scanned.

    • @magdalenaarias3753
      @magdalenaarias3753 Před 5 lety +39

      @@redbullandspite Blue ink does get picked up by the scanner. I know this because in IB exams, which are also scanned, you have to use blue or black ink because when they scan the exams those are the darkest colors and hence easier for the examiner to see

    • @virtualarmageddon6232
      @virtualarmageddon6232 Před 5 lety +51

      @@magdalenaarias3753 well its not our fault that teachers, examination boards etc have lied to us about blue ink not being picked up by their scanners. We HAVE to write in black ink *only*. This sounds like it's the case across England and I can testify it's also the case in Northern Ireland. Tell them to stop lying to us about blue ink.

  • @saff1257
    @saff1257 Před 5 lety +12182

    UK english: analyse word by word, using terminology, structure, plan your answer and include AO1, 2 and 3. also remember 100000 quotes
    US english: colour a bubble

    • @leahj1613
      @leahj1613 Před 5 lety +845

      cheap as chips and here’s one book, one play and one novella

    • @oywiththepoodlesalready1790
      @oywiththepoodlesalready1790 Před 5 lety +833

      cheap as chips and you can’t have the books or poems with you cause you have to have that all memorised

    • @liammargetts
      @liammargetts Před 5 lety +713

      cheap as chips and don't forget the language side of things where you need to write a short story, analyse old text and write 2 of 6 types of persuasive writing, again we won't tell you which.

    • @cjbriggs211
      @cjbriggs211 Před 5 lety +627

      UK English: memorise 15 poems, 2 novels and a play, oh, and don’t forget all of the unseen texts that you have to learn on the spot in the exam
      UK Biology Paper 1: Bloody Beta Blockers

    • @bexter107
      @bexter107 Před 5 lety +158

      Also me,prise an entire story you wrote just to realise it doesn't fit with any of the titles we provide you with p, have fun

  • @stanleycornelius8925
    @stanleycornelius8925 Před 10 měsíci +91

    Hearing that the US don't have to write essays in ENGLISH was actually mind boggling. Literally finished my gcses yesterday and I can't describe to you the pain i went through with English lit and lang

  • @Sam4G0d
    @Sam4G0d Před 3 lety +449

    This is by far your best British vs American, because Jack's sarcastic, confused responses are just BRILLIANT. You should film more with him once allowed.

  • @drawde_064
    @drawde_064 Před 4 lety +2408

    America: Exams
    UK: you mean year 7 quiz?

  • @justsomeunicorn9762
    @justsomeunicorn9762 Před 4 lety +2856

    The fact that American students still complain about how hard Highschool is has me miffed

    • @_.a.amina_.456
      @_.a.amina_.456 Před 4 lety +85

      But then American highschool can be hard depending on the courses you take. Ap classes are meant to be challenging and there exams after you complete the course which are also hard. Also some schools are different so idk

    • @rompe-laar
      @rompe-laar Před 4 lety +24

      @@_.a.amina_.456 No one gets retakes or atleast you shouldn't you don't get retakes in job interviews and first impressions

    • @justsomeunicorn9762
      @justsomeunicorn9762 Před 4 lety +50

      _.a.amina _. Damn that makes me wish I was born in America lol. Idk if this is the case for every school but mine didn't make me take geography, our core subjects which were mandatory was science, maths, English and one language. How long do you do you study for for your exams? I'm gonna be trapped in doors revising from Christmas to July for mine lol.

    • @_.a.amina_.456
      @_.a.amina_.456 Před 4 lety +10

      just some unicorn I study for a long time for my exams when needed and I’m not saying everything is easy in the US schools😂 however it definitely is easier then British schools

    • @tyhall9530
      @tyhall9530 Před 4 lety +4

      geography is not compulsory in England either

  • @bevq2246
    @bevq2246 Před 3 lety +201

    It sounds like american education values complete accuracy and memorisation of the content taught, whereas uk seems to put more emphasis on demonstrating an ability to think around the subject

    • @emma70707
      @emma70707 Před 7 měsíci +3

      It really depends! All of my AP courses and gifted ("Differentiated") courses were very much about thinking through the problems. Only the larger general ed classes with teachers who we're mostly there to get a paycheck used rote memorization and things like multiple choice for grading.
      I think largely the problem is that teaching is relatively underfunded in the US. If you're in a poor area and you have huge classroom sizes, it's literally not possible to grade homework regularly (again, graded homework actually matters in the US) if you want to emphasize creative thought because that usually takes 4 to 5 times as long to create and grade as something with multiple choice options. But broadly creative thinking is something that the US values so in private schools and magnet schools, and for the higher-tier classes that are taught by teachers that tend to have their masters and thus are paid better (not taking on a second job) and have smaller class sizes, you really do get more assignments that emphasized creative thought.

    • @namk0163
      @namk0163 Před 2 měsíci

      That’s probably why the British education is a bit more effective.

  • @estherowl8075
    @estherowl8075 Před 3 lety +389

    Jack: Oh you guys get assessed along the way? Like every piece of work counts? Omg wow I can't imagine that.
    GCSE students 2020/2021: heheheh

    • @goopguy548
      @goopguy548 Před 2 lety +26

      Can't decide if it was worse or better, I had tests for about the last 4 months almost straight, ignoring the holidays, but I also couldn't relax in the holidays because of the course work lp

    • @pinkowlcat2125
      @pinkowlcat2125 Před 2 lety +2

      Happened for my a-levels too

    • @isabellerobey
      @isabellerobey Před 2 lety +2

      One teacher at my school told me about someone in her A level art class and he decided to do nothing for all his mocks and see how well he would do without revising, coursework etc. He failed, no surprise there. Then 2020 came around and teacher assessed grades happened but in the end no matter what the teacher thought he could've got he had to fail because there was no evidence of 'good work'.

    • @estherowl8075
      @estherowl8075 Před 2 lety

      @maus rip

    • @puddleduck1405
      @puddleduck1405 Před rokem

      hahaha yeah

  • @chinkydetemps4043
    @chinkydetemps4043 Před 4 lety +1477

    *school shooter is mentioned*
    “This is the UK that’s not an option”

    • @xygenplasma3715
      @xygenplasma3715 Před 4 lety +6

      😂😂😂🤣

    • @Kjfletcher1985
      @Kjfletcher1985 Před 4 lety +5

      I hope. Yet. Our local primaries are practising their lockdowns so maybe it's not too far off.

    • @harleyoyelade9988
      @harleyoyelade9988 Před 4 lety +5

      Katie Fletcher yeah my class did it and all the girls were screaming and messing around if it does happen we’re all fucked

    • @marianhartley3809
      @marianhartley3809 Před 4 lety +12

      @@Kjfletcher1985 Every school has started doing lockdown drills. Not as often as fire drills though

    • @alphaslash
      @alphaslash Před 3 lety +1

      @@marianhartley3809 wait when did they start this? And whats the lockdown drills for?

  • @bigguy4002
    @bigguy4002 Před 3 lety +5508

    american kids: "omg exams r so hard"
    british education system: *"let me introduce myself"*

    • @packet4382
      @packet4382 Před 3 lety +430

      I’m Finna move to America.Theyre gonna think I’m a genius

    • @melissavaz4379
      @melissavaz4379 Před 3 lety +50

      @@packet4382 ikrrrr 😂😂

    • @user-gk6nt5gi5n
      @user-gk6nt5gi5n Před 3 lety +30

      @@packet4382 i wish I did this but i finished exams 2 years ago

    • @packet4382
      @packet4382 Před 3 lety +13

      @@user-gk6nt5gi5n how’d they go?

    • @user-gk6nt5gi5n
      @user-gk6nt5gi5n Před 3 lety +31

      @@packet4382 fine passed everything with mostly 6s and 2 7s

  • @user-vd2jk7dl3p
    @user-vd2jk7dl3p Před 3 lety +252

    Are other countries sitting back scratching their heads? We are over here in the U.S.A taking tests with cheat sheets and we spend an inordinate amount of time in school doing ...well , pep rallies, painting ourselves up for spirit week, getting excused absences so we can go to cheerleading competitions and planning for prom. Meanwhile, everyone else in the world is buckling down. But every year its like "And the Nobel prize goes to..oh ....another American." Is everyone else like HOW!!!!????

    • @GMAMEC
      @GMAMEC Před 3 lety +17

      Cheat sheets were worthless for me, especially since the test were timed. You either knew the material or you did not. I usually found that the my instructors made the exams more difficult if cheat sheets were allowed. Furthermore, I believe that there may be a misperception regarding cheat sheets. They were never used for spelling tests, specific math problems, or specific questions.

