British High School Explained!

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2020
  • We explain the UK school system according to our own experiences. Let us know if anything surprises you!
    #BritishSchool #BritishEducation #HighSchool
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @trippyerinsd
    @trippyerinsd Před 4 lety +154

    Ohhhh, so that’s why Harry Potter got his letter to Hogwart’s at age 11. He was ready for big school. Never knew the association. 👍

    • @prepperpatty199
      @prepperpatty199 Před 3 lety +1

      What are a levels and o levels?

    • @QUARTERMASTEREMI6
      @QUARTERMASTEREMI6 Před 3 lety

      @@prepperpatty199 The best way to explain it is like P-SATs, SATs, ACTs, to get into college or university (though P-SATs are for those going into high school and if you want to attend a private school). In layman's terms, it's an entrance exam.

    • @onlyme1028
      @onlyme1028 Před 3 lety +1

      @@prepperpatty199 Ordinary levels are the equivalent to modern day GCSEs (introduced in 1986). Taken when you finish secondary school.
      Advanced levels are when you finish college (two years further study after secondary school).

    • @gracieliz95
      @gracieliz95 Před 3 lety +1

      @@onlyme1028 So O levels are your OWLs and A levels are your NEWTs?

    • @onlyme1028
      @onlyme1028 Před 3 lety

      @@gracieliz95 Yes, only nowadays it's GCSE's and A Levels. However, J.K Rowling, being the age she is, took O levels.

  • @abuckley4311
    @abuckley4311 Před 4 lety +198

    I am a high school teacher in the US and I have just finished my 44th year teaching! This video is EXCELLENT! A Star!! Well done!

    • @gentlespiritjw4904
      @gentlespiritjw4904 Před 4 lety +11

      Thank you so much for so many years of dedication! You are appreciated. 👍

    • @tytaylor1461
      @tytaylor1461 Před 4 lety

      Congrats, and for all the students far and wide I say this in unison for all of use, sorry being little bad asses

    • @johnsymons76
      @johnsymons76 Před 4 lety +3

      You have my utmost respect. I was spoiled as I taught in a military academy, a military graduate school and a private university so I never had to deal with discipline. I honestly would be petrified of teaching in an American high school! 😱 🤣. P.S. Hi Jean! Have a great weekend! ♥️🤗💐🌷🌼

    • @dwhetsel695
      @dwhetsel695 Před 4 lety +2

      Well done! I am beginning my 29th year of teaching KG-2nd Special Education. I still love teaching! Paperwork and the testing mentality, not so much

    • @gentlespiritjw4904
      @gentlespiritjw4904 Před 4 lety +1

      @@johnsymons76 Hi to you too! It's my turn to say I have the utmost respect for what YOU did! 👍 I hope you have a great weekend too, dear friend. ❤🙏🌻😇

  • @TangentOmega
    @TangentOmega Před 4 lety +104

    In the U.S. they separate middle school with the idea being that the prepubescent kids are separated from the post-pubescent.

    • @shadowkissed2370
      @shadowkissed2370 Před 4 lety +5

      Not every city separates middle school from high school. The city I live in is building a new combined school for middle and high school.

    • @Imme_begin
      @Imme_begin Před 4 lety +9

      Shadow Kissed I think that’s rare. I’ve never heard of it until now.

    • @shadowkissed2370
      @shadowkissed2370 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Imme_begin not as rare as you think. I guess it just depends on the state and school district.

    • @tiffanymeckley8739
      @tiffanymeckley8739 Před 4 lety +1

      @@shadowkissed2370 yep for my high school years, a new school was built called a Secondary School and it was 7th-12th horrible.

    • @CrisCudi98
      @CrisCudi98 Před 4 lety +7

      That’s how it was for me too,
      elementary school K-6
      Middle school 7-8
      High school 9-12

  • @adriandarkbloom1182
    @adriandarkbloom1182 Před 4 lety +35

    I would like to say that our British show "The Inbetweeners" portray British secondary schools and life as a teenager most accurately.

  • @janeathome6643
    @janeathome6643 Před 4 lety +116

    So your “tutor time” sounds like our “homeroom”; announcements, distributions, etc., lasting 10-15 minutes, either first thing or in between periods 1&2.

    • @lelem1052
      @lelem1052 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah that's pretty much it. We get notices and we get registered but it's also part of our house system because the people in my form were also the people in my house in that year. It's different at sixth form but that's how it was year 7-11.

    • @lelem1052
      @lelem1052 Před 4 lety +1

      But that's not the same for everyone. I know some people had forms that had people from every year in them.

    • @anrach579
      @anrach579 Před 4 lety +8

      This was what I was going to say. Their "tutor time" = our "homeroom." And you would just say, "I'm in Mr./Ms. So-and-so's homeroom."
      And:
      elementary school (Kindergarten & 1st - 5th grades) is about ages 5-10.
      Middle school (6-8) = 11-13
      High School (9-12) = 14-17/18
      And my high school started at like 7:15 and ended at 2:45. I HATED getting up so early.

    • @lelem1052
      @lelem1052 Před 4 lety +1

      @@anrach579 we have names because they're our houses. So because I'm in Austen I was in 7A 8A 9A 10A 11A and so on...

    • @HeyItzMol
      @HeyItzMol Před 4 lety +1

      @@anrach579 In Britain we have nursery which is the equivalent to your kindergarten. This was for children from the ages of about 2-4. Then you start primary school at the age of 4 or 5, and you leave primary school at 11 or 12 (starting and finishing ages obviously depends on when your birthday falls). Primary school is from what we call reception, which is the first grade as you would call it in America, and it goes up to year 6 which you would call 5th grade (I think). When you're 11/12, you start secondary/high school. Some people in Britain (like me) do call it high school, though it's more common to call it secondary school. This goes from year 7- year 11 (11/12 - 15/16). In high school we had a morning form time and an afternoon form time (one before 1st period and the second one would be after lunch; before 4th period).

  • @TheItalianDramaKing
    @TheItalianDramaKing Před 4 lety +116

    Here in Florida:
    Preschool - 4-5 years old
    Elementary School:
    Kindergarten & 1st-5th Grade (Ages 5-10)
    Junior High "Middle School":
    6th-8th Grade (Ages 11-13)
    High School:
    9th-12th Grade (Ages 14-18)
    Anything after that is optional which is College/University for us.

    • @tiffanymeckley8739
      @tiffanymeckley8739 Před 4 lety +11

      Some Americans dont know this Junior High is 7-9 and Middle school can be 6-8 or just 7-8 depending on the area.

