70-80 an A????? Wow Im living it the wrong country
@ronw4846 жыл бұрын
No kidding! Back in my school days, if I'd come home with a 70, my parents would have been really angry with me.
@bucksatanII6 жыл бұрын
A 70-79 in the US is a C. 90-100 is an A
@TheDawnPhoenix6 жыл бұрын
The marking systems are different though. When my best friends came to the UK for a Masters degree, they genuinely cried the first time they received an essay back and it was low 70s (they were solid low-mid 90s students in the US). They were absolutely devastated, and wondering whether or not they’d gone in over their heads, and messaged me, crying. Actually the reality was they aced the essay.
@rawhamburgerjoe6 жыл бұрын
@@inkymunich Exactly
@ttimllo6 жыл бұрын
What she said is actually wrong its 90 for A 70-80 for B and 50- 60 is C and A+ is 95%. I live in Australia and i am in 8th grade of high school so i know what the marking system is.
@leana41295 жыл бұрын
Everybody sending hate to john did you listen carefully? At the start of his turn he said he was homeschooled so he didnt know that well.
@LurkerPatrol54 жыл бұрын
It affects his pronunciation surprisingly. When he said he grew up in southern california and said "San Diego" in a previous video, he said it with a hard D and like really pronouncing it. If you're from San Diego (where I grew up), you would say "sanny yay go". It's all condensed, never enunciated.
@boredweegie5534 жыл бұрын
Exactly you idiot! You just made the point 😂😂😂😂😂he is a bad example of talking about school system when he was schooled in his house.
@metzli_moon4 жыл бұрын
To which he semiconfidently started talking about something anyway, that he knew nothing about
@zachb13444 жыл бұрын
ukkr Los Angeles means the angels in English
@brenden62184 жыл бұрын
Well he was the wrong pick for that question
@mattsteer50036 жыл бұрын
She didn’t mention on how we can drink at 18 LEGALLY...
@kinga47716 жыл бұрын
Is that something to be proud of? Is it really relevant or worth mentioning. Also in Britain if your over 12 and your parents are the ones who give it to you, you are allowed to drink. You can also have some drinks (cider I think is an example) at the age of 16
@dangishnock52026 жыл бұрын
Damn wish America was like that here you have to be 21 to drink but I think if we are old enough to die for are country we should be able to drink alcohol at 18
@assterisk10806 жыл бұрын
Matt Steer huh?? isnt it 21? here the age of consent is 16 but the drinking age is 21
@centrey58276 жыл бұрын
@@kinga4771 definitely something to be proud of, get that sauce early pal, not young forever.
@user-qw9sq3gc3y6 жыл бұрын
Same in the Bahamas 🇧🇸
@BlahBlah-by8wh4 жыл бұрын
Can u guys not I think John was honestly a good representative like he tried his best and also America is a big country so many states have their own rules and stuff but as a Californian he did good also gosh bruh why are Americans so opinionated
@lrgd4 жыл бұрын
You are very thoughtful...Thank you :)
@xiaobai70604 жыл бұрын
They shouldn't have put the guy in there in the first place. The school thing is almost half of the video. Doesn't make sense. They might as well have put a foreigner in there to represent the U.S.
@TheNaveOfCharlemagne4 жыл бұрын
@@xiaobai7060 Except, to be fair, homeschooling is a pretty significant portion of American education, so...
@sliat19813 ай бұрын
Give him a break. I thought he did well
@lrgd5 жыл бұрын
*Updated - Please Read! After reading through a lot of your comments, I think I need to clarify some things about this video. I created about 10 videos with a leading English language Institute in Korea about 2 years ago. Sam, Bella, and John all worked for this institute at that time. I don't know if they still do. I hadn't met them before shooting this video. I was basically told that a British, Australian and American teacher would be available for my video so I came up with questions I was curious about. It was my mistake of coming up with questions for people I didn't know. So, please refrain from commenting negatively on John, Bella and Sam. I will make sure to carefully select for my next video. Thanks!
@missdragonfire4 жыл бұрын
They did fine people just feel the need to moan and pick at things.
@yesyesyes6664 жыл бұрын
they did ok
@asafox65505 жыл бұрын
As a New Yorker, I must interject. It’s “How YOU doing?” Not “HOW you doing?”. Emphasize the “you”.
@lrgd5 жыл бұрын
I went to suny for college too. I would definately agree..
@_02kaye4 жыл бұрын
Are you Joey Tribbiani
@asafox65504 жыл бұрын
_ Myeconn no but I used to live in the Bronx Little Italy
@benvanderwoude44846 жыл бұрын
I see a lot of criticism from Americans of John as the American panelist (in Part 1 it was mostly Australians criticizing Bella). I thought John did a fantastic job. I don't agree with everything he said but he's a young westerner and I'm an old southerner so we almost come from different countries and eras. He was well spoken, and polite Most importantly he suppressed either of those urges we Americans oft get around foreigners, i.e. to exaggerate our American brashness or to pander to foreigners and criticize the US in order to appear sophisticated. I think he was a good representative.
@malaria396 жыл бұрын
I agree he's polite. But even from a southern Californian of the same generation, he's wrong about some things. He sounds pretty sheltered and doesn't represent the US all that well in this video. It would have been better if he just admitted he doesn't know some things.
@benvanderwoude44846 жыл бұрын
malaria39 I can't place anything that he got factually wrong, just some questions of opinion such as things that bother Americans, and pickup lines. Maybe the school grading scale was a point or two variant compared to what I remember (90 for an A rather than 92 etc) but there are 50 state school systems and hundreds of geographical districts and special districts such as 'recovery districts' and charter schools, not to mention private and parochial schools and they likely aren't all on the same scale. Additionally he did preface his answer by saying that he wasn't necessarily the best person to answer as he was home schooled. I don't know about sheltered. Seemed the opposite to me. He just didn't have the pop culture swagger that many kids adopt to fit in and that might seem sheltered to some folks but I found it refreshing. Looks to me like a young guy abroad, I assume working, in a foreign land is a tad less sheltered than most. However I do think he wasn't typical by any means but atypical in a good way.
@2011blueman6 жыл бұрын
John did a horrible job because he didn't answer a lot of the questions correctly. He was home schooled so he didn't know anything about the school system. He also doesn't seem to know much about the US legal system either (you can't shoot someone simply for trespassing).
@benvanderwoude44846 жыл бұрын
Leggo My Ego Could your real objection just be that he was home schooled, a fact he readily revealed and certainly not a thing that is a negative in any stretch of the imagination? I don't think that his home schooling even necessarily rendered any of his school related dialog incorrect. It may have made him the polite, friendly individual that, frankly, more Americans could strive to be. Granted that since most younger folks in the US aren't as well spoken and clean cut as he, he may not have been typical of our sullen youth. In that case I am happy that he was our atypical representative. Regarding shooting people who come into American's private property, in many US states (30) the Castle Doctrine, or 'stand your ground laws', do defacto allow Americans to shoot you if you come on to their property. There are usually other duties such as the duty to retreat mixed in but often those duties are forgotten by the homeowner out of the fear of the moment and abused. California doesn't have such a direct Castle Doctrine law but Colorado does have a variation referred to as a 'make my day' law granting a large amount of immunity to home owners who think they are defending their homes. The case of German exchange student Diren Dede who was shot and killed by a homeowner in Montana while trespassing in. 2015, made international headlines as it highlighted the cultural differences between the US and most of the industrialized western world when it came to perceptions of property rights and the number of guns. That Montana homeowner was found guilty of homicide due to having lured young Dede in by leaving his garage door open, an action intended to exact revenge on burglars who had broken into his home, however the homeowner no doubt mistakenly believed that he had immunity as it was part of his failed defense. The point is that simple trespassing in the US can have far more serious consequences than abroad and in fact in many cases the property owner can shoot you or at least thinks he/she can shoot you. Granted John could have gone into a long winded explanation of every variation of Castle Doctrine or Make My Day type laws in every state but who knows all of them and it was a short video I think it was great that on the spot he thought of that huge difference and he may have given some truly helpful advice to non Americans listening when he said to stay off folks' property in the US. It was a far better cultural difference to warn foreigners of than would have been etiquette rules as it might actually save their very lives.
