Koreans React to American Public High School VLOG For The First Time

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  • čas přidán 30. 03. 2022
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Komentáře • 723

  • @kailfran
    @kailfran Před 2 lety +5788

    Trust me most Americans wake up last minute and run out of the house saying "I'm late!" like you said. This kid just wakes up super early. I respect him lol.

    • @Anacaona4
      @Anacaona4 Před 2 lety +164

      I always ran half dressed out the door with a fruit in my hand for breakfast barely making the bus. 😆 I finished putting my socks on, tying my shoes, fixing my hair, and some makeup on the bus. 🙃 I did it quickly sometimes to finish my homework too. 😅 I never was a morning person. 😁

    • @gchungus
      @gchungus Před 2 lety +110

      But to be honest, he didn't even leave his house at 8:30AM, my area's high schools started at like 7:30 or 8:00, and if you live far away and catch the bus you might have to wake up at like 6:00 or earlier depending

    • @raycee412
      @raycee412 Před 2 lety +9

      I do that in college even

    • @5tt6o_45
      @5tt6o_45 Před 2 lety +12

      I live right in front of my school yet I still somehow manage to go in late😭

    • @heyrobwest3908
      @heyrobwest3908 Před 2 lety +5

      Trust you most Americans wake up at the last minute and run out of the house yelling I'm late? Oh you know the morning routines and behaviors of high school students in all 35 American countries. I take it you are a citizen of the United states the name of your country is not America it's the United states technically the United States of America when it was founded it was the only country on the continent. No it's a company by Canada of America Mexico of America Brazil of America then there's the countries aren't on the mainland like Cuba of America Greenland of America Haiti of America. We have here is another intellectual U.S. citizen that slipped through world geography? If you were a citizen of Germany would you call yourself only a European a citizen of Korea would you only call yourself an Asian what about the Asian people in Russia and the Asian people in Israel and Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

  • @seolarflwr8866
    @seolarflwr8866 Před 2 lety +4865

    It's interesting how they react to the house and backyard. In America lots of places are still rural so you don't have to be rich at all to have a backyard like that in those areas like where I live

    • @prieltheprune1302
      @prieltheprune1302 Před 2 lety +221

      Yup almost every house has a backyard

    • @BlahBlah-wp9gr
      @BlahBlah-wp9gr Před 2 lety +143

      Yeah, my family isn't rich by any means yet we still have over an acre of land.

    • @tiffanysimkins6068
      @tiffanysimkins6068 Před 2 lety +80

      I live in Washington State... It's weird here not to have a front and back yard. Even apartments have yards and patios. Doesn't matter your income, everyone has a yard. Even in the big cities, like Seattle and Olympia.

    • @user-qn7dy4sp4k
      @user-qn7dy4sp4k Před 2 lety +66

      SK is so packed up, and most of us live in the apartment so we really do envy those backyards. Quality of life is so diff bruh so unfair 😭

    • @lasvegasnevada7514
      @lasvegasnevada7514 Před 2 lety +26

      @@user-qn7dy4sp4k Seoul or the main SK is closely compacted yet convenient. It also feels depressing not seeing much people go about their days. It’s mostly suburbs in America and majority of establishments are big box stores and all built similar.

  • @-sincerelyelle9182
    @-sincerelyelle9182 Před 2 lety +3412

    Imagine how they would react to a school rally, I think they would like it a lot because the atmosphere is usually really exciting and hype

    • @sadnesspadness4332
      @sadnesspadness4332 Před 2 lety +178

      Booing the freshman class is a right of passage

    • @CejaTV
      @CejaTV Před 2 lety +44

      and turning your back at your rival grade like when completions happen and lets say the seniors win the juniors turn their backs to them.
      Pep Rallies are so much fun

    • @wow-bp6vf
      @wow-bp6vf Před 2 lety +15

      @@sadnesspadness4332 oooh so this tradition is universal

    • @glitch8661
      @glitch8661 Před 2 lety +5

      @@CejaTV yes I cant wait to experience highschool i missed out on 9th

    • @applefarm6126
      @applefarm6126 Před 2 lety +2

      @@glitch8661 I hope you love it. God loves you. ❤️✝️

  • @kieranshae
    @kieranshae Před 2 lety +1814

    HS all over america are different some have classes you can choose and others don't. my school had nothing like psychology or design.

    • @snuggies8037
      @snuggies8037 Před 2 lety +54

      Same. We had engineering and computer science as like “special classes”. Other than that just some other languages.

    • @Artimusk
      @Artimusk Před 2 lety +27

      I feel like I was lucky since I had like... ceramics, news class and like... sewing class. I don't remember what other stuff we had as I was part of the going home club.

    • @janemay6955
      @janemay6955 Před 2 lety +13

      We have extracurriculars that are all arts 😭 literally no actual career builders
      (not saying you couldn't get a career in the arts but...)

    • @Anacaona4
      @Anacaona4 Před 2 lety +11

      The electives that are offered in American schools are often based on what the major economy is based on in the area the high school is in. In my town the major industries are military (Air Force), aviation, tourism, culinary arts, construction, marine sciences, and medicine, so the classes here in our high schools support that by offering classes related to those fields. You still have the mandatory basics of English, maths, 2 years of a foreign language, etc. and soon to be added financial education. Yes, high school students can and do get their private pilots' licenses here.

    • @annabethyeung8512
      @annabethyeung8512 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Anacaona4 Yes and no. It also depends on career expectations that your community holds. Clearly, your community not only has certain thriving economies, but actively encourages students to go into those fields. My high school, for instance, had many students who chose not to pursue further education at all or went into technical school, so we had a program with the local technical school where students could go take classes on being barbers, firefighters, etc. Obviously, barbershops are not necessarily a thriving business in my community; it’s just a realistic secondary school-education option.

  • @MaxReisinger
    @MaxReisinger Před 2 lety +255

    This was fun, thanks for the feature (:

  • @chaeyoungsbish
    @chaeyoungsbish Před 2 lety +638

    If they thought that this high school was huge I can't imagine what they would think of mine. My school is EXTREAMLY sports lead to the point where we have three gyms, one wrestling studio, a football felid, a softball/baseball felid, and more it's absolutely crazy .

    • @kyleholguin0227
      @kyleholguin0227 Před rokem +26

      my school is the biggest in our city with over 2300 students at it and we have 3 gyms, a weight room, a wrestling room, multiple soccer fields, 2 or 3 basketball areas, multiple baseball/softball courts, and a giant football field. i guess koreans aren't nearly as big on sports as we are in the u.s.

    • @glynisintheglen
      @glynisintheglen Před rokem +4

      Same ! my high school had 2 softball/baseball fields , a soccer field , a football field , 3 gyms , a weight room , a theater , separate choir and band rooms , and 3 different wings with at least 30 classrooms in each

    • @chaeyoungsbish
      @chaeyoungsbish Před rokem

      @@glynisintheglen Mine is about the same we just don’t have as many classrooms I don’t think😭

    • @glynisintheglen
      @glynisintheglen Před rokem +1

      @@chaeyoungsbish we had about 2,300 students when i graduated and a lot of the classes were full , we also had ap and ib classes so our school was one of largest and most academically successful .

    • @sochii23
      @sochii23 Před rokem +1

      my school is sitting at around 4300+ students 💀
      probably gonna be 4900+ next yr

  • @hiandbye3863
    @hiandbye3863 Před 2 lety +801

    this really gave a new look on american education, like in my high school I studied to be in medical field so we had special classes for that and program dedicated to help us transition into health profession.

    • @bisquit2007
      @bisquit2007 Před 2 lety +10

      Where are you from? I'm from America and our school head that too. There were many specializations and they eroded have career/ trial days where you could learn from professionals they brought in. Made many change their stance about wanting to go medical with some hands on things. 🤣
      You could leave about half day to go for medical classes or certifications in other trades. I took accounting and business classes since I specialized in business.

    • @hiandbye3863
      @hiandbye3863 Před 2 lety +28

      @@bisquit2007 I am also in America, Nyc. It's just that since everyone is hating on American education system, I didn't see how some part of the education system is actually good here.

    • @simoneaddo644
      @simoneaddo644 Před 2 lety +11

      @@hiandbye3863 literally don’t listen to trolls on the internet. If u search it most of the top universities in the world are American. Ppl hate cause of jealousy

    • @janemay6955
      @janemay6955 Před 2 lety +7

      That's cool.... My school doesn't have any access to stuff like that. We have the arts and other curriculars, but the only thing helping us for life is home-ec tbh :')

    • @haleyhutchinson8302
      @haleyhutchinson8302 Před 2 lety +20

      @@hiandbye3863 I think this is because people group all American school into one category. They don’t know they each school follows a slightly different curriculum. So, one highschool might have home economics while another might not. Like yeah all American school get taught pretty much the same thing but American schools also get taught different things depending on the school/school district.

  • @fastpitchehs
    @fastpitchehs Před 2 lety +124

    That kid is smart, looked like all his classes are Advanced Placement (Program develop by college board to be given to high school students for college level classes to get college credit before even graduating high school)

    • @annabethyeung8512
      @annabethyeung8512 Před 2 lety +11

      It also might just be the norm at his school, which makes a huge difference

    • @elliekoenig9996
      @elliekoenig9996 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah I went to this high school and it’s super competitive, which makes sense since it’s right next to UNC chapel hill

  • @arcanask
    @arcanask Před 2 lety +257

    You do still get assigned classes, but depending on a few factors you could finish them a year or two early and get to pick extra elective or even college level courses in high school. Which do count towards actual college credits.

  • @hulkhatepunybanner
    @hulkhatepunybanner Před 2 lety +549

    *Someone should tell them that this is what high schools look like in white, rich neighborhoods.*

    • @BlahBlah-wp9gr
      @BlahBlah-wp9gr Před 2 lety +46

      This is pretty poor compared to one of the high schools I attended. Not really rich either considering it was upper middle class at best.

    • @hulkhatepunybanner
      @hulkhatepunybanner Před 2 lety +85

      @@BlahBlah-wp9gr *If you see this school as a step down it means a wealthy neighborhood is your normal. My old high school was torn down 7 years ago. The new building is better but they kept the ancient auditorium cause they couldn't afford a new one. It's in a "middle class" area.*

    • @BlahBlah-wp9gr
      @BlahBlah-wp9gr Před 2 lety +9

      @@hulkhatepunybanner I moved for junior and senior year to a poor area. So, I've seen how things get. But even that school looked nicer than the one in the video due to a recent renovation. The graduating class was like 35 people. The other ~15 students either dropped out or were held back.
      The average income for families in the previous district was $50k and maybe 4 families out of the ~350 graduating class that year had an income over $150k. An overwhelming majority were lower-middle class or middle-class.
      The neighborhood I lived in was on the lower end for the city. Look up Grand Haven Michigan if you want to know more, but It's a pretty run-of-the-mill city.

    • @Itsupimup
      @Itsupimup Před 2 lety

      They are always white 💀 they never do any POC

    • @janus3555
      @janus3555 Před 2 lety +8

      Not quite. Mine was more grand, had what appears to be better or more amenities and it was a middle to upper middle class suburban area with a typical American demographic (80% White or White-Hispanic, 11-12% Black, 5% Asian/Indian and the rest other). It was a 75-100k combined home income region.
      Upper class area in my state had people with 300k+ combined home incomes. But those kids all went to private or prep schools, not public schools.

  • @bobtheaverage7189
    @bobtheaverage7189 Před 2 lety +201

    Wow, that's a REALLY nice high school. I would have liked to go to a nice clean school like that. The one I ended up going to wasn't half as nice. It was designed by a prison architect and looked like a half-done building. Everything was bare concrete and the hallways were pretty much open to the weather so the only place that had actual flooring and AC/heating were the individual classrooms, the library, cafeteria, and the front of the school where visitors would be. The art department was sorely underfunded and the art classroom was basically a garage with no AC nor heating so we were always freezing in there during the winter. The funniest thing about it was that if I did not adhere to the dress code, the PAs threatened to put you in an orange jumpsuit. Mind you, my high school was considered to be one of the higher end ones in the city. The experience for me was pretty much just a kindergarten for teenagers. I wished that I could have gone to community college instead of wasting 4 years of nothing. But hindsight is 20/20

    • @soulaandefender
      @soulaandefender Před rokem +11

      Went to school in the trenches 😂

    • @channelname4331
      @channelname4331 Před rokem +1

      Detroit?

    • @oofgordy4634
      @oofgordy4634 Před rokem +6

      Schools being designed by prison architects is actually really common. Every school in my district was designed by a prison architect. They have to operate in similar ways so it makes sense really.

    • @vernonfrance2974
      @vernonfrance2974 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @bobtheaverage7189 The US has very unequal schools and facilities. In Finland, all schools get the same amount of money and very comparable facilities.

  • @pretty.odd.
    @pretty.odd. Před 2 lety +409

    Really loving seeing Hyeni more often again!
    I would like to note, (and this is not a knock on Max's video at all just an fyi) that this is a typical American high school in an affluent area. Schools are paid by local property taxes. So the more affluent an area the fancier the school. Other schools will have a similar vibe to this but the class options, quality of facilities, available supplies etc. Will decrease as available funding decreases.
    Also, unfortunately, schools in more affluent areas are typically less diverse like this one seemed to be. I know some foreigners who visit Korea struggle because a lot of Koreans imagine Americans as white and that's not always true. So just wanted to add that schools can be extremely diverse!
    All in all good video!
    P.S. Max, if you're reading this, i'm super jealous the area you live in, it's so beautiful. I can't imagine getting to ride a bike through a forest everyday to school instead of concrete suburbia...i also can't ride a bike in general though ㅋㅋㅋ

    • @madisonmarie0613
      @madisonmarie0613 Před 2 lety +22

      Yea there's these rich schools and then the schools with metal detectors... every school is different, and it varies even more by state. I wonder what state this is, did the video say?

    • @elliekoenig9996
      @elliekoenig9996 Před 2 lety +5

      I went to this high school it’s Chapel Hill High in North Carolina, the area is mainly filled with people affiliated with UNC. I would walk home from school some days through the woods, there’s this gravel path that you can take but you need to cross a little creek and the area is very hilly

    • @soulaandefender
      @soulaandefender Před rokem

      This! They only fund white areas y'all do research and y'all will see poc communities don't get anything for education

    • @vernonfrance2974
      @vernonfrance2974 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @pretty.odd These are very important points you bring up. Schools in poverty areas have far fewer options and percs then the prejudiced people will complain about how ignorant minority students are. The US has very unequal schools and facilities. In Finland, all schools get the same amount of money and very comparable facilities.
      Also in the USA there are schools that specialize in team athletic competitions and they will "raid" poor schools of their best athletes.

  • @nabi2884
    @nabi2884 Před 2 lety +224

    My high school had about 3 almost 4K students in total so you can imagine some of the poor conditions some parts of my school. Also passing period was the worst thing 7 minutes and the campus wasn’t even that big it was all the people not moving that made it so bad 😭. Lunch and after school too! Don’t even get me started ✋🥲. But this school is one of the better ones I’d say 😂

    • @efrenr81
      @efrenr81 Před 2 lety +6

      Same but my high-school is big and if you have a class across the campus you would almost always be late

    • @yourdari8707
      @yourdari8707 Před 2 lety +2

      My school was made to hold about 800 people but we had 3k and only 10 mins for passing periods. Which doesn’t sound so bad until you realize the school has 5 floors

    • @efrenr81
      @efrenr81 Před 2 lety +1

      @@yourdari8707 well I live in California so we have school outdoors and my first year there were about 4.3k students

    • @nabi2884
      @nabi2884 Před 2 lety +1

      @@efrenr81 yeah me too. Rainy days were the worst with that many kids

    • @kiriaytroust
      @kiriaytroust Před 2 lety +2

      @@yourdari8707 I wish we had gotten 10mins. My school had 6 floors & we only had 4mins to get to each class.... The hell I had to endure everyday when I had weight training on the bottom floor & had to run clear up to the top floor for my art class the very next period.....

  • @clairefranzen5753
    @clairefranzen5753 Před 2 lety +140

    I've seen all or at least most of their videos about American High Schools are they always seem to be amazed no matter how many videos they've seen. I thought it was great that he showed what he did before going to school in addition to his day at school. When I was in high school I had to be up and waiting for the bus at 6:30 and the final bell for classes was at 7:21. I didn't have time to eat almost anything before school and was so tired in 1st and 2nd period classes. Where I live some high schools have an open campus so you can leave the school for lunch. My favorite part though was all the privileges seniors were allowed to have like their own parking lot, senior lounge, senior prank, senior sunrise, senior sunset, senior wall, etc. Classes were all really cool and I was a student assistant for awhile. I went to both junior and senior prom but never got asked and after prom was so much fun too. My school had a rock climbing class I got to take and assembly were often about the four different classes working together in fun ways. I miss it, graduating is an accomplishment, I still miss all the fun I had and some people at the school I had known since Elementary school or Middle school.

  • @madisonmarie0613
    @madisonmarie0613 Před 2 lety +28

    Most schools aren't that lavish or pretty, but they are usually very large. Also, we have "core" subjects like english, math, etc that we are required to take, but we are also expected to have between 1-3 elective classes (depending on your school) during the year. At my school I would take 8 classes each semester. The "core" subjects are pretty set in stone, you have to take them, but for electives you can pick and choose. At my school you need 1 year of VAPA (visual and performing arts), 2 years of language and 3 years of Physical Education, but you can choose within those parameters. I took theatre for VAPA, Spanish for language and Weightlifting for PE. They also have other fun classes like leadership and woodshop depending on your school. However, because we are required to take a lot of subjects, it is very difficult to maintain, especially if you also have extracurriculars such as sports and clubs (which most students do). I'm from a rural town as well, and we had nice facilities as well, but my school was not nearly as friendly as this vlog.
    There are also private schools and specialized schools, just like in Korea, that have their own requirements. However, these are usually very expensive and even stricter than public schools
    Just a different perspective. Since we do get to study cool electives and are often seen having fun at rallys and football games, many people often assume high school is just like the dramas and movies. In reality, it is extremely stressful, just like in Korea. Also, depending on the quality of teaching staff, you might end up having to teach yourself many subjects (I pretty much taught myself most of my subjects through high school, especially math classes. Low paid teachers are petty and overworked. Pay your teachers more!). American schools have lots of pros and cons, and each school is very different (even more so by state, since state requirements for public schools differ).
    Also, side note about the shirts. Freshmen usually wear them on the first day (and seniors if they are "senior mentors") so that they are easy to identify. It ideally helps freshmen meet other classmates and also helps seniors and staff identify them in case they need help finding classrooms or something. Otherwise, we might wear school stuff on Rally or game days, or PE, but not often.

  • @tiffanysimkins6068
    @tiffanysimkins6068 Před 2 lety +47

    My children's public high school offers Aviation as an elective. And 2nd year Aviation students can test to become licensed and certified drone pilots. And they log 30 hours in flight simulator towards their pilot license. It's a free class offered to any high school student that wants to take the class. It's amazing!

    • @valerieromero6360
      @valerieromero6360 Před 2 lety +7

      Wow that’s crazy. We didn’t even have French in my school. We had pretty basic stuff. I’d say the most interesting was professional baking and forensics.

    • @annabethyeung8512
      @annabethyeung8512 Před 2 lety

      @@valerieromero6360 forensics!!

    • @42jessicat
      @42jessicat Před rokem

      What school is this?!

  • @seanpule266
    @seanpule266 Před rokem +17

    I always find it so interesting how fascinated foreigners are with American culture.

  • @oliviagroza9353
    @oliviagroza9353 Před 2 lety +18

    Hyenis enthusiastic "Max? Thank you Max!" gave me life. She is so funny💜

  • @vcwloves9864
    @vcwloves9864 Před 2 lety +41

    My younger sister went to public school in California and they had small trains to transport students between buildings in-between classes--it was that big! As for me in school, I loved that I had choices. I took a driver's education course and got my license during class hours! I tried a military program, a sports program, a work program, but none of these were for me. It wasn't until I tried an British Literature course that I decided that that was going to be my major. I agree with what they were saying in the video, the fact that we are given choices is a blessing!

    • @ANRII3000
      @ANRII3000 Před rokem

      TRAINS????

    • @Chaeyoung90
      @Chaeyoung90 Před rokem

      mfing TRAINS my school is so big im in the basement takes about 12 minutes to get to the cafeteria for lunch and we have to walk!

  • @trish7041
    @trish7041 Před 2 lety +14

    AHHHHAICHICI THE WAY THEY WERE TREATING BYUNGEUN

  • @faithwalker4301
    @faithwalker4301 Před 2 lety +66

    My school is actually pretty small. It's in a very rural area and not many kids go there. The senior class is usually about 12 kids in total but this year's it's about 20-25 in total lol

    • @tamiwu0346
      @tamiwu0346 Před 2 lety +4

      Sheesh, i thought my senior class was small. I have 5 people in my first period but all in all our school has like 130 seniors...

    • @beckbail7987
      @beckbail7987 Před 2 lety

      @@tamiwu0346 I graduated with 450 other kids lol

  • @toxigenic
    @toxigenic Před 2 lety +17

    There still are many required classes the students have to take, but they get to choose 2-3 elective classes each semester. One of my good friends took a gourmet cooking class and would always share her creations with me. It was the best semester for snacking!

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Před 2 lety +46

    actually subjects aren't really chosen as you have to have a certain amount of classes to graduate. you have to have a language class once a year, science, social, math, the rest you pick but you must have one physical education class. other than cores you pick three electives to do which usually go towards your high school degree. the sciences you need are bio 1, chem 1, one physics, and one of your choice. Math is pre algebra, Algebra, a near calculus, and Calculus. Physical you tend to choose. The electives are different at different schools i chose more science based things like medicine, and business classes. it highly depends on the school you go to.

    • @Princess-dq2jb
      @Princess-dq2jb Před 2 lety +5

      It’s funny cause for my school calculus wasn’t required for us to take neither physics. The states education changes so much based on location 😂

    • @carlycchapman
      @carlycchapman Před 2 lety +3

      In my state at least, we didn't have to do language classes and calculus wasn't required. We also needed 3 years of P.E. or an equivalent.

    • @kiriaytroust
      @kiriaytroust Před 2 lety +1

      With my school, The only requirements we had were counted as credits. It didn't really matter how you got them. 8 English credits, 6 Math credits, 6 Science credits, 7 Social Studies credits, 4 P.E. or equivalent credits, 4 Foreign Language credits & at least 18 elective credits. And most of those you can knock out within the first 2 years. Requirements change within each district really.

    • @jamester3484
      @jamester3484 Před 2 lety +1

      Math: Algebra 1, 2, and Geometry
      English: 4, year-long classes
      Science: Biology, science with a lab apart of the lessons
      Social Studies: US, World, Economics, Government
      1 PE elective
      1 fina arts elective (this one can be iffy)
      2 years of foreign language (they have to be the same)
      8 electives
      I don't know if this is for all of Florida, but these are the graduation requirements that i know of.

    • @oomphdooph
      @oomphdooph Před 2 lety +3

      Graduation requirements are different for each state

  • @evabessioud276
    @evabessioud276 Před 2 lety +8

    OMGGG MAX TALKS IN FRENCH 🇫🇷🇫🇷 it’s so cool to be trilingual 😭😂

  • @iykyk001
    @iykyk001 Před 2 lety +24

    I wish my school my school was also like that😂🤣

  • @lykajaruda6521
    @lykajaruda6521 Před 2 lety +9

    I love how they tease Byungchan and he can't do anything about it but laugh with them.HAHAHAHA

  • @morin7274
    @morin7274 Před 2 lety +9

    I love how they teased byungeun the whole time 🗿😂🤭

  • @radhika.parekh
    @radhika.parekh Před 2 lety +62

    Love this trio. 💞
    However since we haven't seen Heejae and Byueng eun together since days ,can we please have a video with just two of them doing cute things 😅🙈
    Recommendation: Being married to my friend for 24 hours. Or Choosing wedding dress .
    We will make it the most viewed video 💪🏻🔥

    • @nannatan2476
      @nannatan2476 Před 2 lety +2

      They probably realized people Were shipping them too much so they had them be seperated for a bit🍧

    • @efrenr81
      @efrenr81 Před 2 lety +3

      I have a feeling that they're together, have you seen Heejae supporting him in a modeling competition on her Instagram

  • @alexisbesst8698
    @alexisbesst8698 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I think it's super cool to see how different countries exist like this. I think it was Byungeun that said that they have 3 years to decide what they want to do but we actually have 4 years of high school so it's even better, in my opinion. Also, the backyard thing is really cool cause most families that live in more rural cities or towns end up having backyards. Even some places in cities get backyards. It's just really cool to see that difference.

  • @diya5249
    @diya5249 Před 2 lety +12

    As an Indian high school Student i was really jealous when i saw korean High school vlogs 🥲

  • @diptiiisharma867
    @diptiiisharma867 Před 2 lety +5

    basically every asians reaction.....gawdddddd

  • @nadial8531
    @nadial8531 Před 2 lety +10

    I’m quite surprised at the fact that they don’t get to choose at least some of their subjects in Korea. My high school is pretty big, but other than core classes (English, history, science and math, but even then you can choose different levels) you get to choose at least two other classes called electives. My school has 30+ different electives you can take, and other than some diploma requirements such as at least one year of a language class and mandatory PE for underclassmen, it’s pretty much free rein over what you want to do.

  • @stomp9934
    @stomp9934 Před 2 lety +5

    schools in america vary a lot depending on the town or county. my school was nothing like this, i woke up like 40 min before the start of school, still dark outside, no breakfast except for maybe packaged stuff we get in school that they hand out. if you were late, you get nothing. gotta wait for lunch in which the food was edible. some kids didnt even have lunch. ap classes were awful. my school had a bit of ap classes, some schools barely have any or have a lot. it depends on the teacher's qualifications and funding in the school. my school didnt offer any crazy specific fields of classes. it was very general. by your senior year there were barely any extra classes so you had most of the day off. my school was very diverse, more colored people than non colored. the majority of whites were just the teachers which were hella chill since they taught at our school for a long time and know how the students act. fights, smoking, and gambling is common. my school actually had a bad rep in my county cuz all the other towns surrounding mine were white rich areas. most kids could care less about school, so normal classes were literally impossible to fail unless you dont show at all. the only studious people in the school were like the top 30 in the class, everyone else didnt care. my highschool didnt have anything good until some parts were redone or added a couple years back like the gym and cafeteria. i feel as if most of these vlogs are just kids that act or actually is earnest in a nice school, like no one is excited to be in school. i only show so i dont fail and to hangout with friends. sometimes my school had random searches, so if you showed up late, you get your bagged searched and you gotta go through metal detectors. many kids got caught with vapes and knives. they had to fence off the school with locked gates since kids kept walking straight out of the building mid school day and the area was pretty vulnerable to crime. constant security roaming the halls and bathrooms. police posted up outside in the beginning and end of the school day. we werent even allowed outside at all during school hours, we have 2 tables outside the lunch room that is surrounded by a concrete wall and high fence with like 9 feet of distance between the wall and cafeteria. honestly reading everyones comments make me feel my highschool was like a slum.

  • @yaraplays8638
    @yaraplays8638 Před 2 lety +7

    I literally love this channel, good video!

  • @jdb101585
    @jdb101585 Před 2 lety +5

    High schools can be very different. Mine had a vocational wing, so we had design, culinary, welding, automotive, programming, etc. in addition to all the academic classes, such as English, geography, marine sciences, chemistry, etc. and the arts; painting, photography, ceramics, drama, etc. and two gymnasiums. Our classes started at 7:10am and you had four classes in the fall and four in spring.

  • @parawhoo
    @parawhoo Před rokem +2

    Damn wish my high school looked like those schools, they should’ve showed real side of public highschools and the attitude in the atmo

  • @kookymonsta6164
    @kookymonsta6164 Před 2 lety +1

    My little sister graduated with two years of college in her freshman year of high school. That’s another reason I love the American school system.

  • @dhruv3208
    @dhruv3208 Před 2 lety +6

    i like how they trolling Byungeun

  • @kristynchampagne5253
    @kristynchampagne5253 Před rokem +2

    As an American in highschool, I can proudly say that it is a lot more chaotic than in the videos, like waking up 30 minutes early, and then saying “I’m late” everytime. Chaos Central.

  • @zelrius8714
    @zelrius8714 Před 2 lety +3

    I hope they also know that not all high schools look like this. Some high schools only have one story and no second floors and such. Some don't have a large amount of land or they have a small campus. So basically, money and area where it's located really determines how fancy the school is and how much things they have. Idk if Korea does this, but high schools in America will always have sponsors and a sign out front of the entrance showing the sponsors on a board. That's one way they get money, and of course public schools get paid from taxes. Probably other ways, but anyway, it's very different depending on the area/state in the US.

  • @adobetipsandtricks
    @adobetipsandtricks Před 2 lety +10

    This video was edited very well, nice video!

  • @newgrl
    @newgrl Před 2 lety +3

    High School life is very different from state to state and school district to school district. In my rural farming town of 400 people, each grade here has a max of 15 students. Last year's graduating class was 9 people. And although the subjects the students can choose are way more limited than a high school of Max's size, the local Junior College does offer extension learning via online and video starting in 11th grade so the kids can get some college credits and have some different subjects to choose from. The farm kids around here often have 3 hours of chores to complete before coming in for school. So, High School life really is variable here in the US.

  • @bee8589
    @bee8589 Před 2 lety +2

    some of the classes he took are AP classes, which means the credit for that class counts as a college credit! public schools across america vary. i went to public high school in NYC and it was vastly different! we didn't have courses like architectural design but we were a performing arts school so we had theater, poetry, creative writing, music engineering and photoshop classes to name a few.

    • @JJFlores197
      @JJFlores197 Před 2 lety

      Simply taking an AP course doesn't give you college credit. You still need to take the AP test at tend of the class, get a passing score, and then its up to each college you apply as to how they handle AP courses/scores.

    • @bee8589
      @bee8589 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JJFlores197 right…and taking the AP class is the first step to get the credit. cant do any of what you just said without taking the AP class first.

  • @rimjhimmishra7225
    @rimjhimmishra7225 Před 2 lety +6

    Please make video with heejae ,hoseung, byungeun

  • @groovywindows
    @groovywindows Před 2 lety +3

    i would just like to point out that there are a lot of public schools that abide to uniforms as well. so that way it's easier and no one gets picked on for being poor. at least where i live

  • @bootybanditforrest2396
    @bootybanditforrest2396 Před 2 lety +1

    This kid lives in a good neighborhood remember school get their funding from real estate so the richer the bigger

  • @almabika5544
    @almabika5544 Před 2 lety +5

    I liked your reaction. He also made a vlog on French private high schools. It would be cool if you also react to this to see the differences. Thanks and see you for another video.

  • @fruityo
    @fruityo Před rokem +1

    Its so funny how they kept making fun of Byeong. 😂

  • @naomigary7930
    @naomigary7930 Před 2 lety +4

    this is so interesting. my high school experience was quite different, my campus was outdoor and the student body was much more diverse. would've been interesting if i was a vlogger during that time, i would've captured some interesting things on film lol

  • @mickey_the_pizza3204
    @mickey_the_pizza3204 Před 2 lety +2

    I love that almost everyone on awesome world will take any opportunity to make fun of byueng eun😂💕

  • @Meh_Lone_Bah
    @Meh_Lone_Bah Před 2 měsíci

    There are standard classes that are necessary to take, like english literature, history, math, social studies, etc. But other classes like architectural design are called elective classes.
    Students and freely take whatever elective classes they want. Usually you have 5 main subjects required and 2-3 electives per semester/quarter.
    I took my 5 main courses and my electives were either art, percussion band, computer design, yearbook club, etc.
    With every semester/quarter you can change your electives to something else.
    Other people who want to focus on band for a musical focused skill will take the next course I, II, III, etc.

  • @jenovella70
    @jenovella70 Před rokem +1

    This was so interesting. I graduated in 1988 and attended a pretty upper middle class high school but we didn’t have psychology classes. I did take classes at the junior college during my high school years, though. My high school did offer civics, art, radio & tv, driver’s Ed, an elective language, and I did participate in sports - I know a lot of schools in certain areas don’t have those options anymore, which is unfortunate. I feel like I was privileged and had a good education even though I was “poor” in relation to some of my peers.

  • @magdolnavida2717
    @magdolnavida2717 Před rokem

    Hoseung 's eyes are shining while watching it ❤️ sweet 😊

  • @melissaberg5955
    @melissaberg5955 Před 2 lety +1

    I love seeing what American high schools are like now that I live and work in Seoul and see how school in Korean can be similar and very different at the same time.

  • @bisquit2007
    @bisquit2007 Před 2 lety +1

    It's so different in high school across states and cities. My public school had the first class start at 7:15am and we had academies. There was arts, business, medical and judicial academies. From there you can specialize in classes and functioned like college. You have courses to graduate and related to your academy and you had to take electives. I was business academy so accounting, webpage design and computer programming were some of my major courses I chose. Then I wanted fun so took jewelry making and ceramics to round out pass the core and major classes.
    Sports are huge so usually the facilities are taken care of and big if your school is. My school was large so they ended up building a freshman center for all of them. 🤣

  • @xxnerdyangelxx4845
    @xxnerdyangelxx4845 Před rokem +1

    they're making me feel good because this dudes kitchen is like three feet wide and they're like "he has a nice place"

  • @sierrawillett7295
    @sierrawillett7295 Před 23 dny

    My high school looked like a castle, the way it was built. It also had 4 staircases for 2 floors & a large round building for the gym with the freshman academy surrounding it

  • @artrdytdd
    @artrdytdd Před 5 měsíci

    Lets be honest we always run out half dressed, this guy JUST wakes up early and deep respect because I'm always getting up 20 minutes before its time 2 leave

  • @ItsAuntNiNi
    @ItsAuntNiNi Před dnem

    Math, English, social studies of some kind, are usually required then you get to fill up the rest of the day with other stuff. You have to meet a certain number before graduation though. For my HS it was 4 years math, 4 years English, 4 years social, 1 year physical, 1/2 year health, 2 years foreign language. I'm probably forgetting a couple. Now they also require volunteer hours.

  • @dudaljkk
    @dudaljkk Před 2 lety +3

    my dream since i was young has always been to study at a very “American style” school so i really enjoy watching these videos to see what my days would be like😂 that was fun!!!

    • @dasenya1761
      @dasenya1761 Před 2 lety

      My schools were so big it had elevators

  • @juanavargas7562
    @juanavargas7562 Před 4 měsíci

    For middle school and high school, the earliest I'd be up by is at 6:30, since the bus always came a bit past 7:30 in the morning and classes started at 8.
    But in college I'd wake up at 5 in the morning even when I was staying in the dorms and my class started at 8 (I changed to getting up at 7).
    One thing at the high school I went to, I don't know how it is elsewhere, but in mine, freshmen weren't allowed to go out and eat as in leave school grounds, unless their parent came to take them out to eat for lunch. But from sophome to senior year, as long as you came back on time for class they could leave school to eat out.

  • @dubbiedubbie437
    @dubbiedubbie437 Před rokem

    when they said "hes such an insider" is that like saying hes cool and with it.

  • @gchungus
    @gchungus Před 2 lety +3

    Although some schools give you lots of elective options, I don't think it's super common to be able to do all of that especially in freshman year. Plus, while diverse electives and more tech-school type classes are interesting and might be useful in exploring career options, the lack of standardization in American high schools always bothered me.
    In college, you end up with so many varying levels of competency in basic areas like English and Math and History because nobody took the same curriculum, and a lot of college ends up being packed with useless Core classes to get everyone on the same level when that should've been done in high school. It also sets a lot of kids up for failure in college because they might be far behind their peers because their high schools didn't get them up to that level.

  • @michellepadilla7026
    @michellepadilla7026 Před 2 lety

    Wow! The commentators English has improved so much! Perfect actually 👌

  • @MzCAGOMEA
    @MzCAGOMEA Před rokem +2

    My son is at a highschool that was built only 4 yrs ago. I was so excited about it because they claimed to offer so many courses. In the end they hardly had any sports to offer, no one to teach the classes they built rooms for and the staff pretty much just let students do whatever they want. Now the school has its own student created fight page showing kids getting attacked in hallways with their backs turned and everything. My son catches the school bus at 6:30am and classes start 7:15am. No time for school breakfast at the cafeteria and sometimes if you are far back in the lunch line you don't even make it through the line b4 classes start again so you have to skip lunch. The school is huge and 4 stories high. Most of the highschools here do look like college campuses but I think it's really all for show or just to be able to hold the large amount of students.
    My middle child just started kindergarten and honestly I'm wondering if I should homeschool him. School is dangerous these days.

  • @AngryMarine-il6ej
    @AngryMarine-il6ej Před rokem

    When I went to high school, I was delivering newspapers in the morning. After I finish route and got home, I would get ready for school.

  • @thisoneashton.
    @thisoneashton. Před 4 měsíci

    My highschool actually was a college campus but switched into my highschool. Its HUGE. And we have lots od sports things in addition to just campus buildings.

  • @m0rlana
    @m0rlana Před rokem

    This made me recall how I had to be up at 6 am to be at school for 8 am class in high school. I had to take 2 city buses, those were the days.

  • @nicolejones3686
    @nicolejones3686 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This high School is crazy teaching psychology in a high school, you sure that's not college? 🤣🤣🤣
    But all jokes aside that high school looks really spacious and lively 😄

  • @MotorcycleCow
    @MotorcycleCow Před 5 měsíci

    Classes vary a ton depending on where you are in the US. My School for example offered a TON of languages: French, German, Latin, Russian, Spanish, Korean, Japanese, Chinese and ASL

  • @marklaher
    @marklaher Před 2 lety

    Wow I can't believe it's Max Reisinger he's a student vlogger from North Carolina, USA and I watched all of his video.

  • @zinhlepetersen370
    @zinhlepetersen370 Před 2 lety +2

    MAX! MAX! THANK YOU MAXX!

  • @spiceyboogerspiceybooger6437

    I wish we had psychology as a subject in high school. I took a class as a whim in college it was fun.
    Edit: The high school I went to is also in a rich neighborhood. It was built in 1950 and was cute. My Mom also went to this school. They tore it down and re-built it. It looks so high tech now zero charm.

  • @LEE-kq9tq
    @LEE-kq9tq Před rokem +2

    That is definitely NOT the average HS. That looked like a nice rich area one that actually gets good $$ to provide a lot of interesting classes and equipment for the kids.

    • @juliaj7939
      @juliaj7939 Před rokem +1

      This is an average high school in rural areas, the suburbs or in small towns. Rural does not means poor and even if they are, their schools are well taken care of. Just saying... Fun fact: Inner city schools full of gangs and delinquents get millions more in dollars of government funding then a high school with good grades in the suburbs.

  • @sabb5829
    @sabb5829 Před 2 lety +4

    We can choose electives but there are certain credits such as English , math , science that we need to graduate.

    • @efrenr81
      @efrenr81 Před 2 lety

      Yes usually we get 2 elective and one has to be a language class

    • @janus3555
      @janus3555 Před 2 lety

      @@efrenr81 I was in High School from 94-98. Two of our four years had to be at least 1 language or vocational. We could opt out of language classes because of how little use they end up being ultimately. I chose drafting and design. It was popular even then that you can get by in more countries with English than you could with French or Spanish. Especially since 99% of the people lose the ability to speak the languages from disuse.
      Core classes it was 4 years of Math and English, 3 years of Science and History. That allowed Senior year to schedule for more electives or simply opt out and you have a shorter day at school Senior year.

  • @Rip_nami
    @Rip_nami Před měsícem +1

    “It looks so nice and free!”
    Me:💀💀

  • @queenofthepierats3488

    This was really interesting! I love seeing the differences and similarities!
    My high school didn't really let you pick subjects, at least not until junior/senior year. You had to go to all the basics (English, math, science), but you could sometimes take an elective depending on your grades. Art and music (chorus or band - or both) were the most common. You also had to take a foreign language, but we were tiny and rural so the only languages offered were Spanish (the main on) or German (which was done online because we only had a Spanish teacher for the entire middle and high school).
    We were extremely small (80 kids in my graduating class small), so it's always interesting to me to see these bigger high schools: we had a single story building, and the only steps were in the middle school, which consisted of four classrooms and had a double flight of stairs to get to the seventh and eighth grade wings and the rest of the high school.
    My school would rather spend their money on sports and not education, so the biggest and nicest areas were the gymnasium and football and soccer fields. The auditorium was also a decent size, as was the cafeteria. But our only options to get to school were the bus or have someone drop you off if you weren't of age to drive since the area was so rural and you weren't allowed to walk or bike (even if, like my friend, you lived right smack next to the school!).
    Anyway, more than enough rambling from me. Really fun video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @littlebuddy.
    @littlebuddy. Před rokem

    i was so surprised to learn that they didn’t get to pick there own electives, now i’m more appreciative that i have that option in school 🙇‍♀️

  • @TagalogEnglishExpress2022

    I really enjoyed watching this video

  • @derelictgasstation
    @derelictgasstation Před 2 měsíci

    My school started at 8am but the school bus picked me up at like 7:20 so to be completely ready in a full home is be up by 6 in the morning, this dudes day starts at a reasonable time

  • @wordswithkay
    @wordswithkay Před 2 lety +1

    Every high school is so different. Mine started at 7am, we had to wake up at 5:30a in the dark and catch the yellow bus by 6:20 it was horrible! Our classes were okay, I learned I loved to write and take photos by taking journalism. We’re in the south so football and sports overall are super important so we had amazing sports facilities and my school was WAAAY more diverse. I mean omg what in the white is this high school 😂😂😂

  • @marajoya8724
    @marajoya8724 Před 2 lety +1

    It does depend on the school you go to. My high school offered art classes, piano, concert band, choir, carpentry, welding, dance, auto shop, drama (acting) and also AP (college prep) courses. I did go to a small suburban school district instead of a city high school. It depends a lot on your tax base. Many high schools are poor and barely offered the minimum requirements

    • @FallingGalaxy
      @FallingGalaxy Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, some high schools are much better funded than others. I went to both kinds of schools since we moved around a lot, but once I got into high school it was a well funded school due to sports, unfortunately. There was always construction going on, decent class choices, I got to try a few things I would never have gotten in other school settings, but on the other hand half my teachers were coaches who weren't interested in teaching at all and failed me and others. One of my math teachers was a football coach and spent all of the first five minutes hurriedly telling us about the math we had to do that day then leaving us to it whether we understood or not, and spent the rest of the class screwing off, talking to students, inviting his son from college to come hang and chat, etc, anything but actual education, he would tell long drawn out jokes, etc instead. He was fun, but he was no use as a teacher. Also gym was a joke, the entire class was 'let's work in a training session for our athlete's' instead. We spent two to three days a week in the weight room being neglected while the coaches worked with the football players instead. Seriously we could use the equipment, except when they wanted it for their best.

  • @asani.
    @asani. Před 6 měsíci

    This kid just got a good school for him, mine kind of sucks, but at least the happy vibes are there :)

  • @candysmith8724
    @candysmith8724 Před rokem

    My high school in America has a completely separate campus for career orientated classes offered to students. There are several courses offered such as Engineering and Architectural Design.

  • @reneeroesler9944
    @reneeroesler9944 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I went to a HS in NC. We had around 1100 students and were considered small for our county. School started at 7:30. Our School looked completely different and only had a bad rep simply because it was mainly minorities. We did not have classes like architecture design. The primarily white schools tend to be completely different. I can tell you most HS do not look like this. I also went to HS in early 2000s.😮

  • @amyseney2555
    @amyseney2555 Před 11 měsíci

    Hello🙂 I'm from Michigan and I live in a lower income area here. It's been a while since I was in high school but it definitely was not this nice. We do have a stadium for our school teams{american) football but we share it with the other local high school. Since I graduated they added a huge media center and I'm so thankful for the present students that they have that. My high school was nice enough and I'm thankful for all they did for us. All schools are different depending on the state and the district they are in plus property value/taxes also.

  • @Nicole-kt5qf
    @Nicole-kt5qf Před měsícem

    Each city within each state of the United States has different types of schools. Uniforms are required at many, charter schools are huge and specialty schools are also everywhere

  • @itzugbad280
    @itzugbad280 Před rokem +2

    In the UK we were uniforms in high school

  • @Karmanara
    @Karmanara Před měsícem +1

    High school is so different depending on where you live in America.

  • @elliekoenig9996
    @elliekoenig9996 Před 2 lety

    Wow was not expecting to see my high school in this! I graduated the year before this vlog and I kept looking at the video like wait that seems familiar! Then I heard someone say they had Kroll for English and yep that's my school!

  • @crzbadp
    @crzbadp Před rokem

    I love it they tease about him😂😂😂👍🏼

  • @astacia4914
    @astacia4914 Před rokem

    Love you guys

  • @joryllena9382
    @joryllena9382 Před rokem +1

    Korea school is hell but American school is just relaxing that’s the different

  • @IllaLuna17
    @IllaLuna17 Před 2 lety

    Highschool and college have mandatory classes such as Math, History and English (different levels and names) also physical education in some high school for 2 years but you also can have a few free periods with classes you pick like graphic design, art, music, language. Etc etc
    Varies in States even counties.

  • @fluffolial
    @fluffolial Před 2 lety +11

    is it just me, or is that just a really nice high school?
    i live in america and mine is nowhere near that cool TwT
    oh and btw love the video!

    • @dasenya1761
      @dasenya1761 Před 2 lety

      Mines was So massive it had an elevator .

  • @emilylouise1971
    @emilylouise1971 Před 2 lety

    As someone who goes to a public school in America that starts at 7am this just hurt. I have to wake up before six when it’s still dark outside and since I live up in the north east in the winter it’ll be 0 degrees on my way to school too.

  • @surferdog666
    @surferdog666 Před 2 lety +1

    That kid is in AP classes, which are advanced classes and can be applied to college credits. You only get those if you have rely good grades. The fact that he's starting high school with AP classes is pretty impressive.

    • @jamester3484
      @jamester3484 Před 2 lety +2

      That depends on the school. The ones i know let you choose if you wanna start taking AP immediately and it has nothing to do with grades.

    • @sophasleeper7949
      @sophasleeper7949 Před 2 lety +1

      He’s actually joining in junior year I think, he went to a French private school for either 1 or 2 years? But yes, still very impressive!

    • @elliekoenig9996
      @elliekoenig9996 Před 2 lety

      I went to that high school and it’s super competitive, most of my friends and I were taking multiple AP classes each year. A lot of the families in the area are affiliated with UNC so the academic standards are really high

  • @ninjapay9914
    @ninjapay9914 Před rokem

    He started school later than I. My highschool starts at 8:00 am and we got until 3pm.

  • @Koakoa45
    @Koakoa45 Před 2 lety

    My high school back in the 80's, yeah I am old, we had 3,000 students. It is now 1 million square feet, 304800 meters, under 1 continuous roof! Also most high schools I know of require school uniforms.

  • @bjoy20101
    @bjoy20101 Před 2 lety

    Her in California high schools have their own swimming pool, Tennis court, football field, baseball field, and some more depending on school