    • @gilbertv1433
      @gilbertv1433 Před 4 lety +3

      In AZ, (at least in my school district) elementary school is just k-8th grade

    • @agme8045
      @agme8045 Před 4 lety +4

      In my country is basically the same, but junior high is just part of our elementary school (though we call them, kindergarten, primary school and secondary school, not in english lol but thats the literal translation)

    • @RosheenQuynh
      @RosheenQuynh Před 4 lety +2

      In my school (or maybe state, idk), 15 year olds were usually sophomores but because I started kindergarten late, I was 16 as a freshman. Even though I never learned how to drive, I used to joke that I could technically learn how to drive before the rest of my classmates lol

    • @LTBudd
      @LTBudd Před 4 lety

      @@RosheenQuynh We had a couple kids that were held back two years in my year. They got to learn how to drive in 8th grade. You had to be 15 by a certain time of the year in order to learn how to drive. Now they get to learn when they're 14.

  • @criskity
    @criskity Před 4 lety +31

    In the US, if you say "leave school", people will interpret that as "dropping out" of school. That is, quitting school before completing all the classes required for graduation.

    • @NickLea
      @NickLea Před 4 lety +6

      That's interesting - as a Brit nobody in the UK talks about graduating except from university. Someone who has "graduated" from high school in the UK is simply called a "school leaver".
      Perhaps part of the reason for this is that, historically, there have always been two different points at which students can leave or graduate from school so it would perhaps seem odd to have two different "graduations" from the same school.
      The age for leaving compulsory education in the UK has gone from 15 in 1947 to 16 in 1972 to 18 in 2015. So most people left at that age (when I was at school about 85% of people left at age 16).
      Those that stayed on did higher level courses (similar to AP courses in US high schools) up until the age of 18 to prepare for university.

    • @godsbabeborn-again5945
      @godsbabeborn-again5945 Před 3 lety

      Same in South Africa.

    • @TheDoctorsDancer
      @TheDoctorsDancer Před 3 lety

      @@NickLea lol. We use "graduate" way too much in the US! in some places you even graduate from Kindergarten! Lol.
      Where I am from in Ohio, "graduation" usually indicates you are finished with all the grades at one school and going to another. So I had 8th grade graduation, and high school graduation because I went to a K-8 school.

  • @MsTrain69
    @MsTrain69 Před 4 lety +39

    We wrapped our books in paper grocery bags. 📚 Anyone else remember Trapper Keepers? I used to love those! They kept me organized which I loved ♥️

  • @timriehl1500
    @timriehl1500 Před 4 lety +80

    As a former teacher, I can say you are "forced" to take academics because you are so young, you don't really know what you are capable of and we want to expose you to as much as the world has to offer. But you are right, Social Studies could include lessons on politics and math could include how to manage your finances, etc. It would be fairly easy to include real world applications to most subjects. A good teacher would.

    • @JEdwardBanasikJr
      @JEdwardBanasikJr Před 4 lety +4

      I wish some teacher would have explained to me when I was around 8 or 9 why we are learning all this beyond "it's required". Had someone said the purpose was to expose you to stuff and see what you like/dislike, it would have changed my whole outlook on school. However, I'm a child of the mid-70s to mid-80s American (Texas) Public School System.

    • @laurendefrank7380
      @laurendefrank7380 Před 4 lety +3

      I teach 6-8th grade math and I teach a ton about finances. It is not in the standards but I feel like it is extremely important. A good teacher is true and sadly there are a lot of terrible teachers (I had some).

    • @devonlass1967
      @devonlass1967 Před 4 lety +3

      I'd like to add that just because now you don't use pythagoras theoram (having bad spelling day today) or whatever in your job it doesn't mean someone else isn't using it in theirs and if they hadn't learned it at school they probably couldn't do that job now. I totally agree though some of the stuff seemed pointless at the time and more useful stuff like basic finances would have helped a lot and I also wish they were included as they are useful for everyone.

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 4 lety +1

      As you know, assuming you are an American former teacher, you're not given enough time to do much of anything that's not strictly mandated and then there's always the "teaching to the test" problem, which is a joke. I have been out of High School nearly 23 yeas now and with all of that combined with a rural poor district, I didn't learn much of anything that would do me any good because I'm not an academic person, really. I was stuck in a situation where everything, and I mean that literally, was taught by rote memorization. I still can't purposely memorize to save my life. School was not fun for me, to say the least.

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 4 lety +1

      @J Edward Banasik Jr. I can relate. I started school in the early to mid 80s. It was horrible because that was the era when schools were starting to experiment with teaching methods, but none of them stuck because teachers didn't like them and parents complained when the kid had to do something that disrupted home life.

  • @HollyLetson
    @HollyLetson Před 4 lety +12

    I remember thinking "Well, nobody uses that type of math in real life." in HS. Then, our Geometry teacher made us do a report and oral presentation (with visual aids) on "How Geometry is used in 'insert job here'.". I couldn't think of a job that requires it, but my father was all like, "You should call your uncle. He's a mechanist. He uses Geometry in his job all the time.". I called him, and sure enough, he actually does. I remember doing pretty well on that project. It just goes to show that those maths do come in handy for some people, even after HS.

  • @wrighto_0358
    @wrighto_0358 Před 4 lety +38

    Just in case anyone was interested, I finished year 11 this year, and the way they grade students now is on a 9 (highest) to 1 (lowest) basis. Technically, the only fail is a U (ungraded), but if you get a 3 or below in Maths or English Language you have to resit the exam, so anything below a 4 is a fail. They changed it to 9 to 1 as they wanted a grade higher than A*, so a 9 is somewhat like an A** , 4s and 5s are Cs, a 6 is a B, a 7 is an A and an 8 is an A*

    • @neesie7597
      @neesie7597 Před 4 lety +3

      This is similar to what ours is. Except represented dif. Really all your grades add up to 100% & if you get 70% thats a C if its 80% B 90% and up an A....anything below 70 is not passing some courses depending on what it will credit a D but partially.

    • @agme8045
      @agme8045 Před 4 lety

      wrighto_03 such a mess lol why they don’t do like the rest of the world and use grades from 1 to 10 (usually when your younger from 1 to 100) its just easier lol depending on the place commonly you either pass with a 6 or 7, though i think 6 its the most common. But in college for example you can pass a test with 4 but then you will have to take a final exam at the end of the year with all of the subject contents, otherwise you need to pass with an 8 to not do any other tests.

    • @LTBudd
      @LTBudd Před 4 lety

      While some schools in the US have expanded their grading systems with a 5 (0-5), in most respects here, an A = 4, a B=3, C=2, and a D=1. An F is a 0. An E is an incomplete/ungraded. Anything less than a 3.0 and you're not going to most Universities, even then a 3.0 likely won't get you into a top-ranked school. For most classes, anything less than a 2 is consider an unsuccessful completion of the coursework. You won't graduate high school.