@flewkisdead6 жыл бұрын
@@2011blueman You can shoot someone for trespassing in certain jurisdictions. Technically, trespassing alone is not enough (in any US jurisdiction), but many jurisdictions have some type of stand your ground laws that make justifying shooting trespassers fairly easy (ridiculously so). He didn't know much about the school system, but that is not important. The US school system is fucked up. Super fucked up. There is no national standard. It is literally tens of thousands of separate districts based on their city, county, state, and federal laws. And then there's charter schools and private schools. The 60 70 80 90/D C B A system is not ubiquitous. And then there's those that follow Common Core vs those that do not. A shit show to say the least. Edit: He covered it fairly accurately at first. Trespassing is illegal and people do get mad at solicitors. It is only when the interviewer asked about shooting people on your property...
@kharilane13406 жыл бұрын
British College sounds like American Community Colleges.
@janus35556 жыл бұрын
The aspect where at 16 years of age you can decide. In the US that's called vocational schools. They're schools where you can learn a trade and typically some of them can get you into a job without college at the age of 18. Welding for instance as they typically make far more than most college graduates as well as others. I took drafting and design in my vocational school but it helps to understand that I still went to school, I just left for half of it to attend those schools. The only issue I had was that I had Chemistry in 11th grade 5th period and Physics in 12th grade 5th period. I had to leave in the middle of class each time which means I had to work extra hard to pass those classes which for my program, I needed at minimal a 70% to pass.
@nims84426 жыл бұрын
Except that the British college is the most used option to get into university and almost all English universities now require some form of college education or you could do a foundation year at the specific university.
@StrathpefferJunction6 жыл бұрын
@@nims8442 You mean the English college. In Scotland, most people don't go to college, they stay at secondary school, and college is normally for school drop outs.
@Backflipgal126 жыл бұрын
Yeah, at my school you had an option where in 10th grade (basically 3 years until you graduate in 12th) you can go to a vocational school for half the day where you can learn a trade like construction, culinary arts, or veterinary tech, then get a certification by the end of highschool that lets you go straight into the workforce. It doesn’t help you much with university, though, beyond giving you a headstart on the subjects you might learn in the same major. For university there’s something called “dual enrollment,” where you go to Highschool normally, but take Community College classes too, so you can get credits to transfer over the your university, and possibly graduate early, too.
@katherinecorbett75806 жыл бұрын
More tech school
@jellyjish5 жыл бұрын
0:38 did anybody else hear that? it sounded like a minecraft villager
@rrex5 жыл бұрын
Amethyst Velich lmao ur right
@kiianapaige5 жыл бұрын
Amethyst Velich I CANT STOP LAUGHING HOLY SHIT HAHAAHHAH
@narniebear44495 жыл бұрын
I didn’t even notice that! Until I replayed it😂
@jordanleo5 жыл бұрын
Wtf I actually heard that I went on for like 15 seconds😂😂😂
@pinkedguts4 жыл бұрын
That’s just john 😂
@sparklepink58914 жыл бұрын
In America A: 90% B: 80 to 89% C: 70 to 79% D: 60 to 69% E aka fail: Below 59% Positive behind the letter: 98 to 99/100 Only the letter: 94 to 97 Negative sign: 90 to 93
@dantecusolito85134 жыл бұрын
D is 65-69 in MA F under 65
@kelhapam4 жыл бұрын
Some schools in the US are on a 7 point system with 93-100 being an A etc.
@kees_hoe4 жыл бұрын
Sparkle Pink Where I’m at a 93-100 is an A a 90 would be a B
@sparklepink58914 жыл бұрын
@@kees_hoe Both in Michigan and in Vegas!
@as-guardianangel93604 жыл бұрын
At my school F is below a 70
@Wolfgirl9266 жыл бұрын
So the grading scale in the United States is 90 and up is an A, 80-89 is a B, 70-79 is a C, 60-69 is a D, and 59 and down is an F.
@lrgd6 жыл бұрын
Really? I thought 92+ was an A.
@Wolfgirl9266 жыл бұрын
러닝그라운드 yup. Ive been in both Private school and Public school. 90+ is an A.
@sakurablossom8536 жыл бұрын
93+ is an A actually. and 69 and down is an F
@Wolfgirl9266 жыл бұрын
Sakura Blossom at what schools? Because all public education I've seen its 90+ A and 59 down F
@sakurablossom8536 жыл бұрын
Wolfgirl926 ah, maybe because i’ve attended private school my whole life? ;-; i envy your grading scales. 99-100 is A+ and it’s so hard
@jasiahgipson73776 жыл бұрын
We need John to stop talking about the us school system need another representative 😂😂
@kennandunn75336 жыл бұрын
Firelord Azula sure, but someone who was home schooled and relying on what his friends who went to public school told him is probably not the best representative for people from the UK and Australia on a Korean youtube channel
@MekanikKommandoh886 жыл бұрын
Another issue is that your education, much like many other aspects of America, depends on which state you live in. America is massive compared to the U.K. and Australia. There are a lot of differences in many respects even across state lines.
@faranaknejatirostami37785 жыл бұрын
Aussie Aussie Aussie oyy oyy oyy
@ladyfoxwf10755 жыл бұрын
So do the English 😳
@allisonwilson34935 жыл бұрын
Jasiah Gipson yes
@nickelcobalt986 жыл бұрын
English school system is very different from scottish system so saying “British” isn’t really correct
@dochka6 жыл бұрын
the university system too, i often feel watching these kinds of videos they should get a scottish person on as well or maybe welsh or irish because people assume english is just the standard
@Ivielynn1236 жыл бұрын
How is it different? I'm American and really wouldnt mind knowing.
@nickelcobalt986 жыл бұрын
Ivie Murphy in regards to high school. the courses are different (probably cover in general the same thing though); we sit completely different exams; we have a different year system and we take less subjects since our courses are slightly more in depth. cut offs for marks are dependent on the mean results of an exam so if people on average didn’t do so well then all of the grade boundaries will be lowered a percent or two. we also don’t have A* because it doesn’t matter to our uni. an A is just an A. usually the grade boundaries are- 75-100% A 65-75% B 55-65% C 25-55% fail 0-25% ungraded but as i mentioned they can change from year to year, exam to exam. in university, the standard length of a honours degree is 4years unless you have taken specific exams to skip a year. also, in scotland university tuition is free for scottish citizens.
@nickelcobalt986 жыл бұрын
Ivie Murphy You also usually take more exams in scottish high school. In england they sit GCSEs and A levels while in Scotland we sit National 5s, Highers and Advanced Highers
@Ivielynn1236 жыл бұрын
@@nickelcobalt98 thanku for explaining!
@wowshmow80316 жыл бұрын
The only one that Immediately got into my head for America is "Are you from Tennessee? Because your the only 10 I see."🥁
@jenna57934 жыл бұрын
Bu dum shh
@jenna57934 жыл бұрын
Hopefully that's right on how to write it lol
@madhums96194 жыл бұрын
Nice😂😂
@MekanikKommandoh886 жыл бұрын
I am a school administrator in America, so I’d like to provide some insight... John is a poor representative for explaining our education system, but it would be impossible for any American to accurately do so. Educational systems are largely controlled by a mixture of the state governments and local school boards. The federal government, in the grand scheme of things, has very little to do with public education. The Department of Ed mostly handles civil rights situations. There have been some serious laws passed at the federal level - IDEA and NCLB for example - but overall public schools are primarily run by states and local townships. That is why there can be such a wild difference depending on where you live. Home schooling is another beast all together and its regulation, again, depends on which state you live in. None of this accounts for private, charter, or magnet schools either. The University level of education is more universal, but again, it really depends on which school you attend.
@jesskhan095 жыл бұрын
To be fair he did say he is not the right person for this.