    • @goopguy548
      @goopguy548 Před 2 lety +46

      Because the ones who win the Nobel prize went to private schools then universities who both cost hundreds of thousands in expenses maybe even reaching 1mil. So that's probably why, more money based lol

    • @user-vd2jk7dl3p
      @user-vd2jk7dl3p Před 2 lety +5

      @@goopguy548 Disagree. A lot of the most successful Americans come from nothing.

    • @user-qp6ts2dp5g
      @user-qp6ts2dp5g Před 2 lety +30

      That’s better in my opinion (coming from a Brit). Children should be allowed to be children, you’re only young once. Life shouldn’t be focused around grades lol

    • @shutupworkid9735
      @shutupworkid9735 Před 2 lety +2

      Very large population, significantly more funding and academic freedom. Countries like the UK however still have more winners per capita.

  • @mrpepero
    @mrpepero Před 3 lety +128

    When americans see our grade boundaries like “70+ is an A” not knowing they change depending on have my people did well so if more people the did well the higher the grade boundaries and if less people did well they’ll lower it. IT ISNT A FIXED NUMBER.

    • @shannon81726
      @shannon81726 Před 2 lety +3

      wait so everything is curved? in america, while the grades are fixed ex. 93-100 is an A, 86-92 is a B, etc. a good bit of final exams are curved, so everyone’s grades are based off the person who did the best. if a person got a 85 and that was the highest score, that ends up as a 100 and everyone else’s are graded accordingly

    • @rachaelevans8351
      @rachaelevans8351 Před 2 lety +7

      @@shannon81726 oh yeah it’s kinda like if the questions are harder and they expect more people struggled to get higher grades across the country, then they make the grade boundaries lower to make it look like they’re doing their jobs. My English GCSE was the first year with the number grades rather than letter grades and our teachers warned us they’re gonna give you a more difficult exam so they can give lower grade boundaries and make it look like the new system is getting more people to pass English. But usually a difficult exam year is followed by an easier exam year, but the easier the questions the harder it is to get higher grades - my year for maths a 70% was an A* and a C was 20% but a couple of years before an A* was 66% and a C was 14/15%

    • @Lauren-mu9cw
      @Lauren-mu9cw Před 2 lety

      That makes me so anxious because having a 70 on anything will immediately reduce me to tears I can’t imagine being ok with it 😭😭😭

    • @ivylangdon93
      @ivylangdon93 Před 9 dny

      @@shannon81726 Starting my month long GCSE hike in 5 days, basically they have to ensure that 30% of all people who take GCSE's Fail in each subject (30% fail Maths, 30% fail physics etc...)

  • @madeleineedwards665
    @madeleineedwards665 Před 3 lety +4495

    I was always so confused why American high school dramas showed kids never studying but getting good marks, but now it makes more sense lol.

    • @waqtiyao8834
      @waqtiyao8834 Před 3 lety +103

      Yh, if you didn’t study and especially when you reach high school and don’t have your credits you don’t graduate and that’s your problem. In elementary and middle school they don’t count credits and not every thing you see in a(n) American T.V show is not the way it’s like. Trust me I wish it was like that. If you ask an American is nothing like you see on T.V.

    • @gabblebabbles2017
      @gabblebabbles2017 Před 3 lety +63

      I never studied for anything but I usually passed all tests, exams, and quizzes. Except for literally every science class I took. I failed science basically my whole school career because of one not being at all interested in the subjects but also teachers who didn't make it all interesting. Like no science experiments or lab days. Just papers and textbooks for an hour.

    • @abishannon
      @abishannon Před 3 lety +49

      and when they all groaned and looked defeated when the teacher announced a pop quiz

    • @goopguy548
      @goopguy548 Před 2 lety +5

      @Some annoying person that's not true, you need to have a knowledge of chemical reactions and it shows your ability to learn and develop a knowledge off the basis you have in science, atleast that's what it is in Britain

    • @HouseMDaddict
      @HouseMDaddict Před 2 lety

      In New York, they have state tests (Regents) and kids takes 2 in 9th grade, 3 in 10th, 3-4 in 11th, and potentially 2-3 in 12th depending on if you continue with math/science. Then you can do AP/IB as well. Those regents exams are scores by people who are not your teachers.

  • @siine
    @siine Před 3 lety +3689

    i had to memorize people's names, geographical places, dates of events and america had MULTIPLE CHOICE ANSWERS? bruh

    • @haleyhutchinson9353
      @haleyhutchinson9353 Před 3 lety +81

      It depends on where you are. My history class we had to remember stuff and label it on the map. Had to remember who create what, when was it created and other important things. We had to translate something(I can’t remember what it was) I can’t remember if it was from the Romans or the Mediterranean’s but it was complicated. Also all of our test are not multiple choice. It depends on the teacher. Standard class test teachers can decide whether they want multiple choice. A lot of my teachers did short responses and essays. Test like the ACTs and SATS is a mixture of both. AP exams are usually more short responses and essays. Also all schools are different here. My school was definitely not like his

    • @bookdear
      @bookdear Před 3 lety +6

      Well, you still needed to know the right answer in a multiple choice :)

    • @siine
      @siine Před 3 lety +122

      @@bookdear you have the answer right in front of you, all you have to do is choose bruh, don't compare yours to mine💀

    • @siine
      @siine Před 3 lety +23

      @@bookdear btw do you just circle out the answer or you've gotta show the working?

    • @bookdear
      @bookdear Před 3 lety +22

      @@siine haha I'm sure it does make it easier to have choices as a reminder. Also, I've been to school in both America and England (briefly), so I'm a bit familiar with both systems. We get tested all the time with fewer large tests at the end, and you get tested massively all at once. It makes me think that there must be some sort of compromise between the two systems so kids don't feel such pressure.

  • @Justazraa
    @Justazraa Před 3 lety +167

    Me a German sitting here like: what is a gcse ? Wha- 👁👄👁
    And i feel we and the Brits(?) are similar because in the end we‘re all alcoholics by the age of 15
    And praying to god that exams will end. 🤠

    • @x6621
      @x6621 Před 3 lety +12

      GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) is the equivalent of Mittlere Reife, but you can choose certain subjects and the level of knowledge required is usually at an 18 year old’s level even though you take the exam at 15/16.
      A level (Advanced Level, sometimes called ACSE- Advanced Certificate of Secondary Education) is the equivalent of Abitur, and it comes after you finish GCSE, but the level of knowledge required for this exam is usually the level of a 2nd year university student, even though you take the exam at 18.
      It’s very, very stressful.

    • @Justazraa
      @Justazraa Před 3 lety +11

      @@x6621 ahh I see! Thank you so much for explaining! Yeah it really is very, very stressful I have to chuckle when I see some country’s with multiple choice questions.

    • @mychemical_sunshine5879
      @mychemical_sunshine5879 Před 2 lety

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @marilenapolkehn9062
      @marilenapolkehn9062 Před 2 lety

      Crying in Abitur

  • @aedwards5166
    @aedwards5166 Před 2 lety +365

    Fun fact - The reason we have to use black pens for exams in the UK is because blue in won't always show up when a paper is photocopied.
    Really envying all those multiple choice tests in the states though! Any one know what exams are like in Canada? Are they more similar to the UK or the US?

    • @ma_kal
      @ma_kal Před 2 lety +23

      Both actually. Some teachers will set completely written questions while others ia a mixture of both but that's my school. I don't know about the others

    • @aedwards5166
      @aedwards5166 Před 2 lety +11

      @@ma_kal oh interesting! Sounds like a nice balance (if exams can ever be nice 😅)

    • @ma_kal
      @ma_kal Před 2 lety +17

      @@aedwards5166 ikr?? Considering canada is the middle child between the states and the uk

    • @archiehenderson9529
      @archiehenderson9529 Před rokem +2

      In Scotland, it's black or blue, no gel pens (they smudge)

    • @nadismolina
      @nadismolina Před rokem

      @@archiehenderson9529 in mexico for elementary and secondary (since the government doesn't control high school) you have to use pencil, its all multiple option and sometimes you can find the answers online

  • @itsgoldenlikedaylight2674
    @itsgoldenlikedaylight2674 Před 4 lety +1903

    US high school sounds like a dream
    Multiple choice ENGLISH
    Cheat sheets
    Own clothes
    Like 3 exams???