    • @thebeest007
      @thebeest007 Před 3 lety

      Wow in France we’re soo much simple, grades go from 0 to 20/20 lol

    • @agme8045
      @agme8045 Před 3 lety

      thebeest007 I’m pretty sure 1 to 10 is even easier.

  • @fernandodelgado969
    @fernandodelgado969 Před 4 lety +76

    This will date me. When I went to school it was, Elementary grades K-6, Junior High 7-9 and High school 10-12

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Před 4 lety +2

      Same here!

    • @Sonnie0325
      @Sonnie0325 Před 4 lety +3

      My class was the 1st 9th grade class at my high school. Our Jr. high had become a middle school.

    • @rebeccacorbin1590
      @rebeccacorbin1590 Před 4 lety +15

      Close. Jr high was 7 and 8. HS was 9 - 12

    • @BrokebackBob
      @BrokebackBob Před 4 lety

      Same here!

    • @MrGlenspace
      @MrGlenspace Před 4 lety

      Fernando Delgado me too. Junior high started at 9:30 x 4:00, high school was 8:00 or 8:30 - 2:30. We had 8 periods. Lunch, PE, science, language, social studies, math, shop or home ec. And English.

  • @Hellstormraider
    @Hellstormraider Před 4 lety +40

    My high school has over 3,000 and is one of the small schools in my district of southern California

  • @theanderblast
    @theanderblast Před 4 lety +62

    I'm imagining a young Lia putting on the Sorting Hat and it whispering "Webster"....

    • @liahatz
      @liahatz Před 4 lety

      LOL!

    • @Wellch
      @Wellch Před 3 lety

      theanderblast Lia is a Ravenclaw, I think.

  • @dodiecanova854
    @dodiecanova854 Před 4 lety +44

    I knocked my PE requirements out over a summer as an elective. I didn’t want to sweat and shower during my regular school day. We have Freshman (9th), Sophomore (10th), Junior (11th) and Seniors (12). The classes/grades would compete against each other during Pep Rallies (football season) & against each other for a whole week during homecoming. We had 7 periods a day with a different subject for each. I stayed with music and art as my electives.

    • @Shay2theT
      @Shay2theT Před 4 lety +3

      That's cool you were able to do PE during the summers. Genius!

    • @lsmith9249
      @lsmith9249 Před 4 lety +1

      Dodie Canova we competed against each other too, but our year was divided into 4 houses and they were given names and colours

    • @deekrebs592
      @deekrebs592 Před 4 lety +1

      I blew out my knee in 6th grade and was excused from PE for the rest of my school years. In place of PE, I volunteered in an English as a Second Language class all 4 years. 😁

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Před 4 lety +1

      Back when I went to school in the 80s up to the late 90s, in a rural area of Texas, summer school was a punishment for failing students and it only happened when a parent could/was willing to pay the teacher of whatever subject it was, out of their own pocket to take time out of their Summer to teach the kid more.

    • @webwarren
      @webwarren Před 4 lety

      We also did seven periods. Usually English, social studies, math, science, foreign language, gym (2-3 times a week), and an elective (usual choices art, industrial art/shop, music (theory, vocal, instrumental, or music History)...

  • @jamesl6639
    @jamesl6639 Před 4 lety +29

    School seemed an eternity, when I was going. Now on my 50th anniversary, it seems just like yesterday. Time marches on!

  • @tiffanyandrade7128
    @tiffanyandrade7128 Před 4 lety +13

    you guys are my favorite duo!!! u guys are so positive and laugh about everything I love it :)

  • @BrokebackBob
    @BrokebackBob Před 4 lety +6

    Whenever I see you two post a new video, I feel good and after I watch it, I feel great. God bless you two. The bird walking across the grass like a boss left to right behind you was hysterical.

  • @jessicabass5003
    @jessicabass5003 Před 4 lety +10

    My mind is blown that school in Britain is the exact same as Harry Potter 😂 I honestly thought that was just a Hogwarts thing

  • @judahfletcher691
    @judahfletcher691 Před 4 lety +17

    If u got five 1’s and two 2’s you really would have failed your GCSE’s 😂😂😂 the best grade is 9

  • @michaelmullard4292
    @michaelmullard4292 Před 4 lety +14

    So fun!! Thanks for the education, haha! I remember when I was in second grade and how intimidated I was when a 7th grader came into my room! Now I look at a 7th grader as being a bratty kid!

  • @shangri-laj9578
    @shangri-laj9578 Před 4 lety +6

    I'm American and when I went to school there was elementary (K-6grade), junior high (7-8th grade), high school(10-12th grade).

  • @rebella8898
    @rebella8898 Před 4 lety +9

    At my school, we called “tutor groups” “home room”. But in high school, we didn’t have home room. But I graduated in 2006 and it could be different now

    • @melissah521
      @melissah521 Před 4 lety +2

      We don't have homeroom anymore we just start classes when school starts

    • @rebella8898
      @rebella8898 Před 4 lety

      Hello Everybody we only had home room until 9th grade because at my school, the actual high school only had grades 10-12. But 9th was still technically high school. And in high school we only had an assigned teacher we would go to when we had the standardized tests and such.

    • @alyssagilliland3691
      @alyssagilliland3691 Před 4 lety

      I graduated in 2017 and we still had homeroom! It was only like 10-15 minutes and it’s when we had announcements and they handed out papers and stuff like prom flyers or something like that🤷🏼‍♀️. Most days there wasn’t anything handed out or done, and a couple of times senior year my teacher didn’t even show up😂

    • @VRDennis
      @VRDennis Před 4 lety

      I graduated 1997 we had homeroom

    • @TheDoctorsDancer
      @TheDoctorsDancer Před 3 lety

      I think it depends on where you are. Every school district is different.

  • @gwillis01
    @gwillis01 Před 4 lety +4

    Some U S high schools have what are called hall monitors who are supposed to discourage loitering or lingering in the halls.

  • @LeoTheShortGuy
    @LeoTheShortGuy Před 4 lety +31

    Joel and Lia forever and ever. Joel and Lia forever and ever. Joel and Lia forever and ever.

    • @johnbowers6258
      @johnbowers6258 Před 4 lety +3

      forever and ever, amen.

    • @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma
      @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma Před 4 lety +1

      It's nice to see them together again, in person, isn't it?! 😍😍

    • @Blondy321
      @Blondy321 Před 4 lety +2

      I like this channel and Those Two Brits so much more than their personal channels.

  • @youtubeaccount3384
    @youtubeaccount3384 Před 4 lety +5

    2002 High School Graduate. I remember in my last year I had Calculus at 7am. I was one of the over achievers so I was in a lot of leadership roles which meant early morning meetings at 6am. I filled my schedule with as much as I could so I did not have a lunch break. Off school by 3:30pm, work @ 4pm. Off work @ 10-10:30pm, home by 11pm, homework til 1-2am...repeat.

