British Teacher Reacts to 8 Ways British and American Education Systems Are Very Different

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British Teacher Reacts to 8 Ways British and American Education Systems Are Very Different
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Пікірлер: 748
@mededmoon6265
@mededmoon6265 2 жыл бұрын
In America a "test" is typically a weekly or bi-weekly assessment, where as an "exam" assesses your knowledge gained over an entire semester or even an entire school year.
@dannyneeley344
@dannyneeley344 2 жыл бұрын
You mean quiz
@mededmoon6265
@mededmoon6265 2 жыл бұрын
@@dannyneeley344 No I didn't mean quiz, but, a quiz can be end of day(pop quiz), or end of week. Usually not beyond that amount of time in my experience.
@joannemiller8697
@joannemiller8697 2 жыл бұрын
My kid has a test every week in US schools. But it's also called a test when they do the standardized testing that lasts a bloody week and is more like a traditional "exam"
@bl6252
@bl6252 Жыл бұрын
What to make sure you did not learn anything. Teacher are nothing but a waste of money. Most teachers could not even pass a GED test.
@joshuatomlin6347
@joshuatomlin6347 11 ай бұрын
We did not take sat’s we took the ACT which stands for American college testing a standardized test used for college admissions. You scored between a 1 and a perfect score of a 36. Consisted of English , math, reading, and science as well as an essay section.
@jlpack62
@jlpack62 2 жыл бұрын
When Americans say that they attend college, they are mostly meaning that they are attending a university. There are colleges in the USA that aren't universities because they don't offer doctoral programs, but most of the 4 year higher education schools are universities. There are also junior colleges that offer 2 year programs, or are feeder schools to those who will eventually finish their bachelor's degree at another university or college. When I was in school, the times of finishing varied from after 3PM to as early as 2:30. The elementary schools tend to start and finish later, while the high schools started as early as 7:40 but finished by 2:30.
@BuccarooRanch
@BuccarooRanch 2 жыл бұрын
University's is where you earn a degree from a collage of knowledge. You may earn a B.S, Masters, PhD from that collage of knowledge. However, the word collage and university are interchangeable. i.e. Question: What collage did you attend? Answer: The University of Mississippi! We don't say the Collage of Mississippi
@anndeecosita3586
@anndeecosita3586 2 жыл бұрын
@@BuccarooRanch The word is college. Not all US colleges are universities. Furthermore there is an institution called Mississippi College in Clinton.
@anndeecosita3586
@anndeecosita3586 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t completely agree because I frequently hear people refer to junior and community colleges as college. Especially since these schools can also have on campus housing so some students relocate to attend them hence they “go off to college”.
@stischer47
@stischer47 Жыл бұрын
@@anndeecosita3586 LOL...well I guess we should just change how we call them since you don't completely agree. I went to the top community college in the US, San Antonio College (founded 1925) when it was called a Junior College because it was for students who couldn't afford a university or wanted to get the first two years out of the way.
@jlpack62
@jlpack62 Жыл бұрын
@@anndeecosita3586 At the end of the day, college is a catch-all term used for a variety of post high school educational options. That was the entire point of my initial comment.
@GeneBateman1970
@GeneBateman1970 2 жыл бұрын
Colleges are generally smaller in size compared to universities. Due to their small size, colleges offer limited research options to students who want to pursue higher education. A university however could be home to several colleges that function on or off the campus. They are vast in size and offer a number of choices to its students. Universities may also have multiple schools within their campus, such as a School of Arts, a School of Music, and a School of Architecture among others.
@jhouck1969
@jhouck1969 2 жыл бұрын
I think American and British universities use a similar vernacular, where the university would consist of various colleges and schools. The name "university" suggests a wide range of topics to study, which are then broken down into the different schools. Conversely, "college" implies a focused area of study, as in all the students are studying the same field. I think one of the main differences is size, where many American universities are a bit larger than their British counterparts.
@petenielsen6683
@petenielsen6683 2 жыл бұрын
@@jhouck1969 Basically a college can be a stand alone institution or within a university. The fine arts school within Syracuse University is called Crouse College. Whereas the community college in Syracuse is called Onondaga Community College even though it too has multiple disciplines and in some cases professors teach at both Syracuse University (private university) and OCC (public college.)
@jeffburdick869
@jeffburdick869 2 жыл бұрын
@@petenielsen6683 I spent a year at OCC. Good memories. Time goes too fast.
@ZebraGirl97
@ZebraGirl97 2 жыл бұрын
Also while there are a few exceptions now, historically a college only offers associates or similar degrees, where a University offers bachelor's/4 year degrees. For example I attended Cascadia Community College while in highschool, but two years after I graduated, they began offering a handful of 4-year degrees, and changed their name to Cascadia University.
@anndeecosita3586
@anndeecosita3586 2 жыл бұрын
My university was made up of colleges. College of Liberal Arts, College of Arts and Sciences, College of Education and Human Services and so on. Each college has its own dean. Within that we have schools. I was a student in the School of Communication which was under the College of Liberal Arts.
@jdanon203
@jdanon203 2 жыл бұрын
What I learned from this video is the British system is confusing thanks to all the odd nomenclature. Sounds like your version of test is like our version of quiz.
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
I dunno. Quizzes are mini tests. Exams seem to be major tests. So, you'd have a quiz to make sure you understand the work within a chapter. Then, have a test after completing the chapter. At the end of the semester, you'd have an exam that covers all the work done thus far. So, exams tend to be considered more of a major deal than tests. Still, test and exam can also be used interchangeably, while quiz generally isn't... maybe. haha
@walkerlocker6126
@walkerlocker6126 Жыл бұрын
Yes this was also my experience in school, especially high school. We had the mid-term exams (sometimes called semi-final) and the end term or final exams, which we either called the exams or the finals. Quizzes were little things given once or twice a week, tests were more important and maybe once or twice a month. Exams were the most important and only twice a year
@walkerlocker6126
@walkerlocker6126 Жыл бұрын
On that note, notice how I used the words "term" haha. I believe we used term and semester interchangeably.
@ryanjustice2670
@ryanjustice2670 2 жыл бұрын
As an American, I have watched many British shows and they have always referred to, what we would call private schools, public schools. Even when referencing schools such as Eton.🤷‍♂️
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
It seemed that the wife's experience with attending school in Jersey was a bit different than what it's been in the past And in other places in England. It almost sounded like her schools used terminology that was more like the American terms than British. Hmm... Though, it was hard to figure out because the husband kept interrupting to correct her, only to state that he "may be wrong" at the end. It was very odd. I mean, he could've just let her explain Her educational experience instead of trying to do it for her, especially when he did something Completely different education-wise. haha
@ryanjustice2670
@ryanjustice2670 2 жыл бұрын
@@LA_HA I do appreciate your comment. However there's a couple things;1 They're not married, just recently engaged;2 They both have a weird dynamic of thinking themselves as "right". It worries me a little bit as to their future relationship(not that it matters) that they are both super competitive and both very prideful. But what the heck do I know? I'm 46 and single. So best wishes to them.
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
@@ryanjustice2670 Thank you for the information. I'm very new to their channel and didn't know their relationship
@ryanjustice2670
@ryanjustice2670 2 жыл бұрын
@@LA_HA My pleasure.👍🇺🇸
@georgeappleby6868
@georgeappleby6868 2 жыл бұрын
When I was in school in the 1960's and 70's we went to elementary school k - 6th grade. Middle school was called Jr. High School 7th through 9th grade. High school was 10th through 12th. When i was in college my school was on quarters that was 12 weeks per grading period and after i left it went to semester's that were 16 week periods.