  • @bradcoxon6525
    @bradcoxon6525 Před 4 lety +3075

    My mate studied Romeo and Juliet for 3 years then wrote about Macbeth in the exam

    • @horsenuggets1018
      @horsenuggets1018 Před 4 lety +190

      He's defo an absolute don

    • @ethantran8286
      @ethantran8286 Před 4 lety +60

      What mark he get? lmao

    • @bradcoxon6525
      @bradcoxon6525 Před 4 lety +207

      Ethan Tran He got a U

    • @lakishansivakumar6785
      @lakishansivakumar6785 Před 4 lety +88

      Brad Coxon of course he did. the teachers are so shitty

    • @MrGtasan123
      @MrGtasan123 Před 4 lety +50

      My friend did America 1950 1990 history, wrote about 1920 1950 America for exam 😂😂😂 thank God it was a mock though

  • @ashhabimran239
    @ashhabimran239 Před 9 měsíci +14

    I think you should also do an updated version of this with the 9-1 spec, and see how many exams the average GCSE student needs to take

  • @reallifekat
    @reallifekat Před 3 lety +49

    "you only take 3 or 4 at max"
    *looks at my 11 AP tests*
    that was probably a bad idea

    • @nothingtoseeherefolks6911
      @nothingtoseeherefolks6911 Před 2 lety +2

      Did you take them over 2 or 3 years!

    • @reallifekat
      @reallifekat Před 2 lety +1

      @@nothingtoseeherefolks6911 I took the classes in one year, but I ended up spreading out the tests over 2 years because of scheduling conflicts. Some of the tests weren't held in the same place and I couldn't make it to the different location

    • @nothingtoseeherefolks6911
      @nothingtoseeherefolks6911 Před 2 lety

      @@reallifekat oh, wow. That’s crazy. How did you do anything but study?

    • @reallifekat
      @reallifekat Před 2 lety +2

      @@nothingtoseeherefolks6911 I didn't

  • @neelimaalim
    @neelimaalim Před 4 lety +812

    As if the GCSEs weren’t already hard enough... the government decided to bring out the 1-9 system

    • @JoJo-og6nk
      @JoJo-og6nk Před 4 lety +17

      Neelima Alim like me in year 7 with target grade 9 in everything! Everyone who is doing their GCSE’s is panicking saying they are failing like sis imma failll..... might aswell hibernate now!

    • @Pholki
      @Pholki Před 4 lety +26

      Jo Jo It’s ok, I’m in year 10 and I’m starting to hit 8/9’s already, as soon as you get to year 9 and above you can start getting high grades.

    • @JoJo-og6nk
      @JoJo-og6nk Před 4 lety +5

      NightEchoz thnxs. Good to know it is possible

    • @maxrides6880
      @maxrides6880 Před 4 lety +17

      Yeah don’t bank on your predicted grades , they can fluctuate massively from year to year and subject to subject. Did my GCSE’s last year and got all 11

    • @elisesimms3489
      @elisesimms3489 Před 4 lety +6

      Neelima Alim only good thing is if you get 30% on a higher paper it’s a pass

  • @katiebarnett3313
    @katiebarnett3313 Před 4 lety +2716

    not trying to sound controversial but American "tests" sound sooo much easier than the 30 exams I would have had to sit

    • @adambarton2864
      @adambarton2864 Před 4 lety +14

      Good luck 🙏🏾💯

    • @flyingpigacorn6669
      @flyingpigacorn6669 Před 4 lety +174

      Jesus Christ, 30?! Wtf do u take? I thought I had it bad with 28 exams.
      Also, I completely agree. The American schooling system sounds like a dream

    • @pinkgiraffe378
      @pinkgiraffe378 Před 4 lety +6

      Omg ikr!

    • @adambarton2864
      @adambarton2864 Před 4 lety +9

      Not anymore 😂😂😂

    • @CookiesAreNoice
      @CookiesAreNoice Před 4 lety +13

      @@adambarton2864 As an American the schooling system is ok.

  • @Lorentari
    @Lorentari Před rokem +18

    For nearly all exams in Denmark you are allowed to bring everything, notes, books, your PC, the internet.
    When is a "closed book" exam (no aids) ever gonna help you other than for trivia at the dining table.

  • @adam.r3351
    @adam.r3351 Před 3 lety +31

    Just to add a side note here; Something that was missed is in the UK in secondary schools mainly; there is general assessments that would take place after big topics to view your progress in each subjects, which would be done throughout the school year and then an assessment at the end of the year for each subject again to show you have understood everything but also to see what sets you would be put into when you went up into your next year. So from year 7-10 that would happen. But obviously year 11,12,13 will have bigger exams which goes towards more and mean more as this helps you get jobs and be able to go too University. However there are different paths for example, What I am doing which is BTEC which I started after year 11 (You obviously have to complete GCSEs though; which I did. They are mandatory) where I started my first year of BTEC which was a Level 2 in travel and tourism which is a little step back before going foward again from an academic point of view. I have DONE a Level 2 in Travel and tourism which is 1 year and NOW I am doing a level 3 in Travel and Tourism which is 2 years; year 1 being just the diploma for basic level 3 then the year 2 being the extended diploma which at the end will mean you have equivalent to four A levels. So BTECs is just more off a specific education that will be set too one industry/job type which for me was Travel and Tourism as a whole industry which in basic means it will cover everything in Travel and tourism.

    • @namk0163
      @namk0163 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Bro BTECs sound way better, it’s sad how everyone assumes any BTEC student is a set 8. But then again, most BTEC students I’ve seen are a bit thick in the head.

    • @adam.r3351
      @adam.r3351 Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks for ur reply. I mean fair enough, it’s true there are some out there that are really silly and don’t take the system seriously but then again a lot of people do. It’s been 3 years since my comment and I am now in an amazing job and progressing really well. If BTEC wasn’t an option then I have no idea how I would be doing one of my dream jobs currently and also getting even closer to getting to my ultimate dream job. I work in the aviation industry now and work in Airport operations for context

  • @jack_edwards
    @jack_edwards Před 5 lety +4039

    evan: "when the school shooter comes i-"
    me: "wAIT WHAT"

    • @oletamary187
      @oletamary187 Před 5 lety +11

      oh

    • @delicatestyle1330
      @delicatestyle1330 Před 5 lety +7

      How do you only have 1 reply lol?

    • @Adam-yu5zj
      @Adam-yu5zj Před 5 lety +14

      You go to Durem University! Nice I’m trying to get into Cambridge because my dad works there. If I cannot get in I’m going to Durem

    • @fh4599
      @fh4599 Před 5 lety +77

      Gallade wanna go Cambridge but you say “Durem” it’s Durham 😂

    • @Thea-pt9dy
      @Thea-pt9dy Před 5 lety +1

      Fas huss ikr

  • @amsalb1354
    @amsalb1354 Před 4 lety +4123

    wait lemme get this straight for english americans have multiple choice while we have to learn 15 poems 2 plays and a novel without a cheat sheet🤦🏽‍♂️

    • @oldlantern4754
      @oldlantern4754 Před 4 lety +169

      AB not quite. Americans are graded on there performance on every quiz and every homework, in the past three months for English I have analyzed and written a short essay on 2 nonfiction political articles, 2 short stories, three novels (tell the wolves I’m home, the catcher in the rye, and one flew over the cuckoos nest, the last two I read at the same time) created a three part podcast with no rubric, and did an art piece plus essay plus presentation showing my understanding of catcher in the rye. And other stuff like quizzes and notes checks in between. This is for honors English 10 (age 15 usually) all that counts for your final grade in the class and it is very stressful when you have 4 or 5 other classes of similar work load.

    • @hannahfarr1852
      @hannahfarr1852 Před 4 lety +1

      AB ikr

    • @oppositeofmismatch7864
      @oppositeofmismatch7864 Před 4 lety +184

      Old Lantern sounds like a b tech lol

    • @intellectualhybrid2
      @intellectualhybrid2 Před 4 lety +50

      ​@@oppositeofmismatch7864 XDDDDDDD
      nah m8 even Btec had more bones than that weak sauce. Take Btec Comp Sci. It's a pussy compared to uni work, but I'll let you compare what Old Lantern said to Btec Business, that shit can be done in your sleep

    • @chatshitgetbanned3374
      @chatshitgetbanned3374 Před 4 lety +87

      @@oldlantern4754 Yeah but most Brits have like 10+ subjects/classes at GCSE so it still works out more I guess. I did German, History, Maths, English Literature, English Language, Biology, Physics, Social and Physical factors affecting sport, Art, Religious Studies, Latin and Spanish and the breadth of content means that each subject requires two years to learn the entire course

  • @petecroker
    @petecroker Před 3 lety +32

    As a Durham alumnus I want to wish Jack all the best if he's still suffering with exams .... This video was amazing. It has literally transformed every American education reference I never understood growing up ... multiple choice English tests blew my mind! Thank you!

  • @ellah2368
    @ellah2368 Před 3 lety +43

    oh god this is kinda scaring me now lol I was looking into studying to be a vet in the UK (I'm from US), but like all those essays, tests, standards, etc....idk if i'm prepared

    • @alphaslash
      @alphaslash Před 3 lety +7

      Nah you’ll be fine. If you know what you are doing then you should be fine as long as you revise

    • @judeh8160
      @judeh8160 Před 2 lety +11

      The exams you take will certainly be hard in the UK, but the harder part will be getting accepted here. Any medical courses are very competitive and the good Universities for medicine only accept the best of the best. If you can get accepted, I'm sure you'll do perfectly well, but make sure to put the work in now by finding practice UK exams online and doing a LOT of extra reading around your subject.