  • @freetobemeasmr5480
    @freetobemeasmr5480 Před 4 lety +1

    THIS is why I started watching you guys a couple years ago! The other content is good but I’m infatuated with British culture and you two have me hooked for life! I’ve been to London once on a group tour and can’t wait to get back there someday!❤️

  • @elizabethrehmer5516
    @elizabethrehmer5516 Před 4 lety

    I loved this format!! So much more natural and relaxed!

  • @iwnunn7999
    @iwnunn7999 Před 4 lety +44

    Joel : "my parents picked me up."
    Lia: "that's nice." eyeballs rolling back in her head. Lol!!

    • @criskity
      @criskity Před 4 lety +4

      @A G When I was in school, it was considered embarrassing to have your parents pick you up or drop you off, as it was a sign of not being independent and grown up.

    • @webwarren
      @webwarren Před 4 lety +1

      @@criskity depending on the school district and the year, the distance one had to live from the school to get a bus could be quite far. In Junior High, the distance was far enough that the parents got together to get a municipal bus to run a limited route to get us to and from school...

  • @teknekon
    @teknekon Před 4 lety +7

    Well done mates! So cheered to see your team vids! Lovely! It's really enjoyable and relaxing. You're both marvelous! Glad to be back catching your thoughts and enlightenment. More please! Thanks! L&C 👍♥️😘🇬🇧

  • @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma
    @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma Před 4 lety +1

    So great seeing you guys together! Your happiness is obvious and it radiates out to all of us!🌞 Thank You!! 💌💌

  • @PoachedDiegs
    @PoachedDiegs Před 4 lety +8

    Don’t know much about high school. I was put into homeschool after 7th grade, but I was top of my class so there’s that.

  • @charlestonnana4170
    @charlestonnana4170 Před 4 lety +10

    I love watching you two you always make my day. I can be so depressed and your video comes on and changes my attitude instantly. Thank you for being so upbeat all the time. I wish you both the best the world has to offer. My name is DawnEllen

  • @leslijenkins3661
    @leslijenkins3661 Před 4 lety +14

    Well when I went to school, mind you that was almost 30 years ago, our classes were 45 minutes long. I was required to take 4 years of English and 4 years of History (Social Sciences, American History, World History, American Government) 3 math credits and 2 science credits. Over the course of 4 years you were also expected to take 2 fine arts credits (this included languages) and 2 PE classes that were half credits. But you had to have 23 credits overall to be considered for graduation. Some of our electives were half credits (because they were only a half year) and some were a full credit. We had everything from Sewing to Drafting to Accounting and even specialized gym classes. We started at like 7:45 in the morning and went to about 2:30. We had homeroom in the morning for about 20 minutes to take attendance and announcements. They were alphabetical. So say all seniors with the last initial of A and part of B would be assigned to room 301 or something. But there were dozens of home rooms. My graduating class was 212, but there were a few that didn't get to graduate so it was probably closer to 230. And with four grades, 9,10,11,12) we probably had close to 1000 students total. Grading systems across the US vary and even by district.

    • @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma
      @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma Před 4 lety

      Pretty much the same as my school. Class of '86 (wow, that was a long time ago!) We didn't have homeroom. They took attendance in every class but the main one was 1st period. We had 2 years of language and 3 years of science. I got most of my required credits done by Junior year so my senior year was Phyics, Trigonometry, History, English, then lunch, then photography and then I had Work Study for 6th period because I had a job. That met once a month for paperwork. 5 classes Senior year. Fun times.

    • @Shay2theT
      @Shay2theT Před 4 lety

      I graduated in 2000. It was much the same for our school as well.

    • @lawrencelewis5800
      @lawrencelewis5800 Před 4 lety

      Yep same thing Class of 79

    • @donny1960
      @donny1960 Před 4 lety

      I went to a Catholic High School (Providence) and we had to do the complete 4 years also. 4 years of Math, Science, English and Religion. 2 years of PE. 2 years of another language. 2 years of History. And a couple of electives here and there. (Typing, Music, Marketing, Ect). It was College Prep all the way. They let me skip Study Halls, and I was born with a defect in my heels that prevented me from doing PE. So I was basically in classes a year ahead of my grade. I was taking double Math and Science courses and AP courses my last two years. I went to Loyola University in Chicago, double majoring in Math and Computer Science and Theology (I was studying to be a Priest). Because my birthday was very late in the year, I basically entered year 2 of College right before my 18th birthday. It was kind of scary but fun. I always thought of school as a "job" so I didn't feel too out of place being younger than my classmates.

    • @tfive24
      @tfive24 Před 4 lety

      Class of '99 in Atl, I was last class in Ga who the option to have half days. In my senior year of high school, most of my classes were optional, my English class and personal fitness were my only required classes to graduate.

  • @RJ-mw2gw
    @RJ-mw2gw Před 4 lety

    Great video! You had such a natural conversation about your school experience, and I really enjoyed it!

  • @michaelkline6374
    @michaelkline6374 Před 4 lety

    Great subject and the fresh natural energy is over the top! Thanks 😊

  • @rich3371
    @rich3371 Před 4 lety +4

    When I was in high school it was a giant three story building & had about 3000 students but you have to remember that the US has over 300 million people

  • @lsmith9249
    @lsmith9249 Před 4 lety +10

    Calling it BIG SCHOOL is something we said to YOUNG CHILDREN, when l was at school, it was secondary school
    or you went to the Comp or Grammer

  • @jenniferciliberto3078
    @jenniferciliberto3078 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for doing this! I have wondered about the schools for a while and you guys did great answering questions!

  • @Aboz
    @Aboz Před 4 lety

    I grew up in a rural area in North Dakota. When I graduated (1970) there were 70 students in the entire school from kindergarten through grade 12

  • @meligarrett9197
    @meligarrett9197 Před 4 lety +31

    There were 10 in my high school graduating class. 😂 Rural school.

    • @rutheirhart4190
      @rutheirhart4190 Před 4 lety +3

      Wow. 25 in mine. I thought we were small.

    • @caseyflorida
      @caseyflorida Před 4 lety +1

      Very different from mine. There were 380 in my graduating class.

    • @drach2249
      @drach2249 Před 4 lety +2

      Omgosh that is super small school!

    • @mplwy
      @mplwy Před 4 lety +1

      There was about 90 in mine. About 400 kids in the whole school.