@LancerX916
@LancerX916 2 жыл бұрын
Same here in California. I went to school in the 80s and 90s and mine was the exact same.
@froggergypsy4596
@froggergypsy4596 2 жыл бұрын
Same here in kansas
@corinnepmorrison1854
@corinnepmorrison1854 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in California, in 1946... Attended kindergarten in 1950... Graduated from high school, with honors, in January 1963...two weeks before my 17th birthday...
@stanleymyrick4068
@stanleymyrick4068 2 жыл бұрын
Right. Middle school is a term that is used frequently in the town I live now, but it's because of school building size. They need to put grades that aren't Jr High level in buildings together with Jr High level, so instead of using Jr High / upper Elementary they just say Middle School. But by far the most common is Elementary, Jr High, and High School.
@delco2023
@delco2023 2 жыл бұрын
I was in school the same years as you and it was the same for me in Pennsylvania.
@okie-kan9240
@okie-kan9240 2 жыл бұрын
Woah, 5 yrs. old is kindergarten in the US. Middle school (7th-8th grade), used to be junior high (7th-9th grade). High school used to 10th -12th grade, now it is 9th-12th grade. We use the word exam, usually in higher education.
@poohbearsmom2964
@poohbearsmom2964 2 жыл бұрын
There is a middle ground for some American schools between uniforms and casual dress. Some schools have what they refer to as “standardized dress”. So, it’s what Laurence was referring to when he talked about khakis and polos. Some schools require students to wear khaki colored bottoms, slacks, shorts, jeans, skirts, skorts, etc. Those have to be paired with a polo style shirt in the school colors. (Or maybe a graphic t-shirt with the school logo) It’s less restrictive than an actual uniform.
@twenty3enigma
@twenty3enigma 2 жыл бұрын
I went to a university, but wasn't "at university" -- I was "in college". In addition, though not entirely consistent nationwide, most schools don't acquire university status until they offer post-graduate degrees (Masters &/or Doctorates). Related to that, many universities are composed of several colleges or schools -- each with its own curriculum and degree options.
@JustMe-dc6ks
@JustMe-dc6ks 2 жыл бұрын
And just for clarity, the various colleges or schools contained in a university are just different departments. They don’t normally have their own campuses or separate origins.
@twenty3enigma
@twenty3enigma 2 жыл бұрын
@@JustMe-dc6ks True, though the term "College of" or "School of" is still used, our universities aren't like Oxford or Cambridge.
@garycamara9955
@garycamara9955 Жыл бұрын
Not necessarily!
@twenty3enigma
@twenty3enigma Жыл бұрын
@@garycamara9955 You clearly didn't notice where I wrote "though not entirely consistent nationwide" -- so I'd already included your "not necessarily" in my comment.
@michaelh7394
@michaelh7394 2 жыл бұрын
Colleges are a single school that may have more then one degree program. A university is 2 or more colleges in a single institution. Harvard University contains Harvard School of Medicine and Harvard Law School, both of which are colleges.
@Wiley_Coyote
@Wiley_Coyote 2 жыл бұрын
This.
@Stew2130
@Stew2130 2 жыл бұрын
This was really interesting! The college vs university can be even more confusing when the institutions are further divided into Junior/Community Colleges, Colleges, and Universities.
@mermaid1717
@mermaid1717 2 жыл бұрын
Though universities are the only institution where you can receive a bachelor's degree.
@emmasmith1564
@emmasmith1564 2 жыл бұрын
You can earn a bachelor's and sometimes a master's degree at most colleges except for community colleges. Ususally you need at attend a university to earn a doctorial degree but that is also a generalization and I'm sure there are exceptions.
@katannep7798
@katannep7798 2 жыл бұрын
I think in the US the difference between universities and colleges are the size? It seems all the colleges I’m familiar with in my state are a bit smaller, but one can still earn a bachelor’s degree. The exception being a community college, where you can only get an associate’s degree
@Stew2130
@Stew2130 2 жыл бұрын
@@mermaid1717 I've run across at least two colleges that awarded bachelors degrees. One has since become a university. Colleges as distinguished from Community Colleges? Semantics or something more?
@anndeecosita3586
@anndeecosita3586 2 жыл бұрын
@@mermaid1717 That’s not true. There are colleges that give bachelors degrees. They tend to be private ones. For example some of my cousins went to Tougaloo College which has undergraduate and graduate programs.
@sherisimms9213
@sherisimms9213 2 жыл бұрын
I believe there have been some changes in commonly used terminology, over the last few decades. Laurence is giving the most common usage 20 years ago, and it isn’t necessarily current. Still, “pupil” is rarely used in the USA, and is probably used more often in the UK. “Student” is the preferred term here, and is probably increasing in popularity over there. University has a fairly specific meaning in the USA: to be a university, an institution must offer graduate degrees - Master’s and Doctorate. Colleges generally offer only Bachelor’s degrees, and junior or community colleges might only offer Associate’s degrees, but there are very few of those around now. Associate’s degrees are becoming the exclusive province of technical colleges, which also offer diploma programs in trades (such as cosmetology or carpentry). Preschool is a non-specific term, that encompasses K3, K4, and K5. Pre-K typically indicates K4, but may also refer to K3; Kindergarten generally means K5, although the students may be 6 or even 7. Technically, all Preschool is optional, and First Grade is compulsory, but students can be held back by their parents for up to two years. In my state, Georgia, homeschooling is very common, since the state makes it extremely easy to register for it, and puts almost no paperwork burden on homeschooling parents. Basically, you fill out a short form (4-5 lines) on the state department of education website, tap submit, and do your thing. There is no paperwork, except that you have to participate in standardized testing every three years. As long as your homeschooled children perform at grade level on the tests, the state asks nothing else. Speaking of “test,” everything Millie said sounded exactly like how “test” and “exam” are used here. Exams are at midterm and end of course (final exam), and exams are weighted in the grading rubric. The final exam might be 1/4 of the total grade for the class. Tests are given at the end of each chapter or unit in the textbook, or just weekly. We also use the word “quiz” for short tests, generally one page, able to be completed in 5-10 minutes, that may be given daily or sprung unannounced on an unprepared class (“pop quiz”).
@denisemusicnut
@denisemusicnut 2 жыл бұрын
In the US, what we call “college” is the same as University in England. My high school day began at 8:30 am, and ended at precisely 3:09 pm.
@markhamstra1083
@markhamstra1083 2 жыл бұрын
Not quite. Technically, a college typically does not offer graduate degrees, but only Associates degrees (typically from two-year community colleges) and/or Bachelors degrees (four-year colleges). Universities will also offer Masters and Doctoral degrees of various kinds. Then there are also various post-graduate positions attached to universities. So, American universities and UK universities are broadly similar, but colleges are somewhat different. Colleges are most similar across the pond when talking about the atypical case in America where a university is divided into colleges that are similar to Hogwarts houses or to the colleges at Cambridge University or Oxford University, for instance.
@beewyka819
@beewyka819 2 жыл бұрын
@@markhamstra1083 Technically yes there is a difference, but colloquially most Americans will use the term "college" to refer to both university and college. Very few Americans would ever say "I go to university" or ask "where do you go to uni?" We will almost always use the word college. The only time this is not the case is when we are explicitly talking about topics relating to the structure of the university (i.e. referring to the chair of the college of engineering).
@markhamstra1083
@markhamstra1083 2 жыл бұрын
@@beewyka819 Yes, Americans saying “I’m going to college” mean essentially the same thing as Brits saying “I’m going to university,” but the actual definitions of the words are somewhat different from the colloquial usage, with “college” having several different meanings that have developed over the centuries.