@missdragonfire4 жыл бұрын
@@jesskhan09 very true it is quite annoying when people do not listen to what is being said. In my opinion, he made that pretty clear.
@jojoelio55374 жыл бұрын
Funny reading comments like this tbh. He clearly said that he was homeschooled before answering the question. Lmao.
@grayonthewater4 жыл бұрын
I don’t think anyone cares about this level of detail, I think he explained the overview well and he was a GOOD representative for it
@dashdash5674 жыл бұрын
He clearly said he was homeschooled and didn't go through the normal education system
@Алина-т8ж6э6 жыл бұрын
this British guy is so hot
@eugenesingh50036 жыл бұрын
exactlyyyyy!!! i wanna know his ig name!!!!
@xtaylorsversion6 жыл бұрын
Eugene Singh sam
@dylanduran57926 жыл бұрын
sam_hugg1 youre welcome
@mattdb5006 жыл бұрын
looks just like chris evans
@kaciconn61556 жыл бұрын
Hunain Ghazi agree, everything about Britain he says is true so 😂😂 A*
@mafscoolas87546 жыл бұрын
when they talked about the rubbish bins, it was really interesting because they were all sort of saying different things without realising it
@FlyLaces6 жыл бұрын
on the topic of shooting trespassers in america, it is kind of ambiguous depending on the state you live in. generally, if someone is on your property and is not posing any real threat or danger to you, you do not have the right to just outright shoot them. shooting at a trespasser is always a legal gamble and the legality of such actions is incredibly state-specific and fact-specific. so unless you plan on breaking and entering into a home illegally and posing a dangerous threat to the people who live there, this VERY rarely ever pertains to you.
@hanzzarkov76906 жыл бұрын
Until you lawyer up with a 'stand your ground' statute. While those will vary state to state, when one party is dead it's difficult to dispute.
@greenikkie53346 жыл бұрын
You're right but what's the use of disputing if one party is already dead?
@hanzzarkov76906 жыл бұрын
I see your point, but the idea is that the deceased persons family might seek a more thorough investigation. Assuming an investigation found conflicting information, some sort of repercussions either civil or criminal might be sought. The problem is these statutes can make even a warranted judicial penalty all the more difficult to pursue. On the other hand if you're implying that one person lay dead, killed by another, what is there to dispute about the guilt of the live person, this isn't quite how it works.
@faith1cheer6 жыл бұрын
Laces yes, however we have a law that basically says your home is your castle and if someone invaded that property and you need to defend your home, your well within your rights.
@viktoriyaserebryakov27555 жыл бұрын
@@faith1cheer With just cause. It kind of has to be ambiguous because you can't concretely define just cause. So it's for the court to decide where your particular case resides.
@AristotelisMitsiou5 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised neither Australia nor the US mentioned customs in the laws section. At least with Australia there's a lot of stuff you're not allowed to bring into the country, and most of the stuff you do have to be declared.
@Brodas7355 жыл бұрын
Oooooh. I now understand why that Australian show I watched is called 'nothing to declare'
@gay.mer93285 жыл бұрын
Lightning D0!t I have never heard of that show. Searched it up. I think you’re talking about Border Security Australia. If it is here I can’t find it.
@xero63964 жыл бұрын
Yes!!!!!
@Sian6604 жыл бұрын
Not to mention the fruit bins on the borders between states. To toss any of your fruit so you don’t take them between borders.
@thatjenkinsonfamily52025 жыл бұрын
The Australian girl should of said high school not secondary
@scabash5 жыл бұрын
Hey it’s Kiahna 100%
@jamiewatever5 жыл бұрын
It’s either
@RandomAussieEmu5 жыл бұрын
Eh. It annoyed me.
@zahuskee59525 жыл бұрын
We call them secondary schools in Victoria, so I’d say she was right.
@thatjenkinsonfamily52025 жыл бұрын
Zebyzz vic is one place of Australia almost everyone else calls it high school
@JB-jr3yj6 жыл бұрын
We actually don’t use A* to U in England anymore since September 2016 we use 1-9 and it can get pretty confusing now as only one year has been marked with this grading.
@England916 жыл бұрын
Jakub Bledek yeah that fucked with me when my little/baby bro cane home saying that like what??
@JB-jr3yj6 жыл бұрын
Paul Banks employers now will be like “what the f**k is a 9 I’ve never seen this before”
@flowersandkookies75796 жыл бұрын
I can't wait for my GCSE results day to have to try and explain to my parents what the numbers mean, especially since they think a 1 is good lol
@deussivenatura58056 жыл бұрын
A* to U is still used in A-levels but A levels are now linear
@beastmr9196 жыл бұрын
actually the letter grading system is americanisms
@TheThree3Tails6 жыл бұрын
You've literally got the poorest representatives for each country 😂😂 everyone's complaining. (British seems fine tho). WE NEED A SWAP FOR AUSTRALIA! who's aussie and can agree? Im disappointed 😂
@hanzzarkov76906 жыл бұрын
(U.S.) You make a good point. I'd suppose that these are people who have relocated to S.K for one profession or another, indicating they may have a unique background, and mindset, which perhaps make them a bit *A-typical* of their typical countrymen. I wouldn't say that I'm disappointed, but their perspectives may be a tad watered down.
@hosi35836 жыл бұрын
Alicia Massey agreed. She is clueless
@chimcham67626 жыл бұрын
Yeah, she was quite off. Also, she’s from Melbourne so she can only speak on the Victorian education system cause every other state has their own rules and school systems.
@Out2theIndoors6 жыл бұрын
She's gorgeous! If all austrialians are as beauty as her, i'm visiting.
@largelytrue75136 жыл бұрын
Alicia Massey eh she’s not the worse but not the best
@jamie31976 жыл бұрын
"I think most places stay open later in Australia" She obviously left before the Sydney lock out laws controversy lol
@misshisokapaints1095 жыл бұрын
Everywhere in perth closes at 5:30
@jess_70765 жыл бұрын
Miss Hisoka Paints omg finally someone from Perth 0-0
@icantthinkofanamesothisisi78145 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure Victoria is the only state that doesn't have the lockout laws
@jeneralgod5 жыл бұрын
@@icantthinkofanamesothisisi7814 yeah, some of their shopping centres open until 9pm on some days
@gergs9884 жыл бұрын
@Jeri Brown some do, dont know about all though. dont really go to bars lmfao i'd rather wait until i got my blacks lol. sydney police would whoop my ass
@mrver32324 жыл бұрын
This sounds like a start of a joke: "A brit, and Australian and an American walk into a bar..." if you wanna finish it be my guest
@emeryjem4 жыл бұрын
They all had a beer and chatted because we're all friends. The end.
@tunasandwich11354 жыл бұрын
Only two got drinks.
@k.vn.k4 жыл бұрын
Americans: Drink weak, pissy-tasting beer. Brits: Drink warm, beery-tasting piss. Aussies: Drink anything with alcohol in it.