    • @hayleysteffen9432
      @hayleysteffen9432 Před 4 lety +1

      there’s about 900 - 1000 every graduating class in my school

  • @chriswillgoose5970
    @chriswillgoose5970 Před 4 lety +6

    Wow if you feel old for leaving in 08, makes me feel ancient.

  • @emilysundquist270
    @emilysundquist270 Před 4 lety +3

    In the US, we have elementary school (grades: kindergarten- 5th), Middle school/junior high (grades: 6th- 8th), and high school (grades: 9th- 12th). You start kindergarten at either age 5 or 6 and graduate high school at either age 17 or 18.
    For high school, every school is different when it comes to the length of the school day, but at my school, it started at 7:35am and ended at 2:30pm. Unless you were in marching band (marching band is before actual school time and starts at 6:40am at a block called "zero hour"). We had 5 blocks per day, and had different classes every other day. All blocks were 90mins long, except 3rd block, which was called "Academy" and was 30mins long. Academy is not really a class, it's a time to finish up homework or just rest a little. And 4th block was 2 hours long (which seems like a pretty long time, but it goes by faster than you'd think because lunch time is in the middle of 4th block). Basically, the requirements of high school were that you finish the amount of credits required to graduate, which is nice because if you are an advanced kid, you can graduate early if you'd like and move onto college a year before everyone else, but even if you do finish the required credits/classes early, you don't have to graduate early if you don't want to and you may take what's called "duel credits" which are college courses; So you can even get some college courses out of the way while in high school if you want.

  • @kirstyphilp664
    @kirstyphilp664 Před 4 lety +1

    This video took me back to secondary school! Loved it. Our form groups were letters but it stood for the teachers name for example 7JDE = John Doe as the teachers name, I’m so glad you were able to meet and do some videos while in lockdown keep safe 🥰

  • @RickNoppenberger
    @RickNoppenberger Před 4 lety +3

    15:19 is my favorite part of the video..... seagull!

  • @RetiredRosie
    @RetiredRosie Před 4 lety +4

    "Back in the Day" in the 50's and 60's, we covered our books in brown paper grocery bags. Very boring.

    • @princesslisamarie7860
      @princesslisamarie7860 Před 3 lety +1

      Rosanne Runfola Went to school in the 80s and 90s and we did the same. It wasn’t boring it was cost-effective and we got to decorate it anyway we wanted!

  • @rockeyrocket1224
    @rockeyrocket1224 Před 4 lety

    Why do I get the impression that as soon as Joel and Lia turn the camera off they say rude things to one another before walking away in opposite directions, and then just before the camera is turned on they both take a deep breath and a gigantic smile appears as they continue the facade of being great friends for the audience.

  • @denystull355
    @denystull355 Před 4 lety +1

    When I went to school way back in the 60's at my high school in the US we were allowed to take electives (as they were called) in whatever we wanted, I took band (music) and debate. I had friends who took, vocal (singing), band, and drama. Really by the time you got to your senior (last) year your requirements for math and English were finished as we only had 3 years, though there 4th year electives for them. If you didn't want to take math your third year you could take accounting/finance in its place. We had typing, not IT back then. And we only had 10 minutes between classes. Foreign language not a requirement at all, though it was offered as an elective from your freshman year onward. We also had vocational skills (woodworking, masonry, automotive repair, etc) offered for those who didn't want to go onto college after graduation.

  • @cathyknapp8439
    @cathyknapp8439 Před 4 lety +5

    2010 my daughter graduated high school with just over 500 in the graduating class

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Před 4 lety

      But puberty comes early for some. I remember one of my female classmates in fifth grade was developed!

    • @melissah521
      @melissah521 Před 4 lety

      @@edwardmiessner6502 what does that have to do with the original comment lol

    • @cathyknapp8439
      @cathyknapp8439 Před 4 lety

      Steph Welch Life yes she did. Cap and gown and all the students walked and had their name read 😊

  • @LeoS.B.Rosevillte
    @LeoS.B.Rosevillte Před 4 lety +9

    My high school in the US still has the ABC grading system and my Hugh school starts at 7:20 AM XD

    • @dumb747ness
      @dumb747ness Před 4 lety +1

      7:20?!?!? I'd rather die than have to get up that early!

    • @lorensop1540
      @lorensop1540 Před 4 lety

      Lucky, my class starts at 7:00 am. Those extra 20 minutes would be so nice

    • @melissah521
      @melissah521 Před 4 lety

      Gotta love hugh school

    • @m3lgar582
      @m3lgar582 Před 4 lety +2

      When I used to go to High School, it started at 8:00 AM

    • @ivetterodriguez1994
      @ivetterodriguez1994 Před 4 lety

      @@dumb747ness That's not when you'd get up, that's when you'd be in class.

  • @Moonbeams_SweetDreams
    @Moonbeams_SweetDreams Před 4 lety +1

    In USA (Ohio 1999-2003) I went to Miamisburg High School (MHS), which was the name of the town I lived. It was grades 9-12 which would be about 14 year old to 18 year olds. 9th grade (Freshman), 10th (Sophmore), 11th (Junior), 12th (Senior). 6th 7th and 8th graders went to "Junior High" or some called in Middle School, and kindergarten through 5th grade went to "elementary" school. The form or tutor you speak of we called "Home Room" of about 25 students and at my school you were assigned a home room freshman year and kept it all throughout highschool. We only went to home room at the start of each quarter or semester. English, Math, Science, typing, Art, PE, History, Government were all requirements. Foreign Language was optional but if you planned to go to college you needed 2 years of foreign language. My HS had around 1,600 students. We started at 7:30am and finished at 2:15pm

    • @Moonbeams_SweetDreams
      @Moonbeams_SweetDreams Před 4 lety

      We had to take our required courses but any students who were thinking of going to college would focus all their elective course towards their future career choice. I took business, marketing, communications, etc because I wanted to get a business degree in college.

  • @stephaniel3032
    @stephaniel3032 Před 4 lety

    Love you guys. This was a great video!

  • @Gr8man4sex
    @Gr8man4sex Před 4 lety +4

    Excellent video Legends. When I was in "High School" many years ago our day was broken done into 7 or 8 periods. We were required to have English, Math, Science, and Social Studies. Everything else was an elective. Electives included things like chorus, shop, and things like that. We were required to have some form of P.E in our freshman and sophomore years but not required in junior and senior years. We also had at least one period during the day for what was called study hall. Our first period of the day was called Home Room and was usually about 20 minutes in order to take attendance. Junior and Senior years we were also allowed to take Drivers Ed. We didn't even know what a computer was back then. That really is about all I can recall and I am not really sure how accurate I am because I went to High School back in the 60's and 70's. Thank you for the great video and I am so glad you are both doing so well. Stay safe and stay Legends.