@mermaid1717
@mermaid1717 2 жыл бұрын
@@markhamstra1083 🤦‍♀️🤦‍♀️🤦‍♀️ she's saying our generic word for higher education is college... as a blanket word we call all our colleges & universities college. We only say university when we're speaking of specific schools.
@jimpemberton
@jimpemberton 2 жыл бұрын
We use both "test" and "exam" also. A test is any check on one's knowledge, aptitude, or skill level. So and "exam" is a test. But in the US, we typically reserve the use of "exam" to refer to big mid-term or final tests that carry particular weight toward your grade. Tests are often used as instructional tools for students to learn from their mistakes and for teachers to gauge the progress of the students. Exams are often used to see whether the students have sufficiently mastered the material to warrant passing them.
@drchapman6501
@drchapman6501 2 жыл бұрын
For me, last Bell rang at 3:15 pm. We started at 8:00 am. In first grade we had roughly 30 students in each of 5 classrooms. By the time we got to the 7th grade we had maybe 25 students in each of 4 home rooms.
@8mycake244
@8mycake244 2 жыл бұрын
I taught in an American high school. My average classes were 30+ It was a nightmare. My first year teaching, I was twenty-four. I had students who were 19. Imagine the torture of having to deal with kids who were adults (because they'd been held back for failing a grade or two). I nearly had to fist fight some students who hated my guts. I left teaching. It just wasn't for me.
@pushpak
@pushpak 2 жыл бұрын
I'm an American. We were told that your public school was our private school and vice versa. In old British films they were referred to as Public schools as in a Public school boy. This might be a generational thing where the Brits are reflecting American influence.
@mocrg
@mocrg 2 жыл бұрын
Public schools in Britain were open to the public. Which meant you didn’t have to be a resident of that area to attend.
@nikoknightpuppetproduction369
@nikoknightpuppetproduction369 2 жыл бұрын
Where I am from, Texas USA, many of the terminology is the same. Semester is more common, but I would hear some people say Term. Students and pupils are used but students more so. A test is a common assessment, an Exam is a very important assessment. My classes started at 7:30AM and ended at 3:45PM.
@katannep7798
@katannep7798 2 жыл бұрын
When I was in school we had semesters (2 per year) but nowadays our school has trimesters (3 per year)
@nikoknightpuppetproduction369
@nikoknightpuppetproduction369 2 жыл бұрын
@@katannep7798 that's true.
@calme-dx2dp
@calme-dx2dp 2 жыл бұрын
There are some schools in the US that have two grade levels in one class. My first grade class contained grade 1-2, grade 5 had grade 4, and grades 7-8 were also together. However, this is much more common in high school.
@lindacarroll6896
@lindacarroll6896 2 жыл бұрын
I live and worked in a school district that is partly in the city of Houston. Uniform requirements vary by school. Most don't require a uniform, but in schools with greatly varied economic levels they have made uniforms a requirement to level the field (and to prevent gangs from showing their colors). The shirts do look like golf shirts and are the school colors. In a school I worked in, they did a career dressing night for students who had no clue what it meant to dress to go to a job. A local clothing store closed to all but students whom they taught how to dress to go to an office (which is not like they dress in some offices today). As Lawrence said, everything varies from state to state, school district to school district and school to school, depending on a number of factors.
@ElainetheGARugrat8815
@ElainetheGARugrat8815 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in NYC. I went to kindergarten at 4 - because my birthday was in Nov - and turned 5 during the school year. Elementary school was 1st grade through 6th grade. Then, moved to Junior High School - but a little differently - I went to a special progress class and the entire class skipped 8th grade together and completed 3 yrs in 2. Then, I went on to High School at age 13/14 and completed 10 - 12th grade. Next was College "University" at 16. but really 17 a couple of months into the year. Pointing this out as it all depended on the month you were born in the US - at least when I was going to school.
@marydavis5234
@marydavis5234 2 жыл бұрын
When I was 5, the schools in Vermont did not have pre-school or Kindergarden, I had to start 1st grade one year later b/c my birthdate is in October and you have to be 6 yrs old by the last weekend in August, We had an elementary school was grade 1 to 6, there was no high school , so We had to take a bus to the closest school, which was a school with grade 7th to 12th, this was during the 1960's, and my hometown still has no high school , so they go to the same high school I did
@lone6718
@lone6718 2 жыл бұрын
Our class sizes when I was in school were typically 30-35 students per class. But that was during the 80’s and 90’s in the US.
@nochannel1q2321
@nochannel1q2321 2 жыл бұрын
Eton, where many of the UK's leaders are schooled, is listed as a public school. It charges private tuition. In the US a private school is one that charges private tuition and famous ones similar to the end result, boarding status, instructional quality and so on include Exeter Academy and so on. When people deride the elitism they perceive amongst British officials they often remark about the "public school boys."
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
Oooh, shots fired for using Exeter Academy instead of Andover. Ha
@tonygumbrell22
@tonygumbrell22 2 жыл бұрын
Having been born in 1945, I have seen a lot of changes in education in the states in the course of my life. The terminology has changed considerably. Also, there are different breakdowns in the divisions of types of schools in different parts of the country, even from one school district to the next near-by sometimes. One thing hasn't changed the basic K-12 numbering of grades for students ages 5-17. Also, the naming of the grades in High School stays the same: Freshman-grade 9 age 14, Sophomore-grade 10 age 15, Junior- grade 11 age 16, Senior-grade 12 age 17. This nomenclature repeats for college/university: Freshman-1st year, Sophomore-2nd year, Junior-3rd year, Senior-4th year followed typically with a bachelor's degree. (I think most high schools are 4-year schools, but mine was only for 3 years, starting with the sophomore year or 10th grade age 15; the freshman year grade 9 having been part of a junior high school, grades 7-9.
@stephaniebingman8990
@stephaniebingman8990 2 жыл бұрын
Was kindergarten commonplace where you lived? Neither of my parents attended kindergarten. My mom was born in 1970. And even my experience in the 90’s with kindergarten was that it was half day, so really not like it is today.
@tonygumbrell22
@tonygumbrell22 2 жыл бұрын
@@stephaniebingman8990 In Chicago when I started school age 5 in 1950 Kindergarten was mandatory; it was half a day, for the 1st half of the school year in the afternoon, in the 2nd half in the morning as best I remember. I don't have any children, so I don't know what has happened since then, but I expect kindergarten is mandatory in most if not all the country, and I don't whether it is a half day or all day.
@virginiapudelko6280
@virginiapudelko6280 2 жыл бұрын
I am an aide in a Kindergarten class in Arizona, USA. Our Kinders begin school at the age of 5 years. The kids must be 5 before September. Our school average class size for Kindergarten is between 16 and 25.
@JustMe-gn6yf
@JustMe-gn6yf 2 жыл бұрын
It wasn't called middle school when I went it was called Jr high school and was 7th & 8th grade this was in the 70s and our highschool was 90 minute classes and trimesters instead of semesters , what's even crazier is one of the highschools in my city had a indoor gun range
@beckycaughel7557
@beckycaughel7557 2 жыл бұрын
From what I understand in the United States if a higher education school only offers bachelor degrees than it’s a college. But if it offers graduate degrees, masters PhD’s then it’s in University
@pacmanc8103
@pacmanc8103 2 жыл бұрын
That is generally correct, I believe. Universities confer graduate degrees. Colleges don’t typically - Boston College is, of course, different.