  • @WidthTomJones
    @WidthTomJones Před 4 lety +1424

    *British exam hall*
    School shooter: *enters*
    Pupil: Wrong country, mate!
    Teacher: YOU ARE UNDER EXAM CONDITIONS! NO TALKING!

    • @xavigoeswild6827
      @xavigoeswild6827 Před 4 lety +26

      Slytherin to the TARDIS Teachers aren’t even allowed in the exam halls lol

    • @WidthTomJones
      @WidthTomJones Před 4 lety +37

      XaviGoesWILD
      Our invigilators are the teachers (but not the ones of the particular subject)

    • @xavigoeswild6827
      @xavigoeswild6827 Před 4 lety +7

      @@WidthTomJones wow, really? I thought everyone had to have invigilators lol sorry

    • @tiktokcentre9829
      @tiktokcentre9829 Před 4 lety

      XaviGoesWILD yea they are 😂

    • @realchestro2986
      @realchestro2986 Před 4 lety

      @@WidthTomJones same in South Africa; we have invigilators but no teacher/lecturer can invigilate his/her module. Physics lecturer will do, for example, Anatomy 🤷‍♂️

  • @toluwalaseadediran9295
    @toluwalaseadediran9295 Před 4 lety +3220

    Dont forget the fact that in England you passing depends on how every other person in the country does.🙄

    • @mot5919
      @mot5919 Před 4 lety +468

      It's bad how I want everybody around me to fail

    • @giselatipan4884
      @giselatipan4884 Před 4 lety +82

      I can't believe how true this is and I don't understand why?

    • @Antagonist121
      @Antagonist121 Před 4 lety +245

      @@giselatipan4884 If 80% of people get 80% in the exam, you can't have 80% get an A*, so you set the grade boundaries to be higher, so you need 90% to get an A* for example. Some exams are easier or harder than others, it's to make sure everyone has the correct grade relative to everyone else

    • @giselatipan4884
      @giselatipan4884 Před 4 lety +26

      @@Antagonist121 I guess is also because of different exam boards=different difficulty of exams

    • @user-gy7tp7oh7h
      @user-gy7tp7oh7h Před 4 lety +67

      stupid grade boundaries 😭

  • @johnmcdonald219
    @johnmcdonald219 Před rokem +13

    I'm 50 so it's been 30+ years since I went to school. I remember in primary school we sat with our desks in a horseshoe shape. Half way through primary 3 (8 years old) the teacher took each child individually and did a memory test, none of the pupils knew about this test beforehand. The next day the pupils were told to move their desks to create groups. Unbeknown to me at the time I was part of the second to last group.
    Over time I realised that my friends, who were in different groups from me, where performing different work from me and getting more time with the teacher. It was extremely difficult, if not impossible, to move up a group because the teachers weren't sure if you would be capable of performing more challenging work, even if you had proved yourself proficient in the work you were doing within your group.
    The pupils in the higher groups had a distinct advantage going into high school. At high school we were again in a combined class, I sat beside my friend who I hadn't sat beside since I was eight. The pupils were given the same class work but the pupils who had been in the lower groups at primary school found the classwork difficult because we had never been challenged where as the pupils in the higher groups found the work very easy.
    Towards the end of the first year the pupils were again separated into academic abilties. Unsurprisingly the pupils in the lower groups at primary school went into remedial class and the pupils who were part of the higher groups attended advanced class. My friends who were in advanced high school classes left school with good qualifications and confidence but unfortuantly the remedial class pupils did not.
    My whole life I've felt like school failed me, not that I failed school, all because the teachers took no interest in me since I failed a memory test at 8 years old. I really hope the school system has changed in the last 30 years.

  • @maebhnoone5795
    @maebhnoone5795 Před 2 lety +27

    I'm Irish and our school system is soooo different. We have standardised tests every year from 1st/2nd class to 6th class, and then in secondary school you have Christmas tests/week 10s, end of year tests, class tests, and sometimes midterms. and if you are in an exam year (leaving cert/ 6th year or junior cert/ 3rd year) you have your mocks, which are practise exams in January/ February. we also have CBA's (which are new, they were only brought into effect with this years 3rd years). CBA's, or classroom-based-assessments are just projects that you have a set amount of time to work on 9 it depends, anywhere from 4-8 weeks is standard.) So yeah, Irish school is fun.

    • @lykos..
      @lykos.. Před 6 měsíci +1

      I’m in a British school and we also have end of term tests, end of topic test, end of year tests, tri weeklys. I think may be more? Yeah dude I feel sorry for your. My friends in Ireland and she’s done bio already for gcse in yr ten? I’m not sure what that means, do you?

  • @chloechan2953
    @chloechan2953 Před 4 lety +2130

    15:07
    "Do you guys have to use no. 2 pencils on everything?"
    "No we use pens"
    "Then how are they...graded?"
    "...?"
    "....?"
    "With another pen?"

    • @Skyebright1
      @Skyebright1 Před 3 lety +71

      Chloe Chan yeah brits and Australians going wtf???

    • @ruderalph916
      @ruderalph916 Před 3 lety +55

      We write with a blue pen it is checked /graded with a red pen and the principal uses a green pen we can write with a black pen as well it's usually an option but sometimes not

    • @Aml_07
      @Aml_07 Před 3 lety +16

      @@ruderalph916 just a quick correction: it changes. Some schools accept black and some also grade in green (although mine tends to only use green for peer assessment)

    • @zozoey_0537
      @zozoey_0537 Před 3 lety +19

      for us we have to use black ballpoint pen because the marking for gcses is like scanned or something and only black can show up properly.

    • @ruderalph916
      @ruderalph916 Před 3 lety

      @Megan Rose we can only write with black if it's +1,+2 (year 12,13 ) or uni but some ICSE schools allow it

  • @jomama368
    @jomama368 Před 4 lety +1060

    Americans: we have a cheat sheet
    English: cries internally

    • @angiolettaantuonette5074
      @angiolettaantuonette5074 Před 4 lety +21

      I’ve been like laughing / crying since I heard about how bloody easy American tests are - like sign me up I’m going to America.

    • @alexandrab7215
      @alexandrab7215 Před 4 lety +14

      Most tests don’t have cheat sheets. Like that was something you had maybe when you are younger.

    • @trishalopez3932
      @trishalopez3932 Před 4 lety +6

      Lol. I’m an American (ew), and yes some teachers in my freshman year were very generous and let us have cheat sheets, but not many.

    • @alexandrab7215
      @alexandrab7215 Před 4 lety +5

      Trisha Lopez yeah, it’s not really that common and we would never be allowed to have cheat sheets for important tests.

    • @laurenh3343
      @laurenh3343 Před 4 lety +5

      Alexandra B ironically the only time I’ve ever had a cheat sheet was a notecard on a final and no other time

  • @CB-dy1he
    @CB-dy1he Před 3 lety +30

    The point about coursework being just as much a part of your final grade as exams is very accurate. I remember I was on track to hopefully get a B in my final maths grade, but because my teacher lost one of my final courseworks but never told me and claimed that I was the one who never handed it in afterwards(yeah)... I went down to a D as a final grade. I wasn’t great at Maths in the first place, but I’m still quite pissed about it even to this day.

  • @davidsalterego4481
    @davidsalterego4481 Před rokem +37

    GCSE History includes 4 periods of time in history (each multiple decades long) that each have a 1 hour essay style exam. All for a single grade.

    • @meekotheotter2801
      @meekotheotter2801 Před 11 měsíci +2

      ik im doing that rn history, the worst part is, for the cold war, they chose all the parts that i dont remember

    • @parsnip1
      @parsnip1 Před 10 měsíci

      @@meekotheotter2801 no. The worst part is china if you do it (it’s a paper 2 topic and I wanted to cry in the exam. I’m predicted a 9. I’ll be happy to get a 7).

