KOREANS REACT to THINGS that ONLY exist in AMERICAN SCHOOL🏫🏫!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 окт 2022
  • Two Korean girls finds out surprising things that only exist in American school
    #giggle #koreangirl #school #schooluniform #usa #americanschool
    -------------------------
    Official Giggle :: @giggle_kr​
    [Meet our Cast!]
    HANNA :: @hanna.ming
    YUMI :: @YUMI :: @youmd0_0ng96 / / @youmd0_0ng96
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 356

  • @rchllyj
    @rchllyj Год назад +977

    my heart broke when hanna was talking about the racism she experienced :(

    • @pascallaflamme3688
      @pascallaflamme3688 Год назад +40

      I Don't get why this still happen. Here people are harsh toward anyone who display racism publicly. In Montreal that is. If everyone know you suck for being a racist why still do it? It just show how close minded they are.

    • @hyena5313
      @hyena5313 Год назад

      You reap what you sow.. Koreans are super racists themselves...

    • @trodat07
      @trodat07 Год назад

      @@pascallaflamme3688 if society has successfully outcasted racism, then why you all act like you’re fighting H!tler himself everyday? Does it count for social credit? Does low risk demagoguery make you sleep better at night?

    • @powbobs
      @powbobs Год назад

      Thankfully she wasn’t in the Deep South.
      It would have been much worse.

    • @bi-biwolf
      @bi-biwolf Год назад

      @@pascallaflamme3688 Fr!! I don't know how these people go their whole lives being taught about how racism is bad and still come out racist. It's incredible just how dumb people can be.

  • @SimplyBeauty96
    @SimplyBeauty96 Год назад +755

    Hannah went to school in a wealthy area. Most teenagers don't get cars at 16 where I live and most ride the bus. I was definitely left alone some days as a child (around 10 years old) because my parents couldn't afford a babysitter.

    • @prieltheprune1302
      @prieltheprune1302 Год назад +14

      Exactly lol

    • @Kingdom_Of_Dreams
      @Kingdom_Of_Dreams Год назад +10

      I wouldn't say "most". It depends on where you live.

    • @katherinecordero472
      @katherinecordero472 Год назад +47

      @@Kingdom_Of_Dreams Do you know how high poverty is in the US? Most kids definitely don't drive cars, there is richer areas where majority drive but in US overall it's not a regular occurrence.

    • @Kingdom_Of_Dreams
      @Kingdom_Of_Dreams Год назад +4

      ​@@katherinecordero472 What makes you think that I insinuated that most kids drive themselves? Don't put words into my mouth. Other options exist other than the bus, and from my experience, more people get dropped off than drive themselves or take the bus.

    • @yadiaag7771
      @yadiaag7771 Год назад +5

      Yeah past 7 yrs old we never had a babysitter. I was th3 oldest

  • @namjoonswhite-stripedcrab
    @namjoonswhite-stripedcrab Год назад +728

    There are some public schools that require uniforms, from what I’ve seen they are usually charter schools which are funded by tax money but seem to operate independently like a private school.
    Please do not misunderstand, most kids are not gifted cars when they turn 16. 😅 they mostly either get rides from their friends or parents. Also, lots of kids start holding down part-time jobs in high school to pay for their own cars, not nice cars but cars that get you from point A to point B.

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 Год назад +52

      Uniforms in public schools in the US are more like "highly prescriptive dress codes." They're nothing like the British-Isles style uniform they're wearing. Instead, they're unisex, bland colors, and cheap--I call them the "Blockbuster Employee Uniform" because they're usually khakis, polo shirts, and sneakers. They're often the mark of a troubled school; one where they're trying to keep gangs from fighting, or erase socio-economic differences.
      Parochial schools still wear uniforms similar to what they're wearing, as well as some non-sectarian or Protestant private schools, tho I've seen plenty of private schools with no uniform as well.
      As far as cars go...I think her perception of what people get when they turn 16 was greatly warped by living in Orange County CA 🤣🤣🤣

    • @namjoonswhite-stripedcrab
      @namjoonswhite-stripedcrab Год назад +21

      @@gravityissues5210 lol on the blockbuster employee uniform 🤣🤣🤣.
      Yes, Orange County will most definitely warp perspectives and expectations!