@datsall3235 жыл бұрын
Someone may have already explained this but the English school system is quite different, at least from my experience. Firstly, most children attend nursery aged around 2-4 which is probably like pre kindergarten. We attend reception (Year 0 - kindergarten) aged 4-5 and then start true primary school during Year 1-6 aged 5-11. Afterwards, we go to secondary school Year 7-11 aged 11-16, where we learn a whole range of subjects up until Year 9. In Year 10, we choose subjects like history, computing, and art to study for their GCSEs (maths, English, science, one language subject like Spanish and religious studies are compulsory). Note: most of these subjects (and all compulsory ones) have been studied from Year 7-9 so students are choosing which ones to continue for their exams. Secondly, the English grading system began changing from letters A*-U to numbers 9-1 in 2017. This was first implemented for maths and English grades (the other subjects like science and religious studies still used A-U until 2018). Exact equivalence is lengthy to type but is as follows: 9 = A*+/A*, 8 = A*-/A+, 7 = A/A-, 6 = B+/B, 5 = B-/C+, 4 = C/C-, 3 = D and I kind of forgot how it gets to U but anything below a 4 is a fail. A great pass = 5 and a good pass = 4. Furthermore, for maths and science there was a higher tier and foundation tier. Higher tier went from 9-4 or A*-C (science was still letters) and foundation was 5-1 or C-U. Higher meant risking a U if we got a D but foundation meant limiting ourselves to a C when we may have gotten a B or higher. Either way 9-1 maths and English was really tough. It’s worth mentioning English had no tiers it was just one set and also English literature and English language were two different compulsory subjects. Additionally, the final exam papers count for 80-100% of our final grade in England. 20% is coursework for some subjects like science but the rest is memorising 2 years worth of knowledge and hoping the right questions come up as we never know what specific topics will pop up within subjects. In just English literature alone, we had to remember two whole 19th century books, a Shakespeare play and around 14 poems. We also had one unseen poem and one unseen extract from a book for comparison questions. I had 9 subjects spread across 14 1hr30min exams in one month (others had even more). During secondary school, we do have mid term, end of term and other tests in between but they don’t count towards our grades it’s just to check our knowledge and understanding so we know what to improve on. Moreover, the grade boundaries change every year and are only set after all of the exam papers are marked. Students are graded against each other to prevent everyone getting an A* if the exams were too easy or an E if they were too hard. This means there is not a specific percentage amount of marks needed for an A or above (it could be 85% or 92% no one ever knows beforehand). If every student does badly on an exam the grade boundaries are lowered and vice versa. We all just study hard and hope we were better than the rest. In addition, each school chooses a examboard for each subject. There are quite a few including AQA or Edexcel. Often times students have one examboard for science but a completely different one for maths and these examboards all have different standards for gaining marks. For instance, the definition of words may be varied across examboards and many times students lose marks for not uses the exact words written in the markschemes it can be harsh, especially 9-1 exams. Since I didn’t know where to put this, PE (physical education) is a lesson throughout primary school to secondary school but not one you have exams on, unless you choose it as an option. In the latter case, you would have extra lessons plus ordinary PE lessons. Finally, after those dreadful exams are done students either go to sixth form or college or an apprenticeship program for 2--3 years as we’re required by law to stay in education until 18. Apprenticeships are kind of like a shortcut to jobs and college courses are more job oriented than sixthform A levels. With the latter, students choose 3 subjects to study in-depth for 2 years and it somehow makes GCSEs look like primary school work. Then people go onto university but honestly I don’t know much about that yet. All subjects are now graded 9-1 now and they’re all much harder so good luck guys but that’s just how it is.
@feliciamatei41026 жыл бұрын
I think sam John and Bella should create their own official KZbin channel. I'm having so much fun with you guys
@lrgd6 жыл бұрын
Why don’t you dm them? Their id is at the description
@kingnabeel126 жыл бұрын
러닝그라운드 I couldn’t find their IDs in the description.
@blackpinkinyourarea84976 жыл бұрын
School is actually different in every state of Australia. The cutoffs are different. In NSW the cutoff for an E (equivalent of an F) is 20-40%
@shortscouture15 жыл бұрын
Cutoff here in victoria is 39% iirc
@imtheshityourthefly0375 жыл бұрын
Y’all the cutoff where I live is a 69%💀
@daemonskycloak68184 жыл бұрын
park chaeyoung's a wifey That doesn’t even make sense you can therefore pass a class with only 20-40 percent on the required knowledge tested out correctly. Imagine having a doctor who only knew 20% of a surgery. Lol In America if you don’t have above an 80% you are a very below average student and need tutoring and to study a lot more. If you’re not aiming for at least a 90% in America you’re probably someone who doesn’t care too much about school. Of course not everyone gets a 90% but that’s the minimum goal for a lot of people who actually care about their education. For anyone who doesn’t understand that means acquiring and scoring correctly (through various assignments, quizzes, and tests)at least 90% of the information you learn. On another note you can pass a class in most places at a 60% any less and you fail the course. That is the very minimum. Do other countries have GPA? If you don’t it’s basically a system where every final grade you have ever gotten in averages out into a number system typically 0-4. Any A being worth a 4, B worth a 3, C worth a 2, and D a 1. (Advanced classes are typically worth a 5.) Anyway this number follows you through each section of your schooling and resets when you start a new section (ie. middle school, high school, college, university). This is another reason why mediocrity in a single class is not accepted. It brings your overall average down and can affect your ability to get into better higher education.
@xero63964 жыл бұрын
Yes. It depends on which state you're in.
@-cosmixnebulae-73982 жыл бұрын
The cutoff where I am is 59.98.
@고무준7 жыл бұрын
영어권 사람들끼리 대화하는게 참 재미있네요 편집도 깔끔해서 보기 좋았습니다
@lrgd7 жыл бұрын
와 좋은 댓글 감사합니다. 저도 재미있게 편집했습니다 :)
@EVILBUNNY286 жыл бұрын
In the U.K. you can’t put definite boundaries for grades since they are dynamic. Instead of exam boards worrying if the papers they set are consistently difficult for a fixed set of grade boundaries, they just move the boundaries instead. This way the average of the entire country is usually set as a C, and then it’s roughly +/- 10% per grade boundary. This system meant that when I sat my GCSE maths it gave these grade boundaries: 77%+: A* 66%: A 55%: B 45%: C 37%: D 32%: E 25%: F
@shoelacy71015 жыл бұрын
So I'm an American that has been to 8 different schools in different states and they are all different. Some school have 8 classes a day, some have 7, some have 4 and they rotate a schedule so there are a days and b days with the first 4 and last 4 of your courses. I know some schools have an a and z say where your last and first period switch time slots. Some school have uniforms and strict dress codes some don't. Some schools you have to wear a lanyard with a name tag some don't. Some school have lunches in waves, or by grade some have the entire school with the same lunch. Also we have a standard learning curriculum but every school has different requirements for courses to graduate (well maybe depending on which of the 50 states you live in).
@jaroslavkoucky6646 жыл бұрын
Roses are red Violets are blue Bella is single So are you. :}
@jaygambino87645 жыл бұрын
“ahhhhh” “mmmmhh” “ahhhhhhhhhhhhh” “wowwww”
@ёпт-ь7д4 жыл бұрын
Они же в Корее :) а там все так :)
@lillymcdonald5666 жыл бұрын
Australia- A= 1 year and a half ahead of average B= 6 months ahead of average C= Average D= below the standard expected F= Fail
@bribatista76635 жыл бұрын
I CANT BELIEVE JOHN DIDNT SAY THE CLICHE “are you from Tennessee because your the only TEN I SEE” whaaat
@taylormoon70226 жыл бұрын
I don’t think we really have an “A system” in Australia, at least from memory in primary school it was usually graded out of something (eg. 9/10) and then percentages or “out of” in high school and at uni there’s High Distinction (85-90 I think), Distinction, Credit, Pass and Fail (anything below 50)
@chimcham67626 жыл бұрын
queen sansa I don’t know what state you’re in but in QLD we had the “A system” in high school that was mainly based on percentages however in Uni, it’s pass, credit, distinction, high distinction.
@foxxy25836 жыл бұрын
@@chimcham6762 Here in Victoria we have fail, competent, good, very good, excellent and outstanding. The percentages full under those marks. 45% and under is a fail.
@sarahg6946 жыл бұрын
Depends on the state you're in - but I know SA has changed the specifics of its grading system multiple times over the past decade. Currently, in high school they mark things mostly by the 'rubric' - a series of statements about the content/answers/requirements for an assessment task and how well the teacher or moderator believes you've achieved this. They often also use a point-based mechanism to give a rough estimate of your score on a test. Before this, they went by a point-based system that gave a score out of 15 (E- to A+). Before that it wasn't neatly divided equally between each value - I believe (its been a while) that to get in the A band you needed 85 or more - to get a B it was 70 or more, to get a C 45 or more. Don't know about the other states.