    • @MaryMary-pr4iu
      @MaryMary-pr4iu Před 4 lety +1

      Class if '80... the year of the ash. Thanks to Mt. St. Helens, I graduated (long story)

    • @MaryMary-pr4iu
      @MaryMary-pr4iu Před 4 lety

      Judy Reyes oh, yes it is... too long to type out 🤗😂

    • @rutheirhart4190
      @rutheirhart4190 Před 4 lety

      Class of 77. Watch the movie “Dazed and Confused”. That was my life at the end of my junior year.

    • @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma
      @Angie_King_Bens_Grandma Před 4 lety

      Class of '86... Fast Times At Ridgemont High. Totally my school!😂

    • @leaflover9625
      @leaflover9625 Před 4 lety

      Ruth Eirhart Me too. Class of 77. Totally Dazed and Confused!

  • @t00l0fsatan
    @t00l0fsatan Před 4 lety +3

    American secondary schools dont really teach life skills either.

  • @wrosapfs
    @wrosapfs Před 4 lety

    My high school had 8,000 students and my graduating class 2,000. In Brooklyn, NY!! Really enjoying watching you guys 💕

  • @TaylorMMontgomery
    @TaylorMMontgomery Před 3 lety

    Ohhh, the audio is so good jesus thank you, finally y'all got some lavs

  • @nicki1273
    @nicki1273 Před 4 lety +1

    In my school (UK) we have something called PSE which is Personal Social Education where we learn about life and money etc. but we only have it once a week

  • @kristanicole1995
    @kristanicole1995 Před 4 lety

    Loved the park scenery! Should do that more often. Love you guys❤

  • @Quarton
    @Quarton Před 4 lety

    My daughter graduated from her small town high school here in Illinois - there were 9 graduates. Today, in 2020:
    "Ohio Community High School is a public school located in Ohio, IL. It has 35 students in grades 9-12 with a student-teacher ratio of 5 to 1." Her brother attended another public High School, and he graduated in a class of 602, from Edwardsville, Illinois.
    Thanks for telling us about the high schools/secondary schools in the U.K.

  • @friscomorsegmail
    @friscomorsegmail Před 2 lety +1

    I remember it being mandatory (Miami-Dade County Public Schools) for us to cover our textbooks in a wrap. We were so poor that we used old grocery paper bags for covering. I remember thinking that only “rich kids” were able to buy the fancy book wraps from the school directly. 🤣😂

    • @jicalzad
      @jicalzad Před 2 lety

      We wrapped our books similarly in paper grocery bags, but only because we were not allowed to write on our books, so it was basically our way of personalizing our books on the outside, i guess. We didn't have to wrap our books, but most students did.

  • @kimberlyk2295
    @kimberlyk2295 Před 4 lety +1

    It was fun trying to think of those forgotten details from my school years, after watching your video. Thanks Joel & Lia, love you both!❤️🌷

    • @kimberlyk2295
      @kimberlyk2295 Před 4 lety

      @@Judy_R yep, some good, some bad, but all of it makes up the various parts/facets of who we are...just wouldn't EVER want to go back & do it all again! 😏

    • @kimberlyk2295
      @kimberlyk2295 Před 4 lety

      @@Judy_R 😁

  • @LadyRebeccaFashions
    @LadyRebeccaFashions Před 4 lety +1

    That was so interesting! It's way different in the US, and you're allowed to do a basically all creative schedule once you've done your requirements. My senior year schedule was I think literally AP (advanced placement) English, AP Government, Wind Ensemble (which was the advanced band), Madrigals (the advanced choir), Concert Choir, serving as an aide in Symphonic Band, Marching Band, and a free period. I had worked hard my other three years, and finished all my other requirements by the end of my junior year, so I didn't have to take any more language classes, I opted not to take the most math class, and I dropped out of the most advanced science class halfway through the year.

  • @davehensel2247
    @davehensel2247 Před 4 lety

    Love you both. Thank you for the content.

  • @annabogart6689
    @annabogart6689 Před 4 lety +1

    America has Junior high, which is 7th and 8th grades. some cities may include 6th grade in there. jr. high could also be called middle school. high school was grades 9th to 12th. there were 94 graduates in my graduating class, small town, in 1975

  • @georgiawardle618
    @georgiawardle618 Před 4 lety

    Our school had 4 houses named after types of trees, and about 15-20 forms per house. Our forms were "vertical tutor groups" so we had about 5 people from each year group 7-11, and the older kids mentored the new year 7s. Our forms were labelled the first letter of the house names then the two initials of the tutor. We also had our 'main class' in year 7&8 that were named 7c/8c, 7r/8r etc... that you had all your core, non-setted lessons with

  • @Bettybbash
    @Bettybbash Před 4 lety

    I love both of you! You are fun to watch and also both very knowledgeable! We can learn so much from you guys! Thank you 🙏

  • @amberlouise86
    @amberlouise86 Před 3 lety

    We had four groups per year called 'forms' our day was: 'tutorial' in the morning, then lessons were period 1,2, *break* then period 3, then *dinner hour* then period 4 & 5. Our groups were called Whittington (blue), Grey (yellow), Lee (green) and Summery (red).

  • @sergeylamygo5157
    @sergeylamygo5157 Před 4 lety

    You're incredibly entertaining, guys!!!! Wish all people were like you 😃

  • @CraftyBones
    @CraftyBones Před 4 lety +1

    I went to high school 9th-12th and we started at 7:30 and were out at 3:05 with 7, 55 minute periods and a 30 minute lunch

  • @debbivaughn1313
    @debbivaughn1313 Před 4 lety

    Love these chats!💕

  • @traceymorgan-willcox2914

    Loved this when you both started reminiscing, had a few laughs with you

  • @maryalice417
    @maryalice417 Před 4 lety +2

    Joel's school experience sounds exactly like my secondary school. My forms were letters, I finished at 2.50, started at 8.30, had 2000 pupils, form time was the same, Wednesday had longer tutor time...😂😂

  • @mattslupek7988
    @mattslupek7988 Před 9 měsíci

    In America, we do pre-school when we're 3-4, kindergarten when we're 5 (the first year of elementary school, or as you say, primary school), followed by first grade through fifth grade. After elementary school, we went to junior high school (which they now call middle school from 6thto 8th grade (ages 11-13). High school was 9th through 12th (ages 14-17). Elementary school was just learning the basics (reading, writing, math science, social studies, language arts). Middle school and high school is when we started doing SPECIFIC classes, like algebra instead of just math, earth-space science instead of just science, et cetera. This is also when we started with languages. We graduated high school when we were 17 or 18, depending on when your birthday was. After that we went to college, which was usually 4 years.
    We used the A-B-C-D-E scale as well. After elementary school, the grading scale went like this:
    A = 95-100
    B = 88-94
    C = 81-87
    D = 75-80
    E = 74 and below
    When I went to college, the grading scale was a lot more relaxed.
    A = 90-100
    B = 80-89
    C =70-79
    D = 60-69
    F= 59 and below