  • @abdiqanifarah4102
    @abdiqanifarah4102 Před 4 lety +1249

    Us kids : YH OUR TEST IS 75% MULTIPLE CHOICE
    UK set 8 kid : Hold my last Brain cell🥴

    • @lysaali50
      @lysaali50 Před 4 lety +10

      There are only 4 sets

    • @onlythereal3233
      @onlythereal3233 Před 4 lety +35

      Lysa Ali na. it depends what school your in

    • @Lia-nw5dw
      @Lia-nw5dw Před 4 lety +13

      Lysa Ali my school had 5 sets for ever subject, minus English which had 4 but it depends on the size of the school

    • @jab4043
      @jab4043 Před 4 lety +6

      @@lysaali50 my school was massive and they had 2 blocks of 4 sets to basically block 1 had set 1-4 and block 2 had set 5-8

    • @samiha2006.
      @samiha2006. Před 4 lety

      I'm in year8

  • @daisym971
    @daisym971 Před 5 lety +2136

    UK exams are brutal. Before your GCSEs it is a straight month of hibernation when you are revising

    • @maisharahman3685
      @maisharahman3685 Před 5 lety +183

      You revised a month beforehand? I’ve done all my exams just revising the night before

    • @ginadonaldson1123
      @ginadonaldson1123 Před 5 lety +90

      Daisy M in a levels that month becomes a year

    • @foolmeg
      @foolmeg Před 5 lety +5

      Maisha Rahman me too bro

    • @lewisc556
      @lewisc556 Před 5 lety +57

      @@maisharahman3685 last year I expected to revise 3 months beforehand and I literally lost all motivation and revise the day of the exam

    • @whybother4156
      @whybother4156 Před 5 lety +8

      We don’t sit GCSE in Scotland when I was at School in was Standard Grades and ints think it’s still different I guess the person who made the video meant England

  • @reaganr7518
    @reaganr7518 Před 2 lety +57

    I’m from the US and had a completely different experience, we never really go cheat sheets and the majority of in class tests were open answer. I did do the IB dimploma which might have affected my experience though

    • @janwb2141
      @janwb2141 Před rokem +9

      IB is a European qualification tho isn’t it? I know it’s popular in France and Germany.

    • @ahuman652
      @ahuman652 Před rokem +5

      @@janwb2141 Yeah I think it is, at my school (public, in california) going for the IB Diploma/classes is recommended if you want to attend a college in the UK or europe. I really wanna do school in the UK, but i’m also not sure, so i’m going to be taking a mix of IB HL and AP classes junior and senior year and yeah taking IB makes your high school experience different. In 10th grade I took advanced classes and for most of them on tests I was allowed to use cheat sheets, but not for my AP classes. So I guess it just depends on the difficulty of the class itself, IB is definitely the most difficult course offered in high school since it’s more in depth.

    • @janwb2141
      @janwb2141 Před rokem +2

      @@ahuman652 v interesting!

    • @queenelizabeth8145
      @queenelizabeth8145 Před rokem +2

      @@janwb2141 IB is taught in every continent but is european style since it's created there. I did IB diploma in the US as well

    • @queenelizabeth8145
      @queenelizabeth8145 Před rokem

      I did the diploma as well but even before the diploma program my experience was far different from his. I've never had cheat sheets and the only exams that had some multiple-choice were science ones. I was genuinely surprised by his experience, I didn't realize the more stereotypical American education actually held true

  • @nylasagna
    @nylasagna Před 3 lety +39

    honestly think i get stressed just hearing the word “exam”

  • @kathrinbeckmann6530
    @kathrinbeckmann6530 Před 4 lety +1518

    "75% is multiple choice"
    "But-"
    "Even in English"
    "???????????????????????"
    Holy shit

    • @lucasburnett4422
      @lucasburnett4422 Před 3 lety +99

      Yet in English Lit we are told to memorise quotes from a 3 separate books/plays and poems, whilst also remembering the context the books were written in and the techniques the writers used

    • @elyssiathegood1555
      @elyssiathegood1555 Před 3 lety +3

      Oof yeah English multiple choice questions are the hardest. How is it allowed to grade students on something so subjective?

    • @kathrinbeckmann6530
      @kathrinbeckmann6530 Před 3 lety +12

      @@lucasburnett4422 You mean like everyone else, but with multiple choice?

    • @kathrinbeckmann6530
      @kathrinbeckmann6530 Před 3 lety +5

      @@elyssiathegood1555 Multiple choice on subjective questions sounds like such a pain

    • @Pure_Night_Fury
      @Pure_Night_Fury Před 3 lety +23

      @@elyssiathegood1555 idk but I would rather have a 25% of getting it write than writing like 4 pages for one question and only getting like 15 marks or something

  • @louisaw5969
    @louisaw5969 Před 5 lety +3268

    Finally getting some credit for all the hard work we do in England 😂☹️

    • @laurenj796
      @laurenj796 Před 5 lety +84

      i just finnished my biology exam and it was harddddddd

    • @ishuika
      @ishuika Před 5 lety +8

      lauren j yup what boards do you do?

    • @Jonny_spl
      @Jonny_spl Před 5 lety +11

      hey, only a week to go (bit more for some) :)!!

    • @hilz______2528
      @hilz______2528 Před 5 lety +22

      IKR - live in Australia but very similar to the England's curriculum

    • @kaiprice4991
      @kaiprice4991 Před 5 lety +30

      It aint much better over here in Wales, we got the WJEC beating the crap out of us.

  • @uo.2103
    @uo.2103 Před 2 lety +2

    I was just exploring this guy's channel and was absolutely whammed when I saw Jack Edwards in it. Looking so fresh before covid

  • @bambiunicorn602
    @bambiunicorn602 Před 3 lety +21

    It’s so crazy to me (German) that you have to pay for your tests it’s just such a wild thought to me. And in all my school time I did not have any multiple choice test, only now in Uni we have some.
    And cheat sheets were never a thing here, only in your Abitur which is the last big exam at the end of 12th grade you get a standardized cheat sheet for maths

    • @bambiunicorn602
      @bambiunicorn602 Před 3 lety +1

      Also I wrote a Full essay for all my major German exams like we didn’t learn like the meaning of specific words instead it’s more if you can interpret something in a poem or famous books from i.e. Goethe or Schiller

    • @parsnip1
      @parsnip1 Před 10 měsíci +1

      By “cheat sheet” do you mean you got some formulae etc., because we get that in the UK too.

  • @vishanthfishy
    @vishanthfishy Před 4 lety +2733

    The basic UK C grade student could probably be the smartest person in an American school

    • @lilyjohnson420
      @lilyjohnson420 Před 4 lety +138

      Vishanthfishy .R I’ve gotta go to America damn

    • @thesuncollective1475
      @thesuncollective1475 Před 4 lety +144

      The emphasis is on testing in the UK which as a Brit I always thought was wrong cause its just a memory test ...I'd bulk dump and forget everything after a test US system seems more natural ..it concentrates on Maths and English only gets serious when it needs too.

    • @kimmry9406
      @kimmry9406 Před 4 lety +77

      @@thesuncollective1475 a lot people know the us system is bad. They generally aren't more focused on maths and english than the brits, as they also don't need to know grammar or sentence structures to strive. Although the uk system uses a lot of memorisation, we still generally apply what we memorize. For example, I applied what I learnt from literary devices to my english lit and language paper, as did many others. And that increased my chances of getting better grades than others who didn't remember much devices. Memorisation can be handy when your put on the spot, and allows you to work faster.

    • @-PP859
      @-PP859 Před 4 lety +7

      WOW I'm American thanks...(¬_¬)ノ

    • @morganconsoli2830
      @morganconsoli2830 Před 4 lety +9

      Wow y’all that’s harsh nice to see you think I’d be a C grade student 😂

  • @mayajoy7248
    @mayajoy7248 Před 5 lety +2172

    I knew the American system was different, but I didn't realise it was THAT different!! I'm in the middle of my 27 written exams this exam season🙃

    • @Sushigabby
      @Sushigabby Před 5 lety +95

      when I complain about it exams its only 2 days long cut into half days and they're only an hour and multiple choice
      ..... i thought it was really hard but hearing about y'all makes me feel like a 1st grader

    • @phil-jaywhyte6503
      @phil-jaywhyte6503 Před 5 lety +47

      I'm Jamaican and we basically have the same educational structure as the UK. The most subjects I had to do in one year was 17 and we'd get several tests, projects and presentations every month for each for 10 months, then 34 exams at the end of the year in that specific year. I'm in my last year, about to step out of my 18 final exams, including bio, physics and chemistry because I'm doing 10 subjects now. It's hard in these streets. Americans really have it lucky in that department.

    • @maggierowland9914
      @maggierowland9914 Před 5 lety +1

      Maya Joy same good luck

    • @elenamccracken544
      @elenamccracken544 Před 5 lety +81

      Ikr? I’m in the middle of GCSEs (I have human geography today) and I saw this and I was so surprised at how different America schools work.
      Sorry if this offends anyone but...
      Americans have it fucking easy

    • @louiseclarke8948
      @louiseclarke8948 Před 5 lety +24

      I had 26 exams with the 2 day art exam

  • @minleeha286
    @minleeha286 Před 3 lety +29

    All British teachers ever said was to always be in a single filled line and it is actually so frustrating

    • @jasonsomers8224
      @jasonsomers8224 Před 2 lety +2

      My mind is blown by the single file line thing. The halls at the school I went to were not organized. It wasn't chaotic or anything, it just wasn't controlled by teachers.