@abcdefg21745 жыл бұрын
@@foxxy2583 I'm in Vic and my primary school had percentages, my high school had percentages, an A-system and distinction-fail depending on the class lol, it was a bit everywhere, and for us anything under 40% was a fail
@meganwilliams29625 жыл бұрын
At my children's Primary (91-2004), Results were graded 1-5 for achievement and 1-5 for application. 1 was top, 5 was bottom.
@lilywilliams34356 жыл бұрын
When the question ’are all British people sarcastic?’ I was just like well I'm basically a British queen and I'm hella sarcastic soooi
@alex_runarin6 жыл бұрын
My favourite sarcastic line is "No shit, Sherlock" or like "Naaaah I thought it was a (something irrelevant)"
@rihana21x6 жыл бұрын
I like "No, you don't say?"
@Udontkno76 жыл бұрын
American sarcasm is more discreet, it sounds like everyday conversation. It's really not noticeable.
@beastmr9196 жыл бұрын
british don't use the african-american saying "hella"
@kinga47716 жыл бұрын
Oh god I hate those types of people
@mariemeyers66226 жыл бұрын
American: Kindergarten is age 5 on average. 1st-5th grade is Elementary, 6-8th is Middle School, 9th-12th is High School. This is the Average. There are some school systems that are slightly different. 9th grade is Freshman, 10th grade is Sophomore, 11th grade is Junior and 12th grade is Senior. Grades: Based on getting 100%, 0%-59% is F, 60%-69% is D 70%-79% is C, 80%-89% is B, 90%-100% is A. Again, this is the average. some school systems may be slightly different. University or College is after you graduate high school. These schools are where you obtain various degrees. There are 4 major categories: associate, bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees. Generally speaking associate is 2 years, bachelors is 4 years. Your Masters is completed after you have already completed your bachelors degree. The same works for your doctoral degree, you need to have your bachelors degree first. Now, the simplest difference between a Master's and Doctoral degree is the investment of time. A masters may take an extra two years after obtaining your bachelor's degree. Whereas your Doctoral degree usually requires 5-6 years on average. Plus with the doctoral degree you get to add Dr. to the beginning of your name. You also have trade schools or vocational schools that offer diplomas or certificates. These schools provide vocational education or technical skills required for a specific task.
@Everythingisroses5 жыл бұрын
Nobody: Literally nobody: Not a single soul: John: AHHH
@miac23824 жыл бұрын
Huh?
@vjm36 жыл бұрын
Okay so John didn't do American justice. Here are the proper answers to his questions: 1. A is 100-90. B is 89-80. C is 79-70. D is 69-60. F is 59-0. Get gud home schooler. 2. Pickup lines are generally more straight-forward. For example, if you see a cute girl, you'd approach her and say "Hey so I saw you over here and I think you're really cute. What's your number/Snapchat? We should go out for coffee, my treat." This sort of straight-forwardness is preferred for one good reason...it shows an illusion of confidence, which American girls like. At the bar/club, it's not the cutest guy who always goes home with the best-looking girl...it's the one with the most confidence. 3. Most people drink in four situation: At home alone. At a home with close friends. At a bar or club in public. At special public events. Outside of those four there's hardly any (acceptable) situations where people are drinking. 4. Some states have strict gun control laws. The second amendment forbids the US government from stopping people from owning and buying firearms, but many places do require pistol permits and conceal carry permits to own or buy a gun. Also, speeding limits and most traffic-related laws are heavily enforced. Don't drink and drive, or you will go to jail and have to pay hundreds of American dollars in legal fees and training. It really sucks. It's best to just take a taxi or Uber home when you're drunk.
@chloebarram58535 жыл бұрын
The Australian grading system isn’t right btw. Australia has just adopted a national curriculum but because some many states have different tertiary entry results assessment and grading is quite state specific. What she mentioned is relevant to university not high school. And primary school is different again!
@bradleyb39016 жыл бұрын
In Scotland the school system is different than England.
@StrathpefferJunction6 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. I wish these sorts of video would stop spreading misinformation. The school and university systems in Scotland are as different, sometimes more different, from England's as any other country. There's no such thing as 'the UK school system'.
@bradleyb39016 жыл бұрын
Strathpeffer Junction yep defos agree although we are part of the UK, certain topics must be researched info beforehand so that they can speak for either England or UK as a whole
@ItsJustMe05855 жыл бұрын
Several have said that. I'm curious. Explain?
@StrathpefferJunction5 жыл бұрын
@@ItsJustMe0585 I'm not sure I understand. What do you need explaining? Scotland has a completely different education system to England, with a different structure, different curriculum, different exams etc. Is that what you mean? When most people talk about 'the UK' in these sorts of video, they tend to be talking about England, not 'the UK'. In many areas, there is no one, single UK way as the UK is a union of countries, not just one single country. Each constituent part can have significant differences - a different as any country elsewhere in some aspects.
@bradleyb39015 жыл бұрын
K B we have many differences our entire education system is different, they are all provided by one person-SQA. Even other things are different we tend to just have one provided so we just have Scottish water for our water, scotrail for trains, small things like that.
@QueenCityHistory6 жыл бұрын
Ok this maybe HIS version of America... but I can tell y’all this is “California” and that state is like a country of its own. This guy honestly knows very little about America outside of the western part of the country. In America you have the South, the North and the West. All 3 very VERY different
@ItsJustMe05855 жыл бұрын
Yeah, and even in California, it's a major difference between SoCal, NorCal, the valley, then the actual North... :P the US is too big, too diverse, and unless you're well traveled, you're going to be poor at explaining things. I've lived in Texas, and California, and traveled the Midwest and East coast, quite a lot. Pretty much everywhere but the deep South... But I want to!!
@bk-lu6ty5 жыл бұрын
Midgetelf0585 as a New Yorker the Deep South scares me
@adamdonaldson96116 жыл бұрын
I’m from Scotland and our education system is completely different from England
@StrathpefferJunction6 жыл бұрын
Totally. If only these videos would stop claiming there's one UK system for everything. There isn't. Scotland's always had an independent school and university system.
@bewise0076 жыл бұрын
Absolutely
@craigchambers41834 жыл бұрын
I do like the fact that each panelist spoke freely about what they thought about the subjects, yet I also realize that they are limited to their own experiences and not reflective of all people in their countries. A Londoner is not going to have the same outlook as someone in the countryside, or other cities in other areas (Wales, Scotland, N. Ireland). No American is allowed to shoot anyone on their property without cause - they must be threatening bodily harm or breaking into one's home itself, and the vast majority of gun owners never abuse their right to own or carry a gun, so there is no real threat of violence. Trespassing, if warned or told to leave and they refuse, will be called into the police for them to handle. Solicitors (people coming to your door to sell you something) will just be ignored or told to leave. Homeschooling is now common in America, and most of them do very well, especially in college. Seventeen of our Presidents were homeschooled, including Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Lincoln, and both Roosevelts. A University in the US is a collection of colleges, like Engineering or Humanities, and different levels of degrees like Masters and Doctorates. American John graduated from a University with the four-year degree called a Bachelors: his was in Political Science.
@reysukma81805 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I feel like watching Momo Twice speaking English when Bella starts explaining things. ☺️
@Sjh-Ggh6 жыл бұрын
출현하시는분들 다 좋고 이 시리즈 좋아요~~^^^♡
@AntlerGlasgow5 жыл бұрын
The school system in the UK is different between countries. Scotland, England, N. Ireland and Wales all have their own system, so you can’t really use that.
@munchingmozzarella5875 жыл бұрын
In Australia, A = 85-100, B = 70-84, C = 55-69, D = 40-54, E = 0-39
@mothrakaiju73445 жыл бұрын
Munching Mozzarella in America A = 100-90, B = 89-80, C = 79-70, D = 69-60, F = 59-0
@inkyguy6 жыл бұрын
Where is John from? I don’t know anywhere in the U.S. you can be seriously fined for punished for littering. There are local ordinances but they are never enforced. I have never seen anyone scolded let alone fined for littering in a public area. (A private business or area such as a shopping mall could be another matter.) The only thing that keeps me from littering is my own values and conscience, certainly not fear of sanctions, whether personal disapproval or legal punishment. In fact, many visitors from other developed countries find the U.S. to be heavily littered and "dirty."