  • @mmcss640
    @mmcss640 Před 3 lety

    In my high school in Southern California, many moons ago, 1st Period started at 8 am and lasted for 50 minutes. "A" Period was available for a limited number of classes and "A" Period started at 7 am. After 2nd Period, which ended at 10 am, we had a 20-minute intermission for refreshments, called Nutrition. 4th Period ended at 11:40, which is when lunch period began. After lunch, we 5th and 6th Period classes. Typical course offerings included the usual English, History, Mathematics, Science, and P.E. Elective courses included band (Marching Band, Jazz Band, Concert Band), Glee Club / Choir, Home Economics, agriculture, horticulture, automotive repair, a variety of civic clubs, and so forth. Generally speaking, high school in the States is comprised of Grades 9-12, although some high schools are 10-12. Junior High Schools, or Middle Schools, were usually Grades 7-8, while others were 7-9. Elementary School was K-6. High school graduates are typically 17-18 years of age.

  • @familybills2908
    @familybills2908 Před 4 lety

    Our high school - grades 9 - 12 (ages 14 - 18 roughly) starts at 7:10 am, and dismissal is at 2:25 pm. You first go to Home Room for attendence, then on to run through your schedule. Each student has 7 courses each year, with Even/Odd days - they alternate the 7 courses.Then there is after school tutoring, and after school events like band, football, spanish club, etc until 4:30 pm. We also have Saturday school which occurs a handful of times during the year and is not madatory, but it’s very helpful to get one on one help, extra credit, etc. Each student must take core classes: math, english, science, social studies, PE/health. Then they fill in the rest of their schedule with elective courses like IT, music/arts of some sort, auto tech, household management, ect. Preschool - ages 3 &4. Elementary school - Kindergarten (age 5) - 5th grade (age 10). Middle School - 6th grade - 8 th grade ( age 11 - 13).

  • @Nzralw
    @Nzralw Před 4 lety

    You both are gorgeous and your content is always entertaining (especially when you eat or being sarcastic), I'm a new fan!

  • @seandesmond5560
    @seandesmond5560 Před 4 lety +1

    Loving the park chat videos Joel and Lia!!! 👍 I'm Australian and went school in the state of NSW and high was Year 7-12 from ages 12-18 The school year is from February to December with four terms of ten weeks and two weeks holiday between terms. In Years 7 & 8 you do all the subjects on offer English, Maths, Science, Geography, History, PE, Music, Art, Texiles, Food tech, Woodwork and a Language. In Years 9 & 10 You do the compulsory subjects of English, Maths and Science plus 3 electives. In years 11 & 12 You do 11 or 12 units of study and each subject was generally 2 units some had a 3rd unit option. English and Maths were compulsory plus 3 or 4 electives. The HSC is a set of exams you take to determine your mark in getting into university.

  • @kennethdaniels4205
    @kennethdaniels4205 Před 4 lety

    hey...you two are awesome,so honest and explanitary….such a fresh change......love you both (am English.....UK)

  • @biancamachado4183
    @biancamachado4183 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video. I'm always fascinated by how different the school systems are around the world. And also, being from Brazil, I find it curious that everyone else in the world gets to choose a couple of electives and eliminate some. Everyone does all the subjects here. Also, we don't change classrooms, it's the same group of students for the whole day, every day.

  • @mermaid1717
    @mermaid1717 Před 4 lety +1

    Class of 2000 here!! My American high school went in at 8:25am & we got out at 2:47pm.... yes 47. With class change the day added up to that minute. Now all the high school are 8:20am-3:34pm.. again yes.. 34.

  • @peggyford3801
    @peggyford3801 Před 4 lety

    I just skated by. Lowest possible grades. That is a big regret of mine. I ran home from school to watch television. I wasn’t in a happy household. My parents were not supportive. They were too busy, working to pay the bills. One of those bills, that they really couldn’t afford, was braces on my teeth. I really needed them. I am so grateful that they sacrificed so much to pay for it.

  • @MrGraeme
    @MrGraeme Před 3 lety +1

    Little bit different in Scotland;
    - Primary would go from ages 5 to 12 ( Primary 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 Abbreviated to P1, P2, etc)
    - High School/Secondary from 12/13 - 18 (Secondary 1,2,3,4,5,6 Abbreviated to S1, S2 etc - Typically this would be called a year so first year, second year etc) Optional to leave at 16 years old (End of S4) you can go out to work or further education - College or Uni Which are always different buildings/establishments in Scotland.
    - High School started with a 10 minute registration class then 2 periods each 50 minutes then a 10 minute break then another 2 periods each 50 minutes with a 50 minute lunch then another 2 periods of 50 minutes.
    My High School Actually had High School in the name although it was referred to as "**** High" and still is to this day even though its moved into a specially built community campus.
    Similar classes were required although for the first 2 years you do a little bit of Everything on the 3rd year you got to choose a few specifics Science, History, geography, Art, music etc. This was done for 2 years then you got to choose more classes and stay in school or to leave.
    Our School "teams" wear names after ship yards in our town and your Registration/Canteen/toilet & social areas we had two and it was Red and Blue. There wasn't really any rivalry between each house it was more of a sorting and organisational thing that no one really took that seriously.
    I've been out of School for a similar time as yourselves and they have changed things where some days they finish early and other days they have 7 periods and finish later. Kids these days.

  • @clairewilliamson9332
    @clairewilliamson9332 Před 4 lety +1

    Maybe it’s a thing in England. In Scotland I went to a High School and all the local schools after primary school were High Schools. There were about 1500 in the high school!

  • @MarkoSpin
    @MarkoSpin Před 3 lety

    In Slovenia, we have highschool from 15-19, either vocational highschool (technical, business, etc.) or gymnasium (university preparatory). At the end of Year 4, you take the Matura Exam in 5 subjects - three obligatory (Slovene, Maths, English) and 2 elective (for example, Geography and German, etc., or the technical subjects if you were in a vocational school). You have to take both written and oral exams for each of these. School was from 7 am to 1 pm or 1:45 pm, depended on the day. A lesson was 45 min, with 5 min breaks between lessons and one 25 min break at 9:35. Kids were divided in groups of 25-30 and were given a letter: e.g. I was F. So 1F, 2F, 3F, and last year was 4F. You take all of your classes for all 4 years with the same group of 25-30 kids. In my case, we even stayed in the same classroom, and only left the classroom for PE or when we had lab. Grades were 1-5, with 5 being the best. There was no division according to advanced or less advanced, everyone had to take the same tests. The year was divided into trimesters (sept-dec, jan-march, april-june, summer holidays from June 25 to Aug 31; now, it's semesters not trimesters, they changed it). We had a week off last week of october, last week of december, last week of february and last week of april). Also, PE, music, and art were not graded, but just given a "less successful", "successful" or "very successful" description and did not affect your final grade average at the end of the year

  • @WestSideModSquad
    @WestSideModSquad Před 4 lety

    In New York our high school day starts at 7:45am. We go to “home room” where attendance is taken and that lasts until 7:57am. Our first class starts at 8am and our school day ends at 2:35pm. Unless you play a sport or get detention no one is at school after 3pm.

  • @helenweight3783
    @helenweight3783 Před 4 lety +1

    In the north of England its generally High school. My cousins in the sound never called it high school. Love your videos, keep up the good work xxx

  • @johnsymons76
    @johnsymons76 Před 4 lety

    Totally fascinating information about British high schools. I would like you to do a vlog about the social interactions of your high school students. Specifically cliques, bullies, snobs, geeks, athletes, artistic types, shy students, popular students, etc. Hope you will consider doing this sometime in the future. Wishing both of you a wonderful weekend. ♥️🙏🏽🌎

  • @markjesik424
    @markjesik424 Před 4 lety +1

    I had elementary school until I was 11, then middle school from ages 12 - 14, and high school from 15 - 18. We don't have to pick a school path. We can take whatever electives we would like, and have our other required classes to take. I took extra math and science classes, as they were my favorite. Also, it prepare me well for studying engineering.

  • @aliehanaseem5540
    @aliehanaseem5540 Před 4 lety +1

    I love your videeeooos. Hope ur doing well during this quarantine

  • @JDoors
    @JDoors Před 4 lety +2

    My High School had 5,000 students. Depending on the classes you took, between classes you might wind up having to run from one end of the school to the other to make it to the other class on time. Whew!

  • @jono8884
    @jono8884 Před 4 lety +1

    Age 16 is only the second year of our high school....we go to 18.....then to college / university. Usually, Kindergarten to 5th...sometimes 6th is elementary school, then 6,7,8th are middle or junior high and then 9-12 are high school...then college / university.

  • @quantquill
    @quantquill Před 4 lety +1

    Hearing you guys say, "When we were in school we didn't even have flat screens..." Oh, man.
    When I was in high school, I took a keyboarding class that used typewriters.
    My computer class was on how to program in Basic. COBOL was a really newfangled language our computer teacher hadn't learned yet.
    Our computers didn't yet have hard drives. We inserted a DOS floppy disk to boot up the computer. When we wrote code, we saved it on a floppy disk.
    We had enormous monitors with tiny screens and blinky green cursors and we wrote programs to do things like add two numbers.
    We wrote out our programs by hand, then typed it in, compiled the code and ran it, and inevitably had a bug. Then we'd print the code out on 11 x 17 paper on a printer that had wheels on each end fo the roller and little holes along the perforated edges of the paper caught on the wheels to push paper out. Then we'd debug the code and try to fix it, rinse and repeat.
    No one I knew used a computer. I had zero concept of how anyone could ever use them in their everyday life.
    When I went to college, I used a computer to write my papers. It didn't have its own hard drive, it had two 3.5 inch disk drives, one to boot up the computer, the other to run an app like Wordperfect, then after it was booted I'd take out the DOS disk and put in a blank disk to save my work.
    By the time I left college, a lot of companies were using computers for word processing (with WordPerfect) and bookkeeping (with Lotus Notes, what we used before Excel). The internet started before I went to grad school, and you could count the number of websites. Everything was dial up.
    Now we have 3D everything and virtual worlds.
    It's absolutely freaking amazing how far online tech has evolved.

  • @melissah521
    @melissah521 Před 4 lety +1

    We have 5 min breaks between classes and schedule is the same everyday besides Wednesday for early release day. Wednesday released and hour early and had advisory after lunch

  • @Joncotter324
    @Joncotter324 Před 4 lety

    Education/High School curriculums are state run in the US. In Michigan, we’re required 3yrs of Sciences, Math, English, and social studies (history, govt, etc), in addition to a semester of Health and consumer economics and computer science, also a year of PE. Plenty of electives (creatives) too. You’re also required a year of either foreign language or band or choir.

  • @oliviavizza8731
    @oliviavizza8731 Před 4 lety

    Where I’m from in the US, we had elementary/primary school which was kindergarten-5th grade (11/12), Middle School/Junior High which was 6th-8th grade (13/14). High School was grades 9-12, graduating at age 17/18. My state also had standardized tests at the end of every school year (June) called Regents Exams, which acted as our final exams for the course and dictated how good we were. You had to pass a certain amount in order to graduate, and you didn’t take a Regents in every subject every year. Most years you took a Regents in whatever math and science you were taking from 8th-10th grade, History Regents 9th-11th grade, and an english regents 11th grade. In my High School we had AP subjects, and newly introduced IB program which I know is in Britain as well. APs and IBs are upper level courses you can take and then take a long exam in May to possibly get college credit. I took both AP and IB courses, AP courses were one year long, and IB courses were mostly 2 years long except a few. we had to take a language from 6th grade to at least 10th grade (choose from French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, and now Mandarin), but most students keep a language through graduation. We have electives you can choose from. I always had my elective be some art class, I took advancing levels of Photography all throughout high school, and also took Psychology in grade 12th.

  • @shannonvinlove850
    @shannonvinlove850 Před 4 lety

    When I went to high school, which was 31 years ago, my school was a 3 year high school. 10-12 grade. Our school was an open campus, which meant you could leave school for lunch, so long as you had a lunch pass.

  • @christineallocca7307
    @christineallocca7307 Před 4 lety

    I went to 12 years of Catholic school. Primary school was called elementary school and was grades 1 through 8 where you graduated at 13 or 14 years of age. I had 50 kids in my class with three classes per grade. Next I attended high school which was grades 9 through 12 and you graduated at 17 or 18 years of age. The first class was called Homeroom where they took attendance, said prayers and you listened to the day's announcements. My high school originally only taught commercial classes for girls going into business, but did add more academic classes for girls going onto college. I took a combination of academic and commercial classes. Took public transportation to high school but walked across the street to elementary.

  • @bigaspidistra
    @bigaspidistra Před 4 lety

    Some areas in England still have a three tier system - lower school, often called primary, middle school, and high school which may include the old sixth form

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 Před 4 lety +1

    My high school had 1,700 students in it but it wasn't that big. Five towns over the high school had 6,000!

  • @zach3431
    @zach3431 Před 4 lety

    I love that Paris shirt you wear Joel!