  • @pureemma2337
    @pureemma2337 Před 3 lety +3

    This has really helped me with my comparative essay for my university course. It's due tomorrow and I haven't had a class in this module in a month. Thank you lmoa

  • @amanixp3632
    @amanixp3632 Před 4 lety +1052

    America: Multiple choice for almost everything
    Britain: write 50 essays in 2 hours go

    • @TheVortexGaming
      @TheVortexGaming Před 4 lety +4

      SAT nowadays is 100% multiple choice, the essay is optional I think it servers as a replacement for a college entrance essay for some universities if I am not mistaken

    • @dominiquewilliams2783
      @dominiquewilliams2783 Před 4 lety +6

      And to think here in the Caribbean (We're kind of in between Not as difficult as the U.K but more difficult than USA by far) we fight for validation by the U.S. It should be the other way around.

    • @jajohnson8422
      @jajohnson8422 Před 4 lety +6

      Bruh for my school almost for every of my exams except math we need to write and essay

    • @owencoogan409
      @owencoogan409 Před 4 lety +4

      Not even 2 hours it’s like 1 hour 30 minute was the standard time when I did GCSEs

    • @atinyblackrose8938
      @atinyblackrose8938 Před 4 lety

      @Parl Kilkington same haha i can't even understand England's way

  • @wtfjackaboy
    @wtfjackaboy Před 4 lety +1199

    UK: *three years of never leaving the house or socialising or hAviNg a cHiLdhOoD, learning how to write university-level essays and working out maths equations that shouldn't exist and having a mental breakdown every other week, no guarantee of getting into university*
    US: *studies five minutes for multiple choice questions well done you're in college now*

    • @ashryvern6485
      @ashryvern6485 Před 4 lety +12

      Twenty Øne Cheers for Sweet REEvenge honestly the UK sounds like school hell but in my us school, most of the upper level students are in college or university level classes

    • @davidzeibert1324
      @davidzeibert1324 Před 4 lety +4

      Literally every college requires immense studying, the vast majority of tests are not multiple choice once one leaves high school

    • @karissa6560
      @karissa6560 Před 4 lety +3

      Honestly so true, half the time when are teachers provide quizlet for studying, I take like 10 minutes before the test starts, and I'm good.

    • @Catani99
      @Catani99 Před 4 lety +1

      Karissa Nickels
      What year are you in?

    • @bfbvouabeorbvoaervure963
      @bfbvouabeorbvoaervure963 Před 4 lety +4

      David Zeibert
      I studied five hours a day for my A levels. For two years. Every goddam day.

  • @staceyburge8598
    @staceyburge8598 Před 3 lety +11

    I’m from Missouri and we almost never were allowed to use a cheat sheet. If you had one, it was usually a 4” x 6” index card.

  • @timbuyoti1198
    @timbuyoti1198 Před 2 lety +6

    In Zambia, being a former British colony, the exams are pretty similar.
    We have two papers mostly for each subject exam. The first one is multiple choice and the second could comprise essays, one word answers or short sentence answers. That's for the junior secondary leaving exams and the final High school exams.

  • @dan5721
    @dan5721 Před 5 lety +2034

    Next video: Jack brings an English Lit GCSE paper and explains it to Evan.
    Evan- Wha...
    Jack- I Do aN EnGLisH LiTErATurE DeGrEE

  • @Rae-zb1wb
    @Rae-zb1wb Před 4 lety +1198

    I swear a British person would do soooooo well in America !

    • @hunterm9
      @hunterm9 Před 4 lety +11

      @G Walker To be honest the GED is much easier than the SAT/ACT, and unless you are educationally challenged (most who take the GED in the US are, or they had extenuating circumstances as a child) most can pass it with 3-5 months of study. I'm only basing my knowledge of the GCSE on videos and old exams, but if you have a good memory you are likely to do fairly well. The SAT is multiple choice but it will have more complex problems that require precision.

    • @hunterm9
      @hunterm9 Před 4 lety +7

      @G Walker Absolutely, I wasn't trying to make your accomplishment seem insignificant, I was just giving everybody some comparison. The GCSE's sound like an absolute nightmare. Most of the world needs education reform.

    • @etebarekteklay8826
      @etebarekteklay8826 Před 4 lety +1

      I get good grade on the test and my class works but exam kills my grade.

    • @lizzyforsdyke3833
      @lizzyforsdyke3833 Před 4 lety +4

      I'm year 8, I could pass my A.P exams.

    • @Aml_07
      @Aml_07 Před 4 lety +7

      @@hunterm9 as a brit the SATs are the most easy test ever

  • @tosynariyo2427
    @tosynariyo2427 Před 2 lety +4

    The SATs we do in England are normally taken in the equivalent of 5th grade and for Comprehensive school students, it is generally used to put them in academic sets but for us students in in grammar schools, they basically don't matter; for Grammar school students they are just a formality. They are also only taken by state (public) school students; private school kids have their own internal tests.

  • @mrstambourinegirl397
    @mrstambourinegirl397 Před 2 lety +11

    omg how have i just found this now! im English and did the typical exam route and then i went to uni. However, as part of my uk university BA degree i actually went to the States to study for a while. Big up LSU Geaux Tigers!!!! However, i actually found the multiple choice question tests i had to do in the USA much more difficult than the essay type exam questions i was used to. I am so used to analysing and basically talking shit and waffling on, i really did find it difficult to answer multiple choice. However i did get the highest mark in the "Rural Crime in Louisiana" class thanks to it being an essay based exam (that they very kindly gave us a week before the test)- it was like christmas had come early considering we never get to see the exam questions in the uk. :)

  • @pikahet314
    @pikahet314 Před 4 lety +763

    "that just sounds like your constantly studying"
    ...
    Isn't that what school is?

    • @souhridyobose4362
      @souhridyobose4362 Před 3 lety +15

      Yes, Americans got it real ez

    • @bluexephosfan970
      @bluexephosfan970 Před 3 lety +6

      In the US "studying" is more used to specifically mean preparing for an immediate exam as opposed to generally studying, so a lot of what called studying in other countries would be called just like 'doing homework' in the US

    • @sillywatch558
      @sillywatch558 Před 3 lety

      @@souhridyobose4362 well except for math you usually have to remember everything for math.

  • @rhiannonwoonton2381
    @rhiannonwoonton2381 Před 5 lety +545

    relate to Jack saying “we treated our teachers like SHIT” 😂😂😂

    • @111111hakar
      @111111hakar Před 5 lety +8

      The life of a supply teacher is hell on earth.

    • @111111hakar
      @111111hakar Před 5 lety +5

      Not nearly masochistic for that friend, but when I went to school supply teachers may as well have been dogs for the amount of respect they would get.

    • @bakeymykakey
      @bakeymykakey Před 5 lety +5

      once had a supply teacher storm out in the first 10 minutes because someone flicked a condom and it slapped her in the face

  • @noahpalmer6653
    @noahpalmer6653 Před 3 lety +17

    I'm in the uk and we have 6 sets of exams a year (one is end of years) to assess whether we do well in topics. But I go to a grammar school so it's very focused on academics and a lot of the normal state schools dont do that.

  • @gemmacritchison1909
    @gemmacritchison1909 Před 2 lety +1

    I love watching this and comparing this to my experience in Australia

  • @evasharkey2786
    @evasharkey2786 Před 5 lety +735

    aSsEmBliEs
    Jack: “the ones about sexual assault weren’t too fun”
    Evan: “ours were about rainforests”

    • @ilonaestrin5046
      @ilonaestrin5046 Před 5 lety +7

      Red Sharkie I’m in America and we had one about sexual assault

    • @delicatestyle1330
      @delicatestyle1330 Před 5 lety +8

      I’m in england too. We had ones like jack

    • @amymarshall790
      @amymarshall790 Před 5 lety +11

      i’m in england and every single one of my assemblies is about crime and rape and littering, they even bring in the police to threaten us.

    • @ilonaestrin5046
      @ilonaestrin5046 Před 5 lety +1

      Well our ones about rape and sexual assault were stupid. There was this whole thing about tic-tac-no-go, just like tic-tac-toe, which was the three places no one should touch you.

  • @petersavill5749
    @petersavill5749 Před 4 lety +739

    I moved to the US when I was 15. I went from failing maths in the UK to being a Mathathalete and competing for my US school against other kids

    • @petersavill5749
      @petersavill5749 Před 4 lety +34

      Melissa Allison maybe in Math and Science. I found they were way ahead of me in Social Science and English but that could just be my experience

    • @melissaallison2103
      @melissaallison2103 Před 4 lety +38

      @@petersavill5749 yeah maybe but the american system sounds so much easier than the British system.