@inkyguy6 жыл бұрын
Anglo American, it was a rhetorical question, but thanks, I had missed that. I appreciate your ear for detail.
@ZomBeeNature5 жыл бұрын
Umm... in Asia people throw everything on the ground and spit everywhere. I think he was trying to tell the Koreans you can't throw everything on the ground.
@TheAverageNooob6 жыл бұрын
The thing is that sometimes these questions are hard to answer for U.S because there is so much diversity from just city to city. With the whole thing of America being freedom, it has allowed for groups of Americans to have different answers to these questions. Like the trespassing thing about shooting its more complicated than if you trespass you get shot.
@nigbyq17336 жыл бұрын
OMG I love the British school system, that's literally what I tell my friends. Like, why can't we just pick the shit that we wanna learn and become?
@miac23824 жыл бұрын
Um you can? lol After high school
@khadrasamatar81404 жыл бұрын
Where are you from 🤔
@Akku85815 жыл бұрын
Since New Zealand is a western country that gets over looked all the time I'll fill in the gap Age 4-5 kindergarten Age 5-11 primary (year 1-6) Age 11-13 intermediate (year 7-8) Ages 13-18 high school which we also call college (year 9-13) I think in America college and high school are two different things. We don't have the ranking system that goes like A, B... F unless if your doing Cambridge or IB, but you have to be super smart to do that or in uni. Most kiwi students do NCEA the ranking they have are: N - not achieved A - achieved M - merit E - excellence There are no percentage to go with these mark it's more like how detailed and we'll executed the assignment/exam is written. Or if it's maths/science you will be given A, M and E type questions and how well you can answer them. I can see why they didn't have a kiwi up there lol
@PrometheusXV6 жыл бұрын
The thing about the education system in the US is that it can vary wildly. There are certainly national requirements for just about all schools (barring a few special exceptions), but depending on the state, city, county, or even specific school district, the way the school is set up can be hugely different. For instance, the most common grading scale is 90+ is an A (with 90-93 being A-, and above 98 being A+), and 59 and below is an F, with a D and an F being considered failing, but then other places might have a 93 and above being an A, with a 91 being a B. Some schools don't use the Plus or Minus system, and some actually give different Grade Points for pluses or minuses (normally an A in general is a 4.0, but an A- might be a 3.7 in some systems). Similarly, I had friends across the country who all had different times they attended school. One of my friends who lived in Georgia had a system where he didn't have summer breaks, but every month there was a 1 week long break, and my school district in the Midwest had a slightly longer year, but more frequent breaks, longer breaks, and regular half days (with early release and late starts happening 2 to 5 times a month). Not to mention, just as the style of the system can change drastically, the quality of the teaching can also change drastically depending on where you are, with my school district being considered one of the best and also fastest growing at the time I attended school, and our school having pretty large sums of money to play with, but then you can get states such as I believe Alabama or Louisiana (I don't keep up with this too much), where teachers and classes are severely underfunded, and the education can get a bit backwards. California's public education is generally considered to not be the greatest, for example, whereas the easy coast is generally a bit better (from what I remember, it may have changed since). From my experiences as well, teachers in general tended to be a bit more lax than what I heard from friends in other countries, and we were often able to get away with screwing around a lot in class, and being on very friendly terms with our teachers. Many of my teachers I had in public school tried their best to fill the role of a parent away from home, while also being a friend everyone could talk to, and just overall my schools were very laid back and friendly.
@eliza19055 жыл бұрын
What about the Irish Goodbye? In Britain it’s just when your out drinking with your mates and one of them is just gone, and you don’t see them until tomorrow. Basically you get so drunk you just think to yourself, “yeah I’m going home now” and you just leave without letting your mates know.
@annaliseph6 жыл бұрын
australia school system PRESCHOOL (not pre-kinder) then primary school then HIGH SCHOOL (not secondary) where u can drop out in yr 10 or keep going to yr 12 there’s no A/B/C usually, there’s just a number but sometimes they classify in A/B etc under 50% is fail
@Phinneaus.P.Goldspinks6 жыл бұрын
No,no,no. It goes like this. Pre-school Infants (Kindergarten to 2nd class- about ages 6 to 8) Primary (3rd class to 6th class - about ages 9 - 12) High School (Year 7 to year 10 with an option to continue to years 11 & 12 - about ages 13 to 16 options until 18) College (Kind of like trades school. Can do anytime if you get a trades based apprenticeship usually though after year 10) University ( Need to successfully complete year 12 and get a score which will allow you to do the degree you wish.
@copycatsworld70126 жыл бұрын
Jerky, what are you on about?
@annaliseph6 жыл бұрын
copycats world exactly
@annaliseph6 жыл бұрын
JerkyJ what no
@Phinneaus.P.Goldspinks6 жыл бұрын
@ copycats world @ annasaurus: Why? Whats the issue here?
@AcryllixGD6 жыл бұрын
You could see how traumatised Bella was and how uncomfortable she was during the pickup lines question.
@comradegnome65715 жыл бұрын
Q1: What is the school system like in your country UK: Separated Into Two Blocks AU: Prrty much the same as the UK America: *PEW PEW*
@J22-b8t5 жыл бұрын
Ryan Müser hahaha kids death is so funny HaHahAhHaa 😂😂😂😂😭😭😂
@comradegnome65715 жыл бұрын
@@J22-b8t Yeah I know
@miac23824 жыл бұрын
That's fcked up and not true.
@miac23824 жыл бұрын
And you literally got people blowing the legs off and apart little kids at Araina Grade concert and running people over with vehicles and weekly stabbing attacks
@hoper26494 жыл бұрын
@Mia C ‘twas naught but a joke
@ryanmorris90636 жыл бұрын
you can tell the american dude was home schooled lmao
@dirtdiv3r4 жыл бұрын
why? cause he was intelligent?
@cberry67514 жыл бұрын
In America, an A is 95%+. A “B” is 90%. 85% + is a C+, 80% is a solid C. 75% is a C- 70 is a D & below is a FAIL (F)
@sophialovaiza32025 жыл бұрын
I don't know if anyone said it (in the comments) but the school systems here in America is basically like this: - Day care (if you choose) - Pre-k (if you choose) - Kindergarten - Elementary - Grades 1-5 - Middle- Grades 6-8 - Highschool- Grades 9-12 - College/University The grades in Elem, Mid, and High is 90-100% A, 80-89% B, 70-79% C, 60-69% D, 0-50% F and ultimate 0% or not turned in is a Z. (Grades in Kinder and before are different--They use E for an A, G for a B, S for a C, M for a D, and U for a F)
@greyoneal12765 жыл бұрын
US Grading 90-100 = A 85-89 = B+ 80-84 = B 75-79 = C+ 70 - 74 = C 60-69 = D 0-59 = F The percentages might be one or two off, but this is pretty much the grading system.
@jaydonfaal50535 жыл бұрын
97-100 A 93-96 A 90-92 A- and so on
@bk-lu6ty5 жыл бұрын
65 is the failing grade
@StrathpefferJunction6 жыл бұрын
There is no such thing as a UK school system. It's different in Scotland to the rest of the UK, and there are also some differences between Northern Ireland and England & Wales. The UK is really like a number of different countries in one. And in Scotland, university degree in Scotland are four years, not three, and most masters are not just one year.
@JJ-ld4kr7 жыл бұрын
2탄드뎌 올라왔다!! 오래 기달렷다구여!!
@lrgd7 жыл бұрын
네 너무 늦었죠 죄송합니다. 앞으로 콘텐츠 자주 자주 올릴께요 :)
@bliss71665 жыл бұрын
For all those commenting saying the Australian system is so easy because an 80 is classified as an A you’re actually wrong and it’s incredibly hard to get an 80. I studied abroad at an American University for one semester and for most of my classes you needed to get above a 90 to get the top grade (an A) but getting this mark was so easy. There were multiple little assignments worth a small percentage of your total mark and they were so easy with a lot of marks granted just for turning up to the class whereas in Australia most of our assessments are worth a lot and there aren’t as many so if you do badly on one assignment it can really jeopardise your overall mark for that subject. Furthermore, the US system has “extra credit/bonus marks” so technically you can get over 100% in a subject. As someone who has studied in both the US and Australia I can confirm that it’s so much harder studying in Australia
@krazykittymatt4 жыл бұрын
I'm from Texas, and at 16 I went to college for Aircraft Mechanics. You can also take automotive, cosmatolgy, IT, web design, there is lots of programs and schools. I even took a course for office assistants. And then you do continuing education in College or a University. Also Pre-K isn't really a prerequisite, just something to get a kid used to schooling and socializing. And I see people complaining about him talking about the "No Trespassing" signs, he's half right. It's state by state. Like here, if there is a sign and you still trespass, that is you taking the risk of being harmed either by whatever is beyond the fence or by someone who sees you as a threat. Stand your ground also varies state by state, and can only be used if you're not able to flee from the situation. Although, let's face it, people abuse it.
@BlatantSockPuppet5 жыл бұрын
Would have been even more interesting were Canada included in this.
@thomasbramwell87525 жыл бұрын
The British grading system was incorrect. The grade boundary changes every year as the government decide the % to get certain grades so only a certain amount of students will receive A’s, A*’s. Also GCSEs aren’t the same as SATs. GCSEs are 100% exam based, no multiple choice and all essay style. Your final grade in England is only based on your exam, no pop quizzes, homework, extra credit, or influence from your teacher is included.
@EDB2175 жыл бұрын
So the American school is kind of confusing but this how it works: Preschool: 3-4 yr old Pre-K (pre kindergarten): 4-5 yr old Kindergarten: 5-6 yr old 1st grade: 6-7 ye old 2nd grade: 7-8 yr old 3rd grade: 8-9 yr old 4th grade: 9-10 yr old 5th grade: 10-11 yr old Kindergarten to 5th grade are known in most places in America as Elementary school. 6th grade: 11-12 yr old 7th grade: 12-13 8th grade: 13-14 These grades are known as middle school. 9th grade: 14-15 10th grade: 15-16 11th grade: 16-17 12th grade: 17- 18 These grades are known as high school. The ages you’re in these grades can vary depending on when you’re Birthday is and if you’ve skipped grades or gotten held back in a grade. Then after high school you can go to a college or university. If you go to college you can go to a community college that only has 2 year programs where you can get your associates degree. If you go to a university you can get a bachelors, master, or PHD. Ps. Most public school years in primary education (K-12) last from the end of August or the beginning of September to the end of May or the beginning of June. Also there are public schools that are free to go to and private schools that cost money to attend
@KanyeT13065 жыл бұрын
What are Sophomores and Freshmans and all of those terms? Are they years of university?
@ameliafurlong78405 жыл бұрын
KanyeT There are 4 years in what Americans call high school and for a lot of people there are 4 college. Your first year of high school, you are a freshman. So instead of saying you are in 9th grade, you would say your a freshman in high school. In 10th you are a “sophomore in high school” 11th your a “junior in high school” And in 12 you are a “senior in high school” And the same goes for college, IN THE SAME ORDER (freshman, sophomore, junior, senior) except you would say you are a freshman in college. I hope that helps😅
@markpapenfuss11114 жыл бұрын
The sixth grade being “middle school” is not universal. When I was in elementary school, in Oregon, sixth grade was the final year there. The same was true for my oldest child, in Iowa City. But my other children, in Idaho, start middle school for sixth grade. For me, middle school for 7th and 8th grades. High school was 4 years. There are numerous places where 9th grade is “Jr high”. So, there are exceptions. But I agree that your post is “most common”.
@montanerdz4 жыл бұрын
I know it's a year later. For higher education in America we also have Tech (Technical) School which would be the closest thing to UK College in that you can go there for 2 years and get a certificate specialized in something if you know what you want to do.
@Warsnop6 жыл бұрын
Australia is lovely and inconsistent. In SA (the state I live in) we have preschool/kindergarten (I believe you can attend preschool/kindy for only a year, from 4 to 5), primary school years Reception-7, high school years 8-12. We have things like childcare/daycare here, but you didn't learn things there and were just babysat. The grading system in SA is 0-30 E, 31-50 D, 51-69 C, 70-84 B, 85-100 A. We have +s and -s as well, and they're roughly in the top and bottom 5% of each grade. e.g. an A+ is 95-100. After high school, the girl got it pretty spot on. We can leave school legally at 16 and pursue TAFE (Or Uni, if you finish year 12 really early), or you can leave at 18, after 5 years of high school, and attend TAFE or use something called an ATAR score to get into uni. The way we get into university (in most cases) is that we do exams at the end of year 12, which go towards our overall grade for each of our year 12 subjects (usually an exam is worth about 30% of your final grade. The rest is in-class tests and assignments). We then get an overall number grade for each class and this is collated into a final percentage between 0% and 99.85% (it is literally impossible to get 100%). Some students get bonuses to their ATAR score, e.g. for living in a rural area, or living in a generally disadvantaged area, or being low income, or being aboriginal etc. The nice thing about Australia is that any mainstream University will accept you, as long as you apply for a degree that you can get into. For example, an education degree at my local university requires you get a minimum ATAR of 70 (which is pretty low!), and as long as you get 70 or higher, you've got a decent chance of getting in. The higher your ATAR is, the better, and each degree also offers a guaranteed ATAR score (85 in this case). If you have the guaranteed ATAR, then you're guaranteed entry into that degree. Pretty cool.
@rosieanox75576 жыл бұрын
A+: 97+ A: 93-96 A-: 90-92 B+: 87-89 B: 83-86 B-: 80-82 C+: 77-79 C: 73-76 C-: 70-72 D+: 67-69 D: 63-66 D-: 60-62 F: All below 59. So if I get a 11/13 on a 13 point assignment, that's a B, an 84. If I get 3/5, it's a D-, easy.
@cat-ux1jm5 жыл бұрын
I’ve studied in Australia and China and in China A is when you get two questions wrong and A+ is full marks the C is 80 F is 60
@abigailgibbons86745 жыл бұрын
Now,in secondary schools,they do have plus and minus. Because we’ve changed and now we’re being marked on a 1-9 scale
@bethpalmer16994 жыл бұрын
Clarification for the British School System: Primary Education - Infant School < 4 yrs (Nursery) 4-5 yrs (Reception) 5-7 yrs (Year 1 and 2) Primary Education - Junior School 7-11 yrs (Years 3-6) Secondary Education - Secondary School 11-16 yrs (Years 7-11) GCSEs (age 16 exams) Further Education - College / Continue S. School Option to continue at secondary school for 2 years or go to a college for 2 years. Option to study 3-5 academic subjects (A Levels) e.g. Maths or learn a pracrical trade (BTech) e.g. Engineering. Finish college at age 18. Higher Education - University / Continue College Academics study one subject (e.g. Maths) 2 years - Associates Degree 3 years - Bachelor's Degree +1 year - Masters Degree +3 years - PhD. Tradespeople study one subject ? yrs - Certificate ? yrs - Diploma But there is also an option called an apprenticeship - "work while you study" (e.g. for practical trades like engineering). So you work 4 days a week and go to college 1 day a week. You can get 6 years of work experience by the time you finish your degree at age 22-24!
@delaneybelaney72064 жыл бұрын
american grades: A: 90+ (you can go over 100 if you did very well and got extra points) B: 70-80 C: 60-70 D: 50-60 E: 50 and below (an E means you’ve failed, it is the equivalent to an F as far as my knowledge goes) also, in nerd culture, John got it right- you don’t have a solid A unless it’s at least a 93 but even that’s bad.
@matyco916 жыл бұрын
John says American drinking isn't excessive lol. The poor little nugget, he is speaking from such a limited experience. Still fun to watch.
@raavyak18536 жыл бұрын
English Sam is hot
@mochisung73455 жыл бұрын
Raavya K as opposed to American Sam
@harrygallagher12535 жыл бұрын
@@mochisung7345 lol
@harrygallagher12535 жыл бұрын
@@mochisung7345 well yh cause Americans aren't hot
@charleneraymond40366 жыл бұрын
I've been trying to work out why the British guy seems so familiar! I just realised it's because he speaks a bit like Chris Martin!
@lrgd6 жыл бұрын
Come to think of it, you’re right!
@copbabycombo13115 жыл бұрын
actually when you ask whats considered an A+, it really just depends on the school district. in my school an A+ is 98% or higher. some schools dont even use the + sign oo the letter grade.
@jewel77846 жыл бұрын
the thing about the grading system in the U.S. is that it differs based on the school. generally, i'd say 95-100 is an A+, 90-94 is an A-, 85-89 is a B+, 84-80 is a B-, etc., but i've had it change based on the school i was at and what professors' guidelines were. i had a class where a 92 and up was an A (no A+), and i've also had classes where 89.5% was the cutoff for an A-. so it really depends on the school and the teacher. the drinking culture also depends. i would say that a lot of Americans are good drinkers and often go out for drinks with coworkers and friends after work, but i also can't speak for specific communities in certain states. i'm a city person, so i've only experienced drinking and partying culture in NYC and DC, and they're pretty similar. generally people go out around 10 p.m, and come back about 1 or 2 a.m. i'm Korean too, and i've noticed that in Korea, people either go home at like 6 a.m or go out for Korean BBQ at 6 a.m and keep it going LOL.
@zurichadupreez85316 жыл бұрын
You should get a South African on here with the Australian , American and Brit ☁✨
@kittasama6825 жыл бұрын
Where my Aussie Squad at? #australia #aussiesquad
@ASH-dj4om4 жыл бұрын
“I think drinking is like more social than excessive” *laughs in Louisiana*
@parrotdaboss5 жыл бұрын
My name is Bella and I’m from Australia 🇦🇺 😂😂😂
@SchoolinIife5 жыл бұрын
In America, colleges and universities both exist and are two separate things. A college is actually within a university. A college is a specified school based on subject matter and then the university is comprised of all of the different colleges. So if you went to Michigan University and studied Engineering, you be in the engineering college at Michigan University
@iamameliapond85595 жыл бұрын
The English guy was wrong about schools. Not all secondary schools in England give you the option to stay there until you are 18, most secondary schools only allow students to stay at the school until they have completed their GCSEs, they then have to find a college to study their A levels at. Whilst at college you MUST pick a maximum of 3 A level courses and complete these in 2 years. After that most people go on to university and it is common to take a gap year after finishing college and before starting university.
@prod_harui5 жыл бұрын
UK's college sounds more like for the "elites" that already know what their doing, and then we aussies have TAFE, which is more for people that just want to get into the workforce quicker or can't get through secondary school (more the latter).
@rubyanne995 жыл бұрын
Starsky In England, it’s a legal requirement that you either go to college or get an apprenticeship so it’s not really just for the “elites”
@maddisongraham31746 жыл бұрын
In my secondary school in Victoria, Australia below 40% is a fail but in private schools it’s 50% and where I am an A is 85% plus
@foxxy25836 жыл бұрын
And you pay 20,000 dollars to go to a private school.....
@gregmarkham45116 жыл бұрын
In America when your 15 you can opt to go to a trade school.
@bob285386 жыл бұрын
I kinda find if funny looking at all the variations of the schooling systems we have in Australia, Each state seems to change it a decent amount. For me in NSW its graded A B C D E and our grades (like what percent is needed for an A or B) is decided off the average mark. Also the schooling I remember is Preschool (basically social skills, basic item usage and listening skills), Primary school (mine included kindergarten which is just all the basics and getting you read for harder work, This goes Kindergarten, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) High school (You start getting into much harder work and have a bit more freedom on subjects. This goes 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. You have the option to drop out at year 10 IF the school deems you are ready to do so, You need an apprenticeship or something like that to do so) After year 12 you can get into Uni (university) depending on your HSC results or go to TAFE. Note these are not needed and are optional, Some people can just do courses that don't even give a HSC result or test.
@captainmilkman5 жыл бұрын
Another big thing in the US is that you have to be 21 to drink. I know a lot of people under the age of 21 that get like fake IDs and stuff, which sometimes works, but generally speaking you should just stick to the law. If you have a parent or guardian offering you a drink in your own home, feel free to drink it, but just be aware you’re not allowed to do that in public and you’re certainly not allowed to do it unsupervised.
@snail58705 жыл бұрын
John missed the opportunity to say the stereotypical pick up line: "are you from Tennessee because you're the only ten I see"
@rhiannon20025 жыл бұрын
0:39 WaS tHaT a ViLlAgEr
@bethan47705 жыл бұрын
Australia FUNCTIONS on alcohol...You can't go anywhere without a bottle-o
@bethan47705 жыл бұрын
@Buttrape Bill 😂😂
@googanmcboogie93075 жыл бұрын
The school system in America is about preparing for standardized test. If schools don't score well they get funding cut from foreign languages and the arts but never sports.
@junehollybell59776 жыл бұрын
Stand your ground laws aren't based on " hes on my property i can shoot him" its based around him being on your property being asked to leave and refusing then moving towards you in a aggressive manner. You also have to prove you feared for your life and you can not shoot him if he has his back turned and is leaving. Also not sure if this is in other countries but in some American states you can make right turns on red lights unless a sign is there to state otherwise
@ElAfr095 жыл бұрын
I’ve got sams accent but everyone says I’m not British just because of my parents but I grew up here and I’m only half Asian and like 3% Lithuanian still means I’m British!!!
@ladyfoxwf10755 жыл бұрын
Which country are you from?
@AAa-jo2zw5 жыл бұрын
The grades to get A’s May be lower in the uk but it’s harder to get the higher grades over here. There’s multiple cases of Americans who got mid 90s in American tests coming over and getting in the 70-80s in the uk.
@robynrose61756 жыл бұрын
John was really a bad choice to ask about the American school system
@GeorgiaGrown904 жыл бұрын
I'm seeing a LOT of hate in the comments about the panelists. Guys please be respectful and please remember they are stating THEIR opinions and trying to represent their country as best as they know how. As an American I disagree with a lot of what John had to say, but I know America can be experienced differently state to state, heck even city to city within the same state. Please remember this before you make rude comments.
@lrgd4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your comment :) I am very sure you are a wonderful person~
@ZombiePotatoSalad5 жыл бұрын
I'm a 29 year old American guy, and I can attest: 90 and up is usually an A. I did go to Pre-K at a separate elementary school from the one I attended for kindergarten through 5th grade. I then went to middle school around 12 years old, where I did 6th-8th grades. At 15-ish, I went to high school, where I did 9th-12th grades, graduating at 18. I haven't gone to college yet, because I don't know what I want to study. As for pickup lines, yes: everyone typically thinks of the cheesy, cringy lines when they think of "pickup line." But it's really, as said, just something to start the conversation. You take note of something about a person: what they're doing, how they look, what they wear. You have better luck using something like that, since it shows you notice the person, rather than what they are (guy or girl). Laws... now this is a good one. Don't litter, because there are trash cans EVERYWHERE. Don't take pictures of building that have signs stating not to (some government buildings). Well, I think you can take pictures of the outside, but not the inside, at least not without permission. NEVER EVER take pictures of military bases or equipment. No trespassing is a big deal, you can buy signs at the store to stick in your front yard. An interesting one is in the state of Texas where I'm from, purple paint can be used in place of a "No Trespassing" sign. Since people such as ranchers own great tracts of land, it wouldn't be feasible to hang "No Trespassing" signs everywhere, so purple paint is used, as it's easy to just go and splash some paint. It can be applied to trees, poles, fence posts, and it has the same meaning and authority as a sign. It marks a property line that you cannot cross, or else you can have charges pressed against you if you're caught.