@drewjsnyder3
@drewjsnyder3 2 жыл бұрын
My first bell rang at 7:35am to start the day and my final bell rung at 2:20pm. Then most of my sport practices ran from 2:30pm to 6/7pm-ish, except for game days. Being a lifetime night owl I wish I could have started High School later. A 9am start sounds stunning.
@jmcg6189
@jmcg6189 2 жыл бұрын
I went to school in Illinois in the'60s. Primary/grade school was kindergarten through 6th grade. Jr. High was 8-9 grades. High school was 9-12 grades. Hours 8:30-3:15. Dismissal in high school may have been staggered. We didn't all catch the same bus. Hard to imagine 5,000 kids all leaving at the same time. They did encourage after school activities - special interest clubs and intra-murals.
@caynidar6295
@caynidar6295 2 жыл бұрын
So, after finishing high school in the USA, the student graduates with their high school diploma, with the requirements typically being determined by the state. Students wanting to go on to college, a.k.a. institutions of higher learning, would need to have their high school diploma or a GED diploma (obtained by passing a series of standardized tests designed to ensure a person possesses the knowledge equivalent to a student obtaining their high school diploma). More and more colleges have started programs allowing prospective students to enroll in remedial and introductory courses while they work on obtaining their GED, for those who were for whatever reason unable to obtain their high school diploma (failed to meet academic requirements by graduation deadline, dropped out, expelled, etc.). Also, the honors given to college graduates are typically cum laude (with honors, literally with praise), magna cum laude (with great honors) and some schools also give out summa cum laude (with highest honors).
@william2085
@william2085 2 жыл бұрын
When I was in Elementary School, in the late 1960's in South Carolina, we had around 32 students per class. In the 5th Grade we had 35 students per class. This was due to the baby boom. And with the larger number of students, we still received a better education than the students do today. In the US, we graduate High School after the 12th Grade. If we choose to purse higher education, we then start college (small c, a catch all term). A University in the USA is a group of colleges. Colleges have focuses such as College of Liberal Arts, College of Art and Architecture, College of Engineering, College of Nursing, College of Business, etc. These are grouped into universities such as Clemson University, University of North Carolina, Harvard University, Howard University, etc. To confuse you more, there are stand-alone colleges such as Newberry College, Asheville-Buncombe Technical College, Presbyterian College, etc. When I graduated from Clemson University in 1981, there was still an apprenticeship system for Architects in the US. This was abolished in the early 1990's. Now you have to have a 5-year Bachelor's of Architecture Degree or a 6-year Master's of Architecture degree to apply to take the Architectural Exam. So, you are lucky, James.
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
Don't forget there are private 4 Year colleges and universities, as well as public (usually State). So, the University of Southern California (USC) is a private university versus the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and the California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA or CSU Los Angeles). This doesn't include the 2 Year junior/community college system, including California Community College, Los Angeles (LA Community College). I think we have private 2 Year Colleges, but I can't think of one. That's because the idea of going to a junior college is to save money and get the core classes out of the way. Then transfer to a 4 Year University for the last two years and get the diploma from that school
@Riomojo
@Riomojo 2 жыл бұрын
Ok Boomer
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
Look who just discovered the internet. Hahaha
@william2085
@william2085 2 жыл бұрын
@@LA_HA Laugh all you want. Without us Boomers, there would be no Gen-Xers, Millenials or Zoomers. Also, my father was a computer programmer in the early 1960's.
@LA_HA
@LA_HA 2 жыл бұрын
@@william2085 Oh, I wasn't talking about older people. I was talking about that guy saying, "Ok boomer". Haha. How old is That? And he's saying it like it's still funny or cool. haha
@TimSmith-uc4pk
@TimSmith-uc4pk 2 жыл бұрын
When I went to school 1 thru 6 was Elementary School, 7th, 8th and 9th grade were my Jr. High years and the 10th, 11th and 12th grades were my High School years.
@FJA---
@FJA--- 2 жыл бұрын
In the US every state is different. And in most, if not all, states every school district can be different from the rest of them as long as they fulfill the minimum requirements for the state. A lot of schools somewhat follow the program of: Pre-K (Kindergarten) K School Grade/Grammar/Elementary School which usually consists of 1st thru 6th or 5th grades Junior High which can be 6th/7th/8th, 7th/8th, 7th/8th/9th grades High School/Senior High which can be 9th/10/11th/12th or 10th/11th/12th. The Grades are generally referred to as Freshman (9th), Sophomore (10th), Junior (11th), Senior (12th).
@josephharrison5639
@josephharrison5639 2 жыл бұрын
I went to schools in 5 different states(so they ended at different times, most elementary schools I went to ended at 3:30 with 1 of the 5 ending 3:50, middle school ended 3:30 in Colorado which also had the late elementary release so parents could grab kids from both and Washington middle school ended at 2:10, high school was only Washington so it ended at 1:50), never wore a uniform not even fancy dress code, the dress code was just basically don’t show your skin too much and nothing inappropriate in terms of words or images on the shirt. Closest thing we had to a mandatory dress code was wearing masks. Other than that many sports teams would have their members wear a team shirt game day out of tradition. I wore shorts and a tshirt almost everyday Preschool for me was 3 and 4, 5 is kindergarten for the most part I did my AP tests instead of SAT due to COVID, this allowed my to skip four Gen Ed classes In college
@caretaker158
@caretaker158 2 жыл бұрын
Here where I live in VA, the schools just started staggering the start and finish times for the school days a few years ago, not for parent convenience so much but because of a critical shortage of bus drivers. They'd have to actually do two or even three separate runs to get all the kids home or to school. In this area, buses are critical because we're one of the largest counties in the state, a lot of rural and farm areas with only three high schools and our buses have a LOT of miles to cover. It's getting worse by the year too. The school system is literally begging for drivers and where kids and parents used to wonder about snow days, it's now "will our bus be running or not" days. A real nightmare for working parents! Our situation is not unique though, from what I've read, it's happening all over the country.
@stephaniebingman8990
@stephaniebingman8990 2 жыл бұрын
When I was in elementary school, we went 8:15-2:30. Middle school was 8-3 and high school was 8:10-3. Now where I live, high school is 7:20-2:20, elementary is 8:20-3:20, and middle is 9:20-4:20. Apparently staggering times like this saves money because they can make more efficient bus routes.
@johnlewis7092
@johnlewis7092 2 жыл бұрын
In general US schools are setup as follows: Pre-Kindergarten (usually optional) Elementary School - Kindergarten through 5th grade Middle School (also known as Jr. High School) - 6th through 8th grade High School - 9th through 12th grade College Undergraduate - Bachelor's Degree (optional)
@PerthTowne
@PerthTowne 2 жыл бұрын
Whether or not there are uniforms depends on the school district. Can't generalize on that, because uniforms can be worn in public or private schools, just depending on their rules. In the town I live in, public school kids wear uniforms now. But that wasn't always the case. In the US, college and university are used interchangeably. But most people refer to a university as "college." If you go to Harvard University, you would say, "I went to college at Harvard." In elementary school, we finished at 3:15 pm. In junior high ( middle school) and high school I think it was 3:-00pm
@michaelmcgowen8780
@michaelmcgowen8780 2 жыл бұрын
Here in the U.S., we refer to education following high school as college, regardless if the school is called a college or a university. It's just the term we use for that level of education. Not every school district has middle school. My grandson attends a school that is Kindergarten through 8th grade, then he will go to high school for four years. That's how it was when I went to school. We had a dress code in grade school, but not in high school. However, we never wore uniforms.
@1957es
@1957es Жыл бұрын
Example: “I’m going to college.” “Where?” “University of Virginia.” Or some fancy pants schools or wanna be fancy pants schools will call themselves The Ohio Stare University or The University of Texas.
@heidifedor
@heidifedor Жыл бұрын
In Junior High I attended a Catholic school that didn’t require a uniform. But the dress code was so strict, it would have been easier to have had uniforms. That was one of many reasons my parents put me back in public school.
@quentinmichel7581
@quentinmichel7581 2 жыл бұрын
Back in the Olden Days when I was in school we generally had "tests"...but could be subject to spontaneous small tests, "quizzes". The last big test of the school year that covered learning from the entire year was the "Final Exam" which we generally bludgeoned with by every class/subject (math, language-both English & foreign if applicable, science, history etc.) during the hellish last couple of weeks of the year generically called the dreaded "Finals", which usually constituted the largest part of your score for your grade points & equivalent letter grade (4.0=A, 3.5=B+, etc.) For much of my ancient life the higher education was both clear and muddy...lol. Generally, 2yr higher institutions where you would get a Associate's Degree were termed "Colleges" or "Junior Colleges". However, a 4yr institution where you would get a Bachelor's Degree could be termed either a College or University. I never did figure out the criteria.
@justindemski9999
@justindemski9999 2 жыл бұрын
It is very interesting when talking about what certain grades are called. As it seems with most, there are time period and state differences. I was in school in Maryland from the late 70's through the early 90's. For my area, preschool was called Nursery School. Then Kindergarten and 1st grade. Then, also I was in private Catholic school, grades 2 and 3 were Primary. Grades 4 and 5 were Intermediate. Grades 6 through 8 are Junior High and then grades 9 through 12 are High School. At the same time, those in public school in my area had Kindergarten, then grades 1 through 5 were Elementary School. Grades 6 through 8 are Middle School and lastly grades 9 through 12 are High School. It just seems things are unique to the when and where.
@hillofbeans2692
@hillofbeans2692 Жыл бұрын
I wish I grew up in Great Britain. I saw Simon Cowell running auditions for America's Got Talent. One lady who failed her audition told him to "go back to British." Simon was like, "ok, I'll go back to British." Made me laugh.
@fawnmccleavefrancis7808
@fawnmccleavefrancis7808 2 жыл бұрын
Vicksburg Ms we have uniforms in public schools till junior high. Kaki and polo that is all the school colors and you have to pay to wear regular clothes. My son wore wear a red and white shirt in elementary school, and blue or white in junior high. You do still know who has money from the brand. In high school, you can take college classes. My son got his Associate's degree in his last two years of high school. Also, he took the ACT, not the SAT. Also, we use test informal and Exam formal in this area.
@bloopletank2491
@bloopletank2491 2 жыл бұрын
In Springfield Massachusetts (#1 in public schools, the state is not the city) we had a dress code for the middle school and highschool I went to, and they were public. But the middle school had ranked best in the city and the highschool was almost like a mall, where you had barbers, restaurants, shops, car repair shops etc. It was a great vocational highschool for people who wanted to start working right out of highschool, but to get in you needed a certain amount of Putnam points and credits to even apply which was mostly just "don't have super abysmal grades, don't get in trouble". It was a very nice school.
@danielleporter1829
@danielleporter1829 2 жыл бұрын
We have community colleges/Jr.Colleges here stateside. Some of the benefits of community college are 1), students get the first two years of general education courses ( classes such English 101, Speech, math up to algebra 2 ( combo of Algebra and trigonometry) American History, etc) that they would normally have to take as incoming freshman at an university, 2) Community colleges also offer courses in nursing, cosmetology, GED prep (General Education Diploma also know as General Equivalency. The GED is the equivalent of a high school diploma, so if a person couldn't graduate from high school for whatever reason, they can go back to school and get their GED which in turn can be used as their diploma when applying for college or a job since most minimum wage jobs require at a minimum a high school diploma or GED if the applicant is 18 and over ), dental hygine , plumbing, welding , Airplane mechanics , etc , 3), Community colleges also typically have programs for low income working students, students with disabilities and Veterans. And 4) community college fees are typically cheaper than university fees and whilr it's a necessity to take out student loans to attend a four year university, if a student goes to a community college straight out 9f highschool ( while many students have the grades and are a bit better off financially to go to an university straight out of hs, many don't and after two years or more because life happens, students can transfer to a 4 yr from a CC. Over the last 7 or 8 years, there's been a push for community colleges to offer bachelor degrees to help students offset the cost of student loans 5) CCs atd open to anyone of all ages , all academic backgrounds, employment types etc. Universities are institutions with schools/colleges within them such as the College of Liberal Arts or depending on the institution, the school or college of Arts and Letters, school/college of Business, Communications/Journalism, Engineering /applied Sciences , Theatre 🎭 ( Universities such as Harvard, Yale, NYU, Columbia, Howard ( Historically Black College/University in Washington DC, Alma Mater of Vice President Kamala Harris, University of Southern California etc all have schools of Theatre within their universities that can be stand alone depts from the fine arts department . Some four year institutions do have college in their names such as Wellesley College, Alma Mater of Former First Lady and New York Senator Hillary Clinton , Amherst College ( not to be confused eith the Uni of Massachusetts at Amherst), Radcliffe College, Vassar College, Alma Mater of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis , JFKs widow, Dartmouth College etc. Colleges such as these offer the same courses as any university, however these schools can be smaller in student population than the Georgetowns, UCLAs, UT Dallas' UT Austin's ( UT: Uni of Texas Gramblings( HBCU in Louisiana). It's not unusual to refer to a university by the it's acronym ( USC/SC, LMU ( Loyola Marymount Uni my Alma Mater), or by rhe team's name, Trojans (USC), Bruins ( UCLA) Aggies ( Texas A&M) Longhorns ( UT Austin), Sooners (Uni of Oklahoma) Joyas ( Georgetown) , Crimson Tide ( Uni of Alabama) Ducks ( Uni or Oregon), Gators ( Florida State) etc. Note: USC and UCLA have one of the longest cross town rivalries in College football and are cross town rivals in Los Angeles. So whenever they play each other , the city of L.A is split down the middle, iI know because L.A's my hometown and i know people who have gone to both schools. When. I was in elementary school, I went to the same school (public} from kindergarten to 6th grade , Middle school ( Catholic) 7-8th grade and high school ( all Girls' Catholic) 9-12th grade. We also have elementary schools, both public and private that are K-8 and K-12. Usually if schools are K-12, all three ( elementary, Jr.High and high school) are on the same property or the high school is a a short walk away from the other two.Until 2018, I worked at a small Christian preschool ( now closed) with 54 students and the age range of the students was 2-5 . Some preschools/child Development center enroll children from a few months old to they're ready for elementary school. It's not unusual for Universities and community colleges to either have child development Centers on or a few blocks off campus. Also people can run licensed preschools/ day cares our of theit homrs that they charge for their services. Of course they take as does anyone who works at any other kind of preschool at a bare minimum, Child Development/Early Childhood Education classes at a local Community college or part of their course work in education in Uni. In Cal where I live, to work in a preschool/day-care, you need at least 6 units of CD/ECE be credits , which i had 12 and was taking a child development class the same month I got hired at my old job ( I had previous experience working with children both in a preschool setting and as a volunteer at a local science museum) .
@tahliasgoddaddy
@tahliasgoddaddy 2 жыл бұрын
High school finished at 3pm at my school. Junior high was at 3:15pm. Grade school or Elementary let out at 2:30pm. But that was hundreds of years ago. Junior high, grades 7 through 9 is now middle school, grades 6 through 8.
@CollarCityGuy
@CollarCityGuy 2 жыл бұрын
Here in Troy, NY in the 1970's, at elementary school we attended classes from 8am 1ill t 2:15pm, middle school at 9am till 3:30pm and high school in the 1980's from 8am till 2:15pm
@pho3nixinflight
@pho3nixinflight 2 жыл бұрын
In the US in my case at least a test was something we took at certain points during a semester whereas an exam was a test at the end covering the whole that we learned. For example we might have a test on chapters 1&2 and then a test on chapters 3,4&5. Our exam would be for 1-5.
@HaleThePanda
@HaleThePanda 2 жыл бұрын
At my elementary school in the US, it was called an elementary school. However the school was split into two sides, the primary and the secondary. The primary was for kindergarten, 1st, and 2nd grade. The secondary side was for 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade.
@jeffburdick869
@jeffburdick869 2 жыл бұрын
5:00 city schools tend to have uniform policies here more often than suburban schools. The school I taught at, the kids basically weren't allowed to wear black with red, yellow, or green as those were the colors of three different local(and rival) gangs.
@pleutron
@pleutron 2 жыл бұрын
well I didn't go to a Preschool. My first year of school was Kindergarten. Then, 1st through 5th Grade was Elementary. Then 6th Grade was it's own school. Then Junior High was 7th & 8th. Then High School was 9th through 12th.
@TheBubbaClemson
@TheBubbaClemson 2 жыл бұрын
Kindergarten finished at noon, preschool at 1:30, elementary at 2:30, Jr. High (Middle school) 3:15 and Highschool at 3:45. College was erratic, even had night classes. Kindergarten is up to 3yrs old, then it's on to preschool. Another thing I find interesting is that James is an architect while here that usually requires 4-6yrs at a university and at least 1yr of internship. Tests are not as important to the overall grade as our exams are.. you usually will have several tests during the semester but will have a Midterm exam and a final exam each year. A University designation is only obtainable if there are around 70% of the professors have a PHD. (Doctorate) in that particular field they are instructing
@TheMusicgirl151
@TheMusicgirl151 2 жыл бұрын
The school district that I currently work for starts at 7:45 am and ends at 3:00 pm for the primary/elementary schools. The middle school and high school starts at 8:45 and ends at 4:00. Also, our primary school is pre-school through 1st grade and the elementary is 2nd grade through 5th grade.
@jimpemberton
@jimpemberton 2 жыл бұрын
"Mathematics" is singular though the 's' is a plural form. This form denotes a singular general area of study. Another example would be "apologetics" or "hermeneutics". In either of those, when the 's' is dropped it is to denote a particular application or school of thought within the general discipline. Such has not been the case with mathematics, so the plural form stands alone with a singular meaning. So it can be thought of two ways: If one is truncating a word that is singular by definition, one would not affix the 's', hence "math". If one is truncating a word that is plural in form, one would affix the 's', hence "maths". I deem both to be acceptable.
@heatherhj2011
@heatherhj2011 Жыл бұрын
In my senior year of high school which would be year 12 at the age of 18 since my birthday is in January, I finished my day at 10:30 am (started at 800 am). I had managed to complete all the necessary credits needed to graduate and I couldn't wait to get out of there. I had a full-time job so I would leave school and drive to work across town and work for 7 hours a day. I graduated with honors even. Fun story, my office manager won tickets for us to have lunch with a radio station at a local pizza place (on air even). This is the same radio station that they listened to in the school store at lunch time! The next day my friends asked if that was me on the radio with the "Zuu Crew", they all thought it was pretty awesome.
@raze4789
@raze4789 2 жыл бұрын
In my state there are basically 3 versions of higher education. Trade Schools (self explanatory), College (limited study usually smaller and usually county run. Often referred to as a "community college"), University ( state run, most variety of study). I never made it though, I dropped out 11th grade and went to work. Got my GED at age 29. When I was a kid school usually started around 8-8:15 am and went to 4-4:15 pm.
@hannahfindley7739
@hannahfindley7739 2 жыл бұрын
For me, elementary let out at 3:15pm, and middle and high school let out at 4pm. For all three you had to be in your seat at 8am for final morning bell to be counted for attendance. Also, all but two middle schools in my city required uniforms. My middle school you could wear either a button-down shirt or a polo shirt in white, navy, or yellow/gold, and either navy or kakhi trousers, skirts, or shorts. Skirts and shorts couldn't be shorter than 5inches above the knee.
@Melissa-wx4lu
@Melissa-wx4lu 2 жыл бұрын
At my school district, we have Primary. (K-3rd) Elementary (4-6) Middle school (7 and 8) and High school (9-12) Pre school wasn't a thing in my school, Preschool (back in my time at least) was basically Day-care and had very little to do with any sort of education. The smallest class I've ever been in was 28 kids, the largest I've been in was 32 kids. Test for me was something you did at the end of the lesson that week. An Exam was what you take at the end of the Semester before winter or summer break.
@Ms.Opinionated
@Ms.Opinionated 2 жыл бұрын
High School was 7:10 am to 2:30 pm. OMG - I said the same thing.... She spoke more in this video than any other video. One Love
@billwood7408
@billwood7408 2 жыл бұрын
As a former teacher, I really enjoyed this video. The college vs. university in the US can be confusing to people who are not from the US. College is a technical term that refers to a school of higher learning that is focused on a small set of degrees. There are classes in other areas, but the degrees are not available in these areas. For example a college may offer a BA in Liberal Arts or Social Sciences, but does not offer a degree in Mathematics. That doesn't mean they don't teach math classes, it is just that you can't get a degree in that area. A university is much larger and offers a wider set of degrees. Often times a university will be made up of smaller colleges (college of liberal arts, college of engineering, etc.) and you may take the bulk of your courses through this college, but it is still part of the larger university. The really difficult thing is that many people in the US refer to all higher education as "college" even when referring to a university. Maybe it's because college has 2 syllables and university has 5 (the term uni isn't really used in the US), or maybe it was because there used to be a lot more colleges than universities and over time it has just become normal to refer to it as college. Whatever the reason, when someone says they are going to college, it is very possible they are attending a university that may have 30000 students.
@DesertPrimrose
@DesertPrimrose 2 жыл бұрын
I started formal schooling at 5 in kindergarten, and I graduated from high school at 17. Then I went to a private junior college for two years, and transferred to a university for my last two years of post-secondary education.
@TeacherTonya74
@TeacherTonya74 2 жыл бұрын
Uniforms: In my area, some schools in low income areas require kids to wear uniforms. US kids are not required to attend Kindergarten, thus the reason our 1st grade is your level 2. In my state, the max for K-3 is 18 students and 22 students for grades 4-8 and 25 students grades 9-12. High school is when grades start to count (Grade Point Average) toward admission to college. You are required by law to go to school through your 16th birthday, but it is looked down upon if you don't graduate through 12th grade, and very hard to get a job. The alternate it to take the GED test which is equal to graduating. Thanks for reacting to this! I love Lawrence too! Our elementary school starts at 8:45am and ends at 3:00pm with 25 minutes for lunch and 20 minutes of recess.
@patrickchambers5999
@patrickchambers5999 2 жыл бұрын
When I was stationed in Thailand from 1972 to 1973 I knew some Thai children who had to wear a uniform to school. They owned two uniforms and when they got home from school changed clothes and washed the uniform they just took off, and wear the other one the next day. The next day they came home repeated changing and washing the uniform they just wore and ironed the now dry one. Repeated this cycle every school day
@johnobrien2055
@johnobrien2055 2 жыл бұрын
In the US, a university is an institution that has multiple colleges. So you can have a college of arts and science, and a college of law, and a college of medicine. That's the difference.
@michaelbraman4445
@michaelbraman4445 2 жыл бұрын
correct
@cinb3448
@cinb3448 2 жыл бұрын
When we lived in Malta, we wore uniforms. We had two, one for cooler seasons and a dress for warmer season. I did learn to tie a tie. Lol
@marywood6001
@marywood6001 2 жыл бұрын
5 yrs- kindergarten 6-11 yrs 1st through 6th grade- elementary school 12-14 yrs 7-9th grade junior High school. 15-17yrs 10th -12th grade High school. Classes when I went to school had around 30 to 35 students per classroom.
@mystic37
@mystic37 Жыл бұрын
A College is usually for a particular field of study, and a University is a collection of Colleges, but in the US University is still referred to as College. So is you ask what College someone attends, they will usually answer with the school name, even if it's a University or trade school.
@jamesseibert5356
@jamesseibert5356 2 жыл бұрын
Test vs Exam, best teacher's call them opportunities to show what you have learned so far and showing if you need help understanding a topic. remember, if the child does learn the way you teach, perhaps you should teach the way the child learns. Great video, thanks from USA
@barryfletcher7136
@barryfletcher7136 2 жыл бұрын
In the USA to be a "university" the institution has to offer advanced degrees (Master's and PhD programs). An institution of higher learning which offers only Associate's (2 year) or Bachelor's (4 year) degrees is a college. However, the term "college' can be used to refer in a general sense to any post-secondary school which offers degrees.
@dennisstafford1749
@dennisstafford1749 2 жыл бұрын
Most High Schools, not all, finish about 3:30 pm. However there are many extra-curiccular activities (e.g. Chess, Glee Club, Band, Sports Teams, School Papers, Debate, Theater, etc.) are after school and require the student Voluntarily staying after school. Detention is non-voluntary and may require attendance after school. School Districts vary as to length of the school year and most states require a certain number of days of instruction so calling school off because of inclement weather (snow, ice, floods, hurricanes etc.), means those missed school days must be made up by lengthening the school term. College and University are used now interchangeably but originally a College like that of Arts and Sciences was a liberal arts facility and a University might have several 'Colleges' within it. (Business, Education, Agricuture and Agronomy, etc. ).
@georgekemp9680
@georgekemp9680 2 жыл бұрын
In Elementary School K - 5th grade we started at 8:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Middle School 6th - 8th grade we started at 9:15 AM - 4:15 PM, High School 9th - 12th grade we started at 7:15 AM - 2:15 PM.
@reneeb1393
@reneeb1393 2 жыл бұрын
I went to parochial Catholic school k-8th. We wore uniforms. Green and cream plaid skirts and and Holly collar white blouses, saddle shoes. I had no idea we different then anyone else. Loved my school!
@torcedrake
@torcedrake Жыл бұрын
In American public schools, how the grades are divided up can vary from school district to school district too. For instance we had PreK-4th grade for Elementary, 5th and 6th for Intermediate, 7th and 8th for Junior High school and then 9th through 12th for High school. Meanwhile other districts around us would have 5th through 8th as Junior High, no Intermediate or 5th as part of Elementary and then 6th - 8th for Junior High.
@l30penguin
@l30penguin 2 жыл бұрын
In the US we use the word quiz for the least grade effective, quick little lesson review kinda thing. Test is used for your end of unit kinda thing, worth more and covers more content than quizzes. And exams are usually refering to midterms (tests taken in the winter half way through the year) and then the final exams, (tests taken in the spring to test our knowledge of the second half of the year).
@MrGlenspace
@MrGlenspace 2 жыл бұрын
In suburban NY I had no uniform. So from K-12th grade I got up had breakfast, put on jeans, a shirt, socks and sneakers. Caught the bus and that was it basically for twelve years.
@christophermckinney3924
@christophermckinney3924 2 жыл бұрын
We sort of have degrees of testing to. An exam tends to be comprehensive like over all material for a year or a term. Whereas, a test is usually less comprehensive maybe over all the amterial from that week or that part of a term. We refer to the even less formal tests adn exams as "quizzes." These are usually given by surprise by teachers to see if people in class actually read the assignement or absorbed a previous lesson. It's more for the teacher's benefit than the students evaluation and often a quizz is merely for extra point on a final exam or other test. So you may get ten surprise questions, and if you get 5 right you get 5 extra points on your next test or exam. But tests and exams compose your score for the term.
@dkwuhn
@dkwuhn 2 жыл бұрын
Went to school in the 80s and 90s in New Jersey. Kindergarten: 8:00am until 12pm. 1st - 8th grade: 8am until 3pm. 9th-12th grade (high school): 7:45am until 2:30pm.
@profd65
@profd65 2 жыл бұрын
I'm an American and I know for a fact that in Britain private schools (in the American sense) are or at least were called public schools, I've encountered it in books and movies repeatedly.
@judithham2320
@judithham2320 Жыл бұрын
We started school at 8am. Ended school at 3:30 pm. But in the senior year of High School, we kinda chose our own hours by taking only the classes we needed to finish for graduation, so we could easily have only morning classes. And be free the rest of the day.
@LancerX916
@LancerX916 2 жыл бұрын
In the US a college and university are the same things. Say I was accepted into Stanford University. I would then say "Oh I got into college at Stanford." If you say that people know you are going to a university. We don't say "We are going to university" We might say "I am going to a university and taking college classes". I hope that makes sense. We do have a Jr College system that is sort of like a lesser version of a university. A lot of people will go to that and take all their basic courses for their degree and then transfer to a college or university to make the 4 years of college cheaper. I never understood why you say Maths for math but you say Sport for sports.
@biggee8111
@biggee8111 2 жыл бұрын
In New York City where I went to school typically the hours are 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM. If you had a club or a team membership you may go to school at 8 AM, and finish at 3:00 PM.possibly later if your club or team meets after three , the normal closing time for school .
@Justin_W
@Justin_W 2 жыл бұрын
Pre-School in the U.S. is 3-4. At 5, most go into Kindergarten, which is typically in the Grade School (Primary School). Depending on when your birthday falls, and whch area you life in, you might start kindergarten at 4 and graduate Highschool at 17...like I did.
@babykots
@babykots Жыл бұрын
In America, we use both test and exam. Tests are usually weekly to see where a student is at and an exam is done at the end of the term.
@85rockchalk
@85rockchalk 2 жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Wichita, Kansas in '85. Back then you weren't required to attend preschool so my schooling started at age 5 in kindergarten through 5th grade for elementary, 6th-8th for middle school and 9th-12th for high school where I graduated at age 17 but turned 18 a month after graduating lol. My mom's schooling was kindergarten-6th, 7th-9th and 10th-12th so it just changed a little for my generation.
@85rockchalk
@85rockchalk 2 жыл бұрын
Elementary was from 9am-4:10pm, usually middle in Kansas is 8am-3:10pm but mine was 7:15am-2:25pm and high school is 8am-3:10pm. They added the ten minutes when I was in elementary school to make up for potential snow days that we never got off for anyway lol.
@MrAvfc14
@MrAvfc14 2 жыл бұрын
School started at 8am and ended at 3:25PM in grades 10 thru 12. also colleges are usually 2 year degrees( associates degree ) and are used to get your foundation studies for a 4 year degree.
@maureenl5255
@maureenl5255 Жыл бұрын
Back in the 60's and 70's when I went to school we had 45 - 55 kids in a class. The teacher had teacher aids who basically were Moms who helped out.
@DudeFromTheMountains
@DudeFromTheMountains 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t agree with the sentiment that it is good for poor people. It just makes them buy more clothes that they wouldn’t otherwise have to. I’m from America and in my junior high we had to wear certain clothes and it was always annoying being forced to buy extra crap when the money could have been spent on something better like food. We were required to wear collared shirts with no logos, either being white, navy blue or navy green and khaki pants. The rich kids still were noticeable because they had the shirts with the tiny eagle emblem on it, which didn’t count towards the no logos on clothes. Uniforms are a way of dehumanizing people, in my opinion and I’ll never agree with forcing kids to dress a certain way. This was in Utah by the way.
@stanleymyrick4068
@stanleymyrick4068 2 жыл бұрын
Well, I don't agree. I never went to a school that required a uniform, and I personally don't think I would like it. But I'm not all Pink Floyd about uniforms being a dehumanizing measure. Especially in cases where school dress code isn't strictly enforced and you have people wearing clothes that are barely decent and distracting. More than helping to prevent bullying because you aren't wearing designer clothes, it can be a sign of school spirit to wear a uniform I would think.
@stanleymyrick4068
@stanleymyrick4068 2 жыл бұрын
@@DudeFromTheMountains Not liking Pink Floyd doesn't help your argument.
@DudeFromTheMountains
@DudeFromTheMountains 2 жыл бұрын
@@stanleymyrick4068 You having no personal experience or bringing up bands that have nothing to do with it doesn’t help your argument.
@Screaming.Monkey
@Screaming.Monkey 2 жыл бұрын
@@DudeFromTheMountains He's alluding to Pink Floyd's song "The Wall," which contains lyrics that are critical towards the educational system. I don't blame you if you didn't get it, that song is from the 70's. 😁
@jimwilcox2964
@jimwilcox2964 2 жыл бұрын
Just to add to the confusion. I went to Grade School (aka Elementary) grades 1-6. Junior High grades 7-9. High School 10-12. But then they changed things. K-5. 6-8. 9-12. But hold on 9th graders. Freshman, sometimes had their own school building. Then to Iowa State University graduating in the College of Design. 1 of 8 colleges making up the university. No Grad School for a MA (Masters of Arts which would be the terminal degree) other Colleges have Masters. PhD, Dr. I forgot community college. Some did that after high school. Usually 2 year degrees vs 4. Sometimes also known as Trade School at one time because some their courses are construction, auto mechanics, accounting etc along with ge eral coursework. Some people did the AA (Associates Degree) there then College/ university and skipped over a lot of Freshman and Sophomore classes. We would have tests or quizzes, midterms and final exams. After graduating ISU switched from 4 quarters to 3 semesters, now they added a accelerated winter course (a semester's work during the month between fall and spring semester) and some of the semester classes can be done that way too.
@thegibsonkid
@thegibsonkid 2 жыл бұрын
In highschool, we started and left depending on if we had “free periods” ie no scheduled class at that hour. sometimes I would be able to come in around 8:45 and some days I was able to leave around 1:00
@adelamoon
@adelamoon Жыл бұрын
I work in a high school in NYC as a paraprofessional. Teens at our school can wear whatever they want, in the past we talked about a dress code, but no one ever follows through. Funny thing is that some of the teachers are very young, just out of college themselves and dress like the students, lol. School starts at 8 am, but there are classes that start at 7:15, like gym class and some of the college now classes. School ends at 2:20 in my school, some schools end after 3 pm. It really depends on the size of the school. My school is very small with about 600 students, so everyone knows everyone. We also share the building with a junior high and a charter school. I would never work in a junior high, teachers always seem to be yelling at the students. Usually there are around 30 kids per class, but early in the morning there are a lot of kids who are late.
@Texbec
@Texbec Жыл бұрын
Also tests are taken throughout the year and exams are the bigger more important test at the end of the semester and counts for more points toward your final grade.
@karenftx1
@karenftx1 2 жыл бұрын
Grades can vary by state. As an example, in NYC where I was born, I went to PS (public school), IS (intermediate school) and HS (high school). They went from k-5, 6-8 and 9-12. When I moved to North Carolina, the schools were elementary, junior high and high school. They went from K-6, 7-9, and 10-12. I graduated IS 74 in the 8th grade and was in my first year of HS in the 9th grade when I moved. In NC, I was put back into junior high as that grade was considered that. So, I have the distinction of graduating Middle School twice without being held back.
@rmorris2447
@rmorris2447 2 жыл бұрын
I went to a small school that was K - 8. It was an elementary school. There were 2 classrooms. k-4 in one class room and 5-8 in the other classroom. It was an all year round school that started at 8am and ended at 3pm ever day. My high school was 9-12 and was also from 8am to 3pm.
@jono8884
@jono8884 2 жыл бұрын
In the US college and university essentially mean the same thing. Does UK education use "quizzes"? Basically a short test. A US private school is one where the students are selected from applicants and the parents are paying a tuition in addition to their normal taxes for "public" tax supported education where every child is eligible.
@jenp7818
@jenp7818 2 жыл бұрын
Elementary school starts (in Maryland) at 9 and get out at 3:30. Middle and high school are 7:30-2:15.
@kurooniyuri5715
@kurooniyuri5715 Жыл бұрын
In America we typically refer to the act of obtaining a higher education as "going to college" but the institutions have different levels based on accreditation and offer different degree options. A College is usually an institution were you can get a one year degree or "Certificate" or a 2 year degree or an "Associate's." A University is one were you can get your 3 or 4 year "Bachelor's" and some Universities even offer "Master's" and "Doctoral" degrees. There are also Trade Schools that offer a more focused curriculum in areas such as Cosmetology or Auto Repair that are shorter and offer more hands on and on the job training but don't grant the same kind of degrees. As far as times of school day, when I was in school, in Elementary school the school day was from 8:15 to 3:15, but Middle school and High school was 7:15 to 2:45. But the Elementary school my girls attend is 8:20 to 2:40
@GeraldWalling
@GeraldWalling 2 жыл бұрын
In Birmingham, Al (not to be confused with Birmingham, England) I started 1st grade in 1958. 1st, 2nd and 3rd grade we went from 8:00 to 2:00. Starting with 4th grade through grade 12 (Senior Year) we went from 8:00 to 3:00. Graduated in 1970. We had no Middle school. Elementary school was 1st through 8th and High School was 9th through 12th grades.
@blakenewell9967
@blakenewell9967 2 жыл бұрын
I started my highschool at 7:30 and was released at 2:45 we also had an open campus for lunch so I could drive off and go to a fast food place if I wanted during lunch period
@Raees-Divitiae
@Raees-Divitiae 2 жыл бұрын
There are also "weighted" systems here in the US at some schools. My 3.8 GPA came out to ~4.7 GPA when applying for college. It's a pretty confusing system, as most schools are "unweighted", which means all classes are treated equally. In that situation, the highest you can reach when applying for college is a 4.0 GPA. Our "general classes" which are the lowest tier, were the equivalent of "academic classes" in other schools. Our "academic classes" were the equivalent of "AP classes" in other schools. Our "AP classes" were the equivalent of "college prep", which some schools don't even have. Like I stated, it's odd.
@Bargle5
@Bargle5 2 жыл бұрын
My final (high) school started at 8:30 and finished at 3:30. But since I moved a lot as a kid, it was different depending on where I lived at that time. Many of our Primary schools have staggered end times depending on the grade. The older you get, the longer you stay. Something else that's changed now. It used to be that Middle school was often called Junior High. This is less common now, I think.
@Boxacheeseballs
@Boxacheeseballs 2 жыл бұрын
7:30-3:15. Sometimes ended at 1:45 if I had the last period as a free period. Rarely started at 10:00 if I had first period free.
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