Japanese people are famously known to be polite, strong-willed, and pleasant. This culture is so important that even children conform to these values thanks to the excellent schooling they undergo. Though the kindergarten, elementary, junior high, and high school system seems similar to the American, the truth is quite different from outward appearances.
Here are ten reasons Japanese schooling is unique, helping to forge excellent and happy little characters. Due to reasons like these, Japan’s education system is widely admired and even envied.
1. Before exams, children have to learn their manners

While at elementary school, the students are not drilled so hard in learning core subjects (compared to later years), there is a greater focus on values and ethics. Students are taught respect and gentleness. They have to learn how to be compassionate and generous. Virtues like self-control and a sense of justice are also shown great importance. Students are expected to master the core curriculum in junior high and high school only when these foundations are laid.
2. Term starts at the beginning of April

The start of the school year coincides with the first bloom of spring, so dramatically marked in Japan by the appearance of the sakura cherry blossom. It is thought that this means children start their school years with a feeling of positivity due to the end of the winter months. This timetable is quite unlike most of the world, where school starts at the end of summer or the start of Autumn. So perhaps we should all switch to the Japanese way!
3. Kids do all the school cleaning themselves

All students are expected to take part in the cleaning chores of the school. This inculcates in them an almost natural work ethic. They form teams and learn what it takes to get a job done well, with cooperation and hard work. They don’t only clean the classroom, but the cafeteria and lavatories too. Consequently, the children are more careful not to mess up their school and learn to despise uncleanliness. As a child, I would have hated it if we were told to do this, but now I am sure it would have been better if we had done so.
4. Eating in the classroom

In Japan, meals are important communal moments. Students eat the same balanced and well-prepared meals as one another, almost always in the presence of their teachers. This helps build a strong bond and encourages good table manners. In addition, before every meal, everyone has to pray and say thanks (itadakimasu), and at the end, they do the same (gochisosama deshita). These are highly polite phrases that express gratitude to the earth, the food itself, the cook, and their social superiors present at the table.
5. All high school students enjoy extra-curricular activities

If Japanese kids are not working, they are playing. So, after school is just as important as the school hours themselves; their time is then divided into an additional study, either at one of the many juku private schools, designed to improve math, science, and English exam scores or at school sports and musical clubs. Every junior high school student chooses a club to join, such as swim, table tennis, baseball, brass band, chess, etc., and then pursues their ability in that club for the rest of their school years. Of course, they socialize with their group and spend most of their weekends with them too.
6. Kids are taught beautiful poetry and calligraphy

Japan never forgets its traditional art forms. So, kanji (over 2,000 Chinese characters), Hiragana, and Katakana (the two native writing systems) are all taught to students. They have to learn exactly how to write each character, strokes in the right direction, and very precise order. They use bamboo sticks and rice paper for this process. Haiku poems from Japan’s rich literary history are also recited and learned by heart. Thus, every student understands the importance of preserving their cultural heritage.
7. School uniforms are obligatory, inside and outside school

School uniforms have become obligatory by junior high school. Since every student wears the same attire, all social barriers are erased, and everyone is considered part of the same school body. The same goes for haircuts. Boys are supposed to have shortcuts and girls medium-length hair with a short fringe. When in public, school children are not feared by people but respected. Thus, there is a good harmony between generations.
8. Japan’s school truancy rate is only 0.01%

It is very rare for children to fail to attend school, which I wish to say about my country! Not only do all children attend, but they also try to pay close attention to their class lectures. It has been calculated that around 91% always listen to their teachers at all times. And I thought I was quite a good student, but there were certainly many hours that I daydreamed away while my teachers talked!
9. One exam decides everything

High schools are so rigorous in Japan that a high school graduate here is considered as educated as a university graduate in Italy, a very important and cultured land. So, for those who would pursue a college education, competition is quite fierce. One exam will decide whether they get the marks required to attend their single college choice. If they fail to meet the grade, they will probably not go to university, but they will still be very employable in Japan’s high employment economy.
10. After completing school, college is considered a holiday

So hard is the effort required in the national school system that graduating is regarded as the first great trial of their lives. Some of them will move to the following college years are considered more of a reward to be enjoyed than something to be taken very seriously. Students are regularly seen sleeping through lectures at university, so universities in Japan do not rank very high internationally. Perhaps this is simply a result of working so hard during their early teens at school.