    • @TojiiZzzz
      @TojiiZzzz Год назад +5

      In my country even public schools have uniforms, I’m from a private school :)

    • @jacobmckinley9708
      @jacobmckinley9708 Год назад +5

      truuuu. all the public high schools in Long Beach, CA (except on, Long Beach Polytechnic, maybe Jordan? i cant remember if they have uniforms) have uniforms, and yeah, khaki bottoms (pants, shorts, or skirts) and a top thats either white or a school color (usually red or blue). i only knew like two people who had cars in my school i think. though the student body was about 5000, and the student lot was small, so its not like it would have mattered much anyways

    • @technicaldifficulties368
      @technicaldifficulties368 Год назад +1

      I bought my own car when I graduated high school for 2,000$
      It was a 98 and I graduated 06

  • @BisonWilliam
    @BisonWilliam Год назад +142

    In Wyoming, USA, state law requires every public school provide a place to coral or pasture a horse, for any child that rides their horse to school. Even our state university still has a large area in the middle of the campus for this reason.

    • @julieb3996
      @julieb3996 Год назад +9

      that sounds so awesome

    • @MaskMaker0822
      @MaskMaker0822 Год назад +9

      in texas we had a kid try riding his hourse to school, he wasnt allowed in and they forced him to call his parents to get the horse...

    • @roku5071
      @roku5071 Год назад +2

      We had kids ride their horses to our country school. I was not an odd thing. Only time there were/are horses at the town schools then and now is during the FFA Week (western Nebraska)

    • @kittykatpharuhs
      @kittykatpharuhs Год назад

      Bro huh?! That's so cool!!!

    • @Chaeyoung90
      @Chaeyoung90 Год назад

      @@MaskMaker0822 lol i live in Texas to thats never happened tho

  • @stormcross9112
    @stormcross9112 Год назад +343

    So sad that she had to go through that sort of racism in her school some times but sounds kinda accurate for Orange County - LA resident 😂😅

    • @taoist32
      @taoist32 Год назад +23

      I live in the Bay Area near San Jose. Growing up I was lucky not being bullied by racists, but I was bullied for being autistic.

    • @stormcross9112
      @stormcross9112 Год назад +7

      @@taoist32 damn sorry u had to go through that dude. I don’t really have any bullying stories from school. Tho being the only Latino family in a very heavily white area can give u tough skin so maybe I am just very oblivious. Sorry that those people did that to u, like it’s not that hard to be not ignorant 😞😒

    • @taoist32
      @taoist32 Год назад +3

      @@stormcross9112 Yes, but this was back in the 80’s. Not many people anything about autism. In fact, I didn’t either. I wasn’t officially diagnosed, but a couple friends were and they said I was the same.

    • @stormcross9112
      @stormcross9112 Год назад

      @@taoist32 ahhhh, ya that was a while ago

    • @joesmith7925
      @joesmith7925 Год назад +7

      Please don't think Asians are treated differently in America. There is racism in every group. Even amongst Asian Americans. There are a lot of Korean Americans who are racist against Vietnamese and Chinese. There is a lot of racism against blacks and Mexicans by most of the Asian communities. Most people know about racism in the south because of slavery but California is the worst because it is the most diverse. During the 80s and 90s quotas were set by nationality for jobs schools, almost all sectors of life were supposed to equal opportunity. The reality is it only led to each race fighting over scraps while the rich and powerful whites maintained control. It's easy to see Trump's racism but most people don't recognize Biden's. He said he he wanted to pick a black woman as his vice president before he started. In other words he looked at color and sex first which is both racist and sexist. Two things he claims to be against. So both of the most influential groups in America use racism and sexism to gain support. It's not changing anytime soon so no one should feel they are being singled out and no should feel safe from rascim either. Fortunately there are still a lot of good people and lots of opportunities in the U.S. which makes it worth coming to visit or live.

  • @ash-dl8ff
    @ash-dl8ff Год назад +90

    I went to public school all my life and each school had uniforms. Also, only wealthier kids get their own cars at 16. Most kids take the yellow school bus or private bus. I’ve never heard of middle school kids with their own cars. I’m pretty sure that’s illegal for an 11-14 year old to drive around.

    • @ACBmonkey
      @ACBmonkey Год назад +3

      In rural parts of the us kids can get a license for special circumstances prior to the age of 16. Because the area is so remote and the only way to get to school or anywhere is by driving quite a ways.

    • @luna-mo3ol
      @luna-mo3ol Год назад +1

      I think the majority of kids don't get new cars but hand me down or really old run down cars. For me, I got my dad's vehicle that was a few years old and really crappy. But it did get from point A to point B. Most kids at my school had cars like that. In my area, public transportation doesn't exist. It's very rural and the only way for anyone to get around is by driving

  • @shawna2946
    @shawna2946 Год назад +56

    I’m a high school teacher in the US. At our school you have to go through metal detectors before coming in and then they have people that go through all the backpacks. We also have 6 armed officers at our school. But it’s not like that everywhere.

    • @bitchhp2973
      @bitchhp2973 Год назад

      My school didn’t even have a school officer. And we didn’t have busses, you took public transportation.

    • @Shay45
      @Shay45 Год назад

      Most schools have security guards in them.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад +1

      Mine never had that then again times were way different people didn't lose there minds as much as now.

    • @oklahomasoutherner8276
      @oklahomasoutherner8276 Год назад

      The school in my town has trained armed teachers( who has chosen to be), and there are many posted signs,"warning school staff may be armed." They have to take a special class to get a special license that allows them to carry on school grounds, must show they regularly train, and train/ be involved in the school shooting drills with the local sheriff department. Many schools here in Oklahoma allow teachers to be armed after what happened in Texas and the hesitates of the police officers. school districts can allow teachers and staff to carry if they have a valid armed security guard license or a valid reserve peace officer certification.

  • @cloudsefi_drawing
    @cloudsefi_drawing Год назад +94

    Happiness appears in the form of yummi and hanna!!!

  • @slgmomma
    @slgmomma Год назад +31

    It really depends on the state you live in on child being allowed to be without an adult. In my state a child can be alone at 12 also that is when you can get your babysitter safety classes (cpr, etc). School buses are used often in many schools in US and I know where I went to school back in the day & my kids at their schools now only Junior & seniors were allowed to drive due to limited parking spaces. CA has weird rules compared to the rest of the US anyway.

  • @isabelle441
    @isabelle441 Год назад +11

    Only rich kids get cars for their 16th birthday, most kids take the bus

  • @linsen8890
    @linsen8890 Год назад +54

    Any video with Yumi and Hanna is for sure so much fun to watch! They are both so cute and adorable, and well, Hanna is just freaking gorgeous!!

  • @kurarisusa
    @kurarisusa Год назад +42

    She went to school in California, so you know she had it rough. The experience elsewhere in the country is quite different depending on where you go.

    • @karenvonbargen4472
      @karenvonbargen4472 Год назад +2

      The experience in California depends on what part you live in, too. My part of California is rural and poor, hundreds of miles from a beach, and very, very different from coastal communities.

    • @purin5035
      @purin5035 Год назад

      She had it easier then most students tbh

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад +1

      I live in California it wasn't that rough it was actually smooth just getting up was rough for me, long hours and back work due to a learning disability other then that nothing hard. It depends on where you live southern California is very different then Northern almost everything is different.

    • @zaynes5094
      @zaynes5094 Год назад

      Also, Bella Swan, in New York State things are very different from town to town and city to city because where I live, in New Paltz NY, we don’t live in a huge area and so everyone can whisper about certain things and catch wind of it. More Upstate is where the rednecks live and where I live is where more of the hippies and bikers live. Those tend to be very cool towards Asians. I know I am cool with Asians because I dated a Thai girl for a little while in HS, until she came out of the closet that is and let me tell yah it was harder telling her mom she wasn’t going to law school but to school for graphic design than coming out to her, and so I did see some racisms from within the Asian community. Even my ex didn’t like Chinese. She though they were dirty and unclean. She, on the other hand, thought Japanese were the most calm and cool.

  • @rockyember
    @rockyember Год назад +3

    4:19 girlll almost everyone rides the school bus to school, and people would NEVER be able to drive themselves in middle school 😂

  • @anonnnymousthegreat
    @anonnnymousthegreat Год назад +6

    Middle schoolers in the us are too young to drive themselves to school. So middle schoolers don’t drive themselves to school. But they can study up on a driver’s permit so by the time they reach freshmen year in high school (age 14-15yrs old international age), they can practice to get their driver’s permit (which is something you get to say you can practice driving as long as you have a legally liscensed guardian with you at all times when you drive).
    High schoolers are old enough to drive themselves when they are about sophmore/junior yr in high school because by that age (16-17yrs old international age) they would have an actual driver’s liscense to be able to drive themselves to school and anywhere else for that matter.
    And the thing i think hanna was mentioning about the “reproduced dui” scene was something call a “mock crash” demonstration. So basically they have students volunteer to be actors in a mock crash simulation held at the school to show the reality what happens when you engage is drinking/or on drugs while driving. They do that alot around prom time because it’s widely known in america that teens can get carried away at after prom parties getting drunk and doing drugs and then try to drive afterwards. When i was in my senior year of high school i got volunteered to participate in my school’s mock crash simulation. It was an interesting experience but kinda sad and uncomfortable.

  • @evilzombiemonkeyshow
    @evilzombiemonkeyshow Год назад +10

    It always strikes me odd when they say things that are American, and then they have a viewpoint that is like 1% of actual American life. The only thing she really commented on that is more prevalent is the racism she faced. Kids not taking school buses, getting a car at 15/16 as the norm, Domino's pizza being available (you'd usually pay extra for that), leaving to get lunch, are all NOT the norms for American kid's.

    • @Alici_Evans
      @Alici_Evans Год назад +2

      Yeah, I think the car thing is mostly seen in movies. Plus we have pizza at my school, but it’s definitely not Dominos and it’s the same price as any other standard lunch food. It’s not really seen as a privilege to have pizza. The food that’s extra is ice cream, cookies, and other snacks/drinks.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      ​@@Alici_Evans well most here do have cars but we're out in farm land so kids and adults have responsibilities here in California. But yes a majority ride the bus cars were usually for farm work or to run to the store that's it.

  • @chuckpapermaker
    @chuckpapermaker Год назад +10

    Yumi is back!!! So happy.

  • @keyahsuel8025
    @keyahsuel8025 Год назад +9

    It really depends. I was left alone with my brother when we were both 7. We had to get up and get ready for school and walk to the bus stop ourselves. Also, most hs students have a part time job. You can get hired at 16 at almost any food or retail store.

  • @potatobear4963
    @potatobear4963 Год назад +6

    For my school the majority ride the bus and most people had jobs to pay for their own car or further education. Our school food was not from other restaurants and kids weren't allowed to leave school during hours. The states are bigger than people assume so car is the easiest to use for those who have a license. We didn't have unifroms but there were rules on what to wear. My school was one of the smaller ones in the district so we didn't get as much money for improvements like the larger schools.
    Not everyone is from a big city or blessed with certain things in school. I was allowed to start staying home alone in 6th grade which is younger than 13 since I walked home from my bus stop, so I don't think it's illegal or child abuse to leave a middle schooler home alone. Every state has it's own laws and most don't agree with laws in California so almost every state is different.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      Same although the teacher would let us leave during class as long as we didn't get caught or she would deny it lol. This was in high-school same class watched movies all year long some rated R lol . Now it looks like a prison I know it's for protection but at the same time if something ever happen kids are fucked the gates are locked you need to scan your ID and show the school security it aswell. Glad I graduated for all that I wouldn't be able to handle it seems to claustrophobic and very limited on options if an emergency happened.
      As for staying hone I could at 9 but then again we live in the country so it's normal here most are farmers so long hours kids took care of little things so it wasn't a big deal. The whole that's child abuse is ridiculous cause it's not.

  • @roku5071
    @roku5071 Год назад +3

    Quite a few differences between schools in America. They are not all the same. For instance, in my high school we did have a police officer, but they did not wear their regular uniform. They usually wore a casual suit and tie, like many of the male high school teachers wore. They also did not drive a squad car to school, only did that if they were on regular patrol duty and not at the school. We also had a few other police officers that would stop by the school during lunch hour and just talk with any students that wanted to chat. Of course we were a small town where everyone pretty much knew all the police officers, sheriff, deputies and the state patrol officers that were assigned to our area.
    Not everyone had a car. Mostly the kids that lived out of town, in the country (on farms and ranches), were the ones that had a vehicle. There were a few town kids that had a vehicle, but it was not everyone. And kids got a learner's permit at 15 or a school permit which allowed the kid to drive to and from school. Then they could get their license at 16. A lot of kids rode to school with either older siblings or parents dropping off/picking up the kids. A lot of town kids walked or rode bikes to school. Busses back then were mainly for sporting events or other after school activities.
    When I was in high school a lot of pick-ups had racks in the back window. Ranch kids usually had hot shots in the racks except during hunting season in which the hot shots were replaced with rifles &/or shotguns. And we didn't have shootings at our area schools back then. Imagine that. Might have seen a pheasant or two in the pick-up bed, but that was it.
    Our school didn't have a surf team 😉 but there was the usual sports as well as a rodeo team. We also had groups like FBLA, FFA, FHA, DECA, art club, choir, band, flag corps, Thespians and the A-Club which was the jocks, or regular sports kids, that had lettered.
    All in all there are days when I do miss those days, especially the friends and fun we had as well as a few of the teachers. So long ago, almost 40 years now ::sigh::
    Our kids, like their parents, went to country school. Well a couple got to go to county school - one did Kindergarten through 8th grade and then to a local high school, one did Kindergarten through 5th grade when the school closed and 6th, 7th and 8th in junior high then high school at the local town school while our youngest did Kindergarten through 3rd grade at the same local town elementary school. Oldest drove himself to school. The other 2 rode the school bus and middle drove himself to school when he got his school permit and then provisional license. They did sports and extra curricular activities. Kids even went hunting after school similar to kids I went to school with.
    After watching videos like this, I am glad for our small town schools 😎
    Peace out! ✌

  • @soojinsgf
    @soojinsgf Год назад +17

    MY FAVORITE DUO IS BACK LET GO STAN YUMI AND HANNA

  • @zengrath
    @zengrath Год назад +22

    A lot of things discussed depend on the state. I couldn't get my driver license unit I was 18, permit at 17 but some states are lower. And yes unless you live in a large modern city there isn't public transportation in most of America. And even when you turn 18 if you don't own a car you can't rent a car as well, most places require 21 years or old with some being even higher. American's pretty much drive everywhere and you rarely see people walk except in densely populated cities. We have a horrible public transportation system. So until you have a car and a license you have 0 freedom and rely on family/friends to drive you around.
    It makes me sad that we still have so much drugs and guns and all in school, i was lucky enough to be home schooled so i didn't have to worry about all that and honestly with everything going on i think more parents should consider homeschooling, public schools just aren't worth the risk and there are other ways to get your kid practice socializing like various clubs, sports, and so on. Public schools suck in that you don't really learn much anyway, it's more like a daycare then a place to learn, learning at home you can learn in 1 hours what you learn in an entire day at school (I went to school for a while then switched to home schooling and couldn't believe how much easier and faster it was to study, public school held me back and just full of drama). Uniforms are only private schools, schools your parents have to pay a lot of money for you to attend, public/free schools you were sort of what you want but there are restrictions.

    • @faervas1234
      @faervas1234 Год назад +3

      Yeah Hanna assumption about the rest of the country from California have a lot of inaccuracies. California is not like the rest of the US. They are over regulated and they have laws there that the rest of the country find silly. The US is huge and the states have their own laws. South Korea is about the same population as California. So they have generally the same laws all over South Korea.

    • @potatobear4963
      @potatobear4963 Год назад

      Personally I prefered to go to public school where you do learn a lot. In middle school you take 7 different classes and in high school 5 different classes in a day. That's how it was in my school. Everuone has a different learning style and it's good you succeeded at home but most people learn better in a classroom. As someone who gets distracted easily, being in a classroom was definitely better than learning at home.
      I was lucky to have a pretty safe school and the only thing considered drugs kids would sneak were vapes. Not every school or state is the same, but I felt safe while learning. There are many different clubs, sports, and a honors society that held events so everyone was included in something. I went to a daycare in elemtary school so I can say that public school is not like a daycare at all.

    • @zengrath
      @zengrath Год назад

      @@potatobear4963 We can't choose our public schools in America, you only get the one assigned to you. So if you actually want to learn, and not be around drugs and alcohol and violence's caused by other kids with parents who clearly don't care about raising their kids properly, then your parents would have no choice but to pay a ton of money for private schooling and not many families in America have the money to afford that. So it's a sad situation still where only the rich get the good education and the poor don't. Only way to get a better public school would be to physically move houses and again, that's likely into a more expensive area and again only peoples with money can do. When i grew up I had to go to a very poor public school with really poor ratings and constant violence's and i was always targeted and attacked because I was a white kid and a minority, there was only like a dozen white kids at the school. There was actually another public school right down the road from us and it was actually closer, but my parents fault for years to get me into that school and they wouldn't allow it because i didn't live on the right side of the border, my home was actually right on the border of the two areas but according to the school I wasn't eligible for the other school, so as things got worst i eventually switched to homeschooling and it was so much better. I actually could learn at my own pace and learn far more then I ever did in school and without the violence and everything. I honestly don't understand why parents in America risk ruining their childs lives but introducing them to bullying, violence's, drugs, and so on when they can be homeschooled, the excuse of kids missing out on social skills is bull, there is so many ways for kids to be social today, far more then when i was a kid, and there still so many things kids can do to be social, like sports and many other clubs and all going on. Parents can still make friends with other parents in their neighbors and kids can still socialize and make friends out-side of school and parents can actually monitor the situation unlike schools and ensure that thier kids friends and parents are good people. Schools on other hand parents have no idea who their kids are interacting with and public schools especially most of these kids parents don't care at all and let thier kids run free doing whatever the hell they want including hurting other kids. EDIT: Actually legally parents can't leave you home alone in America, my parents on other hand didn't care, they knew we are better off home alone then at school, and we never got in trouble for it. So maybe that's another major reason families can't home school due to baby sitter costs and so on, but honestly that's a law that needs to go away in America, it's completely unfair to tell parents how to raise their kids and that they can't let their kids stay home alone.

    • @nicholasbrown4109
      @nicholasbrown4109 Год назад

      ​@@zengrath Thats not completely accurate. There are public magnet schools that you can choose to go to if you pass the entry test and remain in the magnet program. The high school I went to was a public school but it had two magnet programs, a tech one and the International Baccalaureate program, which is basically honors classes with an additional test you take near the end of the school year that can count for college credit. I was in in the IB program. Of course, you have to maintain a certain GPA level or you will be kicked out and have to transfer to the high school based on your street address, but that is pretty rare because most kids in the program are motivated to remain there.

    • @venesa5802
      @venesa5802 Год назад

      @Zengrath So you think kids that are homeschooled don't get introduced to bullying, drugs and violence? Some of the "baddest" kids I know growing up were homeschooled. So again, it all depends on where you live. I'm glad it worked out for you, but your story is exactly that.... yours. Not every homeschooled kid grows up the same way you did. Your parents monitored who you were around, others don't always do that.

  • @jpeopolis
    @jpeopolis Год назад +10

    I was worried we'd never see these gorgeous faces again. