Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Japanese Kindergarten




    The Japanese kindergarten in quite different from the kindergarten model followed in the West.  I became very interested in Japanese children’s education after living with a Japanese family with a 4 year old boy. Kids in Japan definitely have less everyday tasks than kids in America or Brazil , for example.




    For example, they don’t have to clean up after themselves, they have many things that they request as fast as their parents can run to bring it to them and in kindergarten class they also have lots of freedom to do what want. 
My host brother's kindergarten class consists of one teacher and approximately 30 kids.  Unlike western schools, the teacher is not supposed to interfere with the actions of the children.  In Japan, kids learn that fighting is wrong through social interactions and sometimes by fighting and being hurt. If the teacher interferes with the social interactions in the class, the kids will never know how a fight can hurt and be bad. It’s a very interesting method that seems to really work, as when these kids advance to middle school and beyond, their behavior is much disciplined.





    I went to a Kindergarten festival and it was very interesting to see how the kids are noisy and they don’t seem to care about the festival very much. But it was amazing to see how they stand nearly four hours of festival, changing clothes and doing various performances without complaining. In contrast, a 4 year old child in Brazil would perform for no more then 15 minutes and would surly complain every time some one asked for something as simple as taking a picture. 












4 comments:

  1. Lots of nice pictures here. Did you get permission from the parents to photograph the kids?

    It might be helpful to have some links or references about Japanese education in this post.

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  2. Well , the only kid I am really showing the face is my host brother . The other kids are blurry in the pictures!! :)

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  3. It is still good to get permission as privacy is a very touchy subject, especially when it comes to children.

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  4. i m highly impressed by the thought of training children this way.

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