    • @anonymous-iu4th
      @anonymous-iu4th Před 4 lety +1

      Brilliant

    • @aijsdijdni3401
      @aijsdijdni3401 Před 4 lety +25

      Melissa Allison Americans aren’t stupid that’s just the public school system. They don’t care about enforcing and encouraging you in your studies, but other schools, such as Charter Schools, Private Schools, and Performing Arts are extremely academically competitive. Same thing goes for college. Many community colleges have people who don’t take things seriously, but then you have universities such as Ivy Leagues that are the most competitive schools in America. It all just depends on the person. The school system is fucked and doesn’t care about enforcing education and leaves it all up to the students to force themselves. It’s very split between intelligence and stupidity, with not really an in between.

    • @jasonbyrne8487
      @jasonbyrne8487 Před 4 lety +6

      @@melissaallison2103 They did, however, land people on the moon so they're obviously not stupid...

  • @chronos5882
    @chronos5882 Před 3 lety +2

    This is giving me flashbacks, I remember specially in maths (they did this for science too) you'd have to write down how u came to the answer u chose and sometimes if u didn’t write them down u'd either just get 1 point for that question or none at all.

  • @millyadshead-grant1378
    @millyadshead-grant1378 Před 4 lety +1379

    WAIT AMERICANS DON'T HAVE OLD MEN WALKING AROUND THE EXAM ROOM STARING AT YOU SUSPICIOUSLY?

    • @mariah3686
      @mariah3686 Před 4 lety +34

      we do lol

    • @ashejarvis5957
      @ashejarvis5957 Před 4 lety +23

      Dude, all through my biology higher tier exam this old man at the front always stared at me whenever I so much as looked around the room.

    • @arshtewari7075
      @arshtewari7075 Před 4 lety +5

      @@ashejarvis5957 i feel you dude

    • @murdershe......7378
      @murdershe......7378 Před 4 lety +21

      @@arshtewari7075 Or the slow walk they do around the exam hall, I always got one with a squeaky shoe.

    • @TheHesK9
      @TheHesK9 Před 4 lety +3

      I had a women with really loud shoes walking around

  • @m.a9078
    @m.a9078 Před 5 lety +820

    💀💀💀A CHEAT SHEET?!?!? WE’RE NOT EVEN ALLOWED THR BOOKS ANYMORE 😭😭😭

    • @moniquecastelli8058
      @moniquecastelli8058 Před 5 lety +10

      M. A right! And I live in America! Dang cheat sheets where????

    • @jakecard981
      @jakecard981 Před 5 lety +3

      As someone who wholesomely cheated in my english literature exam by marking quotes with coloured dots for different characters. I can say i’m proud

    • @oxauthoralicexo7854
      @oxauthoralicexo7854 Před 5 lety

      I sweaaaaarr

    • @sneakerhead6625
      @sneakerhead6625 Před 5 lety +4

      M. A and this is why i’ve failed gcse i forgot all the quotes i needed

    • @ciara.d3
      @ciara.d3 Před 5 lety +1

      EXACTLY😭 AND WE HAVE 3 BOOKS TO LEARN

  • @carolinaguzman1936
    @carolinaguzman1936 Před 3 lety +8

    At my public high school in America there were tons of people that didn’t care and if you did you had it kind of hard. Not all my test were multiple choice and I had like 4 finals on the same day . Also they changed the grading for SATs the year I took it. Majority of my AP classes had no multiple choice questions .It was all written even quizzes. Rarely if ever did we have a cheat sheet. I had quizzes at the beginning of the week and a test at the end of it. Some snobbish teachers gave 2 question quizzes so if you got one wrong you failed this was also a written test with no cheat sheet .

  • @charliefern2719
    @charliefern2719 Před rokem +3

    I also did my GCSE’s with A-level students, so it was basically a gym full of y11 and sixth formers and we had never done this kind of exam before since all the others were in our classrooms.

  • @amber5802
    @amber5802 Před 4 lety +486

    There’s always that convo between people “who’s gonna take one for the team”

  • @ameliahall6951
    @ameliahall6951 Před 4 lety +1591

    imagine if he mentioned the 10 hour art GCSE or the 15 hour A level art exam lol

    • @anabiasaif1433
      @anabiasaif1433 Před 4 lety +98

      Amelia Hall yeet i did it last year for gcse and cried the whole twhile munching on m&ms for 10 hours

    • @septicboop2947
      @septicboop2947 Před 4 lety +15

      I did a clay project for mine this year... absolute hell

    • @realcheesybob20
      @realcheesybob20 Před 4 lety +11

      15 hours? What do you even do?

    • @realcheesybob20
      @realcheesybob20 Před 4 lety +8

      Or wait do you have to like make a sculpture or painting...?

    • @kou3459
      @kou3459 Před 4 lety +41

      @@realcheesybob20 yes you have an exam book for a few months and then make the final piece in the 15hr exam

  • @lavistelle6031
    @lavistelle6031 Před 2 lety +8

    This sounds so complicated. In Italy we do almost only oral examinations (except for subjects like maths that need ALSO a written test), like at least five of them for subject every year of school. At the end of high school, to graduate, there is a big national exam with two written parts of 6 hours each (one for an essay and the other for the subject your high school is specialised in: for me it was maths and physics) that are the same for all the country and then an oral exam about all subjects that you do with a commission half made of your teachers and half made of teachers of other schools you don't know. It's incredibly hard and you need to do perfectly in all 3 exams (and having had very high grades in the last three years of school) to score the maximum.
    But the final score is useless XD you don't need it to get into universities, most of them are free and accept anyone. Only some subjects (like medicine) or private universities (which are very rare, almost all Italian famous universities are public) need you to take another written national test, but your score in high school doesn't give you any advantage. If you do well you're in even if you were a bad student.
    We can't choose classes, we can only choose the kind of high school we want to go to (scientific, "classic", artistic, linguistic), but in school the courses are fixed for everyone.
    Then in university it's again a bunch of mostly oral exams and in the majority of cases they don't care how well you followed the course: the final exam is 100% of the grade, so if you do badly you're screwed (but you can decide to retake the same exam as many times as you want if you don't like the score). We use marks from 1 to 10 in school (6 is the minimum to pass) and from 1 to 30 in university (18 is the minimum to pass).
    Hearing how the American system works make me a little jealous. It seems way easier. We study ALL the Divine Commedy for 3 years, together with a bunch of italian, latin and even greek poets and writers. Italian schools and universities are very hard.

  • @JacobMaximilian
    @JacobMaximilian Před 3 lety +8

    Yeah, I'm American and I've always had much harder exams in my classes; I'm genuinely surprised that some people go through school with cheat sheets at every exam

  • @charliejohnson9962
    @charliejohnson9962 Před 4 lety +584

    Americans will never know the pain of A-level maths.

    • @ollieshaw6957
      @ollieshaw6957 Před 4 lety +5

      Charlie Johnson i’m thinking of taking it. how bad is it? 😬

    • @AB-mb8uy
      @AB-mb8uy Před 4 lety +6

      Ollie Shaw I wish you luck dude 😂🙏🏾

    • @10-io
      @10-io Před 4 lety +16

      @@ollieshaw6957 it's not bad, but it's a lot of work. Once you figure a topic out, it's just a matter of practice.

    • @effiecantero6737
      @effiecantero6737 Před 4 lety +5

      @@ollieshaw6957 it's hell 😭

    • @sambalsillie4301
      @sambalsillie4301 Před 4 lety +5

      Charlie Johnson I’m Scottish and just did N5s last year, gcse maths looks so incredibly easy compared to N5

  • @katieerridge
    @katieerridge Před 5 lety +627

    Not allowed to bring the books into your English GCSEs anymore 😢😂 have to memorise quotes

    • @charleyarnold4042
      @charleyarnold4042 Před 5 lety +15

      you can at a-level but it has to be a clean copy

    • @04nbod
      @04nbod Před 5 lety +24

      I had to memorise quotes for GCSE too. Never saw the point of it, seemed needlessly stressful.

    • @hiddengem336
      @hiddengem336 Před 5 lety +10

      Luka Cherriman no they don’t ^^

    • @rdaisyd4678
      @rdaisyd4678 Před 5 lety +1

      Luka Cherriman They don’t?

    • @katieerridge
      @katieerridge Před 5 lety

      04nbod completely agree

  • @JorgeLourenco000
    @JorgeLourenco000 Před rokem

    Thank you for this channel, makes me realize my school system was awesome and I actually could go through the American school system like a walk in a park.

  • @Charlotte-fn5jy
    @Charlotte-fn5jy Před 2 lety +4

    I did my GCSEs last year and am now doing my A-levels. For my exams, it was a little different so we did exams for 6-7 weeks (and for most of that I had at least one exam a day and then they also counted (slightly) our mocks from 6 months before, which were before our exams were even cancelled. It was so frustrating because so many people assumed that because they were 'cancelled' that we weren't doing exams. I'm sure, based on my mocks that were actually more realistic, that I would've done better if they were more real.

  • @daisysmith1079
    @daisysmith1079 Před 5 lety +1076

    "that just sounds like you're constantly studying" yeah. Pretty much 😂

    • @sgsnake2x
      @sgsnake2x Před 5 lety +5

      Daisy Smith lol yeah. Playing ps4 24 hours a day before the exam, totally studying xD

  • @fay-qp7cn
    @fay-qp7cn Před 4 lety +748

    To top it off, we're NOT ALLOWED THE BOOKS ANYMORE FOR ENGLISH.
    Had to memorise 15 poems and quotes from 3 novels in one night...Hell
    still got an 8 tho so its all good

    • @mrdictator7030
      @mrdictator7030 Před 4 lety +7

      ... Or you can just take the risk and do a passage question instead of the essay one

    • @Omie01
      @Omie01 Před 4 lety +6

      bye. U can just make the quotes up, lol.

    • @tayladawe8451
      @tayladawe8451 Před 4 lety +18

      I can still remember quote from blood brothers, a Christmas Carol and othello 😭 I took GCSEs 2 years ago

    • @princessas7950
      @princessas7950 Před 4 lety +2

      i remembered 2 quotes for like 2 poems and 3 quotes for each book. You dont really have to revise for english. I got a 9

    • @TheDropdeadZed
      @TheDropdeadZed Před 4 lety +3

      Didn't have to do it in one night. You had 2 years to do it.

  • @giulial5011
    @giulial5011 Před 2 lety +2

    Listening to this makes American movies make so much more sense!! I never understood the ‘extra credit’ and why everyone was always stressed about little quizzes

  • @zachrichardson7099
    @zachrichardson7099 Před 2 lety +1

    SATs in the uk are used as a measurement for the teacher’s teaching ability, the reason the teachers push you so much for them, it will most likely not affect the secondary school you’re going to unless you are second appealing for a grammar school in either kent or Buckinghamshire. They test comprehesion, maths and SPaG (spelling, punctuation and grammar) and each subject is scored out of 120, not out of 5. The 11 plus on the other hand is a test you can take in either kent or bucks and iff you get 121 or higher (roughly 1/3 to 1/4 of people pass), you can apply to a grammar school which will have better teaching staff and far fewer delinquents for better learning experience.

  • @oskar7361
    @oskar7361 Před 4 lety +1314

    As a Brit about to do GCSE's I am more than offended

    • @maisharahman3685
      @maisharahman3685 Před 4 lety +26

      Oskar Curtiss it’s chill you finish topics early so it’s like 3 months of just revising. Only ones that have it bad is geography and history because there’s hardly any revision time

    • @jonathancochrane1749
      @jonathancochrane1749 Před 4 lety +10

      @@maisharahman3685 yup I'm yr11 and our geography teacher has decided to make us learn about 20% of the course and we still will only get 3 revision lessons. Fuck

    • @yoevfx3995
      @yoevfx3995 Před 4 lety +15

      Go revise get off CZcams 😂

    • @maisharahman3685
      @maisharahman3685 Před 4 lety +6

      Jonathan Cochrane better than my school some classes had to teach some of the content to themselves because they were so behind

    • @Dan-tk8em
      @Dan-tk8em Před 4 lety +14

      Eva Cassidy dont stress, year 9 is a chill year tbh

  • @phoenixmorris-board8321
    @phoenixmorris-board8321 Před 5 lety +361

    Watching Evan freak out about how hard UK exams are is the highlight of my day 😂

    • @abcxyz-cx4mr
      @abcxyz-cx4mr Před 5 lety

      And to think it’s not even the hardest nor the most challenging exams in Europe,
      Italy’s, Austria’s, the Netherlands’s Education Systems are much more rigorous and demanding than the UK’s.

  • @Tiernan422
    @Tiernan422 Před rokem

    I like that Evan was amazed about the standardized test about one book when that’s essentially what AP Lang and AP Lit are just with multiple things

  • @thomasklein8564
    @thomasklein8564 Před 2 lety +12

    Watching this I realized my high school was a lot like the British educational system 😂 we had three or four exams a year per class. We did have the multiple choice but it was more of writing out and stuff like that. Sometimes even if it was multiple choice we had to write out explanations and stuff.

    • @Lana-Moran
      @Lana-Moran Před 2 lety +1

      Honestly sounds like my education in Australia.

  • @cathas7454
    @cathas7454 Před 4 lety +2131

    The UK be like:
    So memorise these 15 poems, quotes from a 19th century book, a 20th century book, Shakespeare's Macbeth, 30 or so science and maths equations, these 5 or so German paragraphs on useless topics like marriage in four different tenses, learn the whole timeline of the cold war, 20th century America, the development of medicine from 1000 AD to the present day, the Elizabethan era, about 100 Italian musical terms about structure, melody, rhythm, tonality, intervals, keys, ornaments, whatever else, arguments for the existence of God, and the different views of people on creation and whatever, learn useless calculations that really shouln't need to be taught unless you're doing further maths, and also, we'll give you loads of pointless homework that keeps you up until 2:00 in the morning but then tell you off for sleeping in and not being on time for school, and we'll give you loads of tests that you have to do loads of revision on, so you can lose even more sleep and your social lives, having breakdowns most weeks, because the tests you take at the end of the year define a large amount of your future, and if you fail them, you've completely failed he whole subject, and even passing doesn't guarantee you a place in sixth form or university. But remember to get plenty of sleep and exercise and social time with your friends and look after your mental health xxx

    • @idrisahmed5094
      @idrisahmed5094 Před 4 lety +65

      Word

    • @theosb9632
      @theosb9632 Před 4 lety +87

      Truest shit😂

    • @Joe-hj1ou
      @Joe-hj1ou Před 4 lety +38

      So true

    • @t.4861
      @t.4861 Před 4 lety +50

      PREACH UR FACTS !!! :')

    • @jayb7154
      @jayb7154 Před 4 lety +143

      Jesus Christ you wrote a whole fucking essay on the UK education system

  • @nif3853
    @nif3853 Před 4 lety +709

    Uk English: in a 4 page essay, explain and describe how the mood and atmosphere is presented throughout the novel
    Us English : colour in

    • @nif3853
      @nif3853 Před 4 lety +29

      Esmeralda Huizar yeah but the majority are where as in the uk you have to compose two essays and write two two page extracts in 2 hours. I think English lit is harder

    • @JuliannaK1597
      @JuliannaK1597 Před 4 lety +8

      Honestly when it comes to English, an essay is probably the less annoying way to go. There were constant debates in my classes about one option being "more correct" than the other. English does not work well with multiple choice.

    • @samy3936
      @samy3936 Před 4 lety +10

      Us English: color* in

    • @nif3853
      @nif3853 Před 4 lety +1

      Julianna Kocsis it seems easier though there's like a 50% chance of getting it right

    • @nif3853
      @nif3853 Před 4 lety +3

      Samantha Y us English colour* in

  • @amarisb7596
    @amarisb7596 Před 3 lety +2

    wow. australian exams are very different. to give you the idea of what theyre like, most people in my class forgot that we were even in an exam week in the last one we had.

  • @harperoconnor5285
    @harperoconnor5285 Před 2 lety +1

    USA here, high school from 1084-1988, then college from 1995-1998 (I went straight through some summers). The only "cheat sheet" I was ever allowed was high school geometry so we could use the formulas to do the work. i never took the ACTs or SATs, my college didn't have them as an absolute requirement. I vaguely remember some standardized tests in my senior year of high school, the Ohio something something. Yes, you had to pay to take the SATs. I've never heard the term "invigilator". Tests that were external, like the SATs or GRE (GRE to get into masters programs) had someone supervising, but that kind of person was always called a proctor. College exams were often those Scantron sheets, but I rarely remember them in high school except for the standardized one. Most stuff was writing on paper back then, even if some multiple choice was included. Every class in high school had a final at the end of the year. Having any part of your grade be on "participation" was hell for shy or bullied people. Evan mentions the advantage of teachers who like you doing the grading, but conversely, if a teacher didn't like you, they'd grade you more harshly.
    Now, note of something over the years. I graduate with a BA in 1998 from college. I applied to grad school this past year (they waived the GRE requirements) and did not get in for a Master's program. Why? My college GPA, although high for two years, averaged out to a 2.93 at the end. Their program wanted a 3.0 So... A GPA from 21 years ago meant more than any accomplishment in my professional life since. That's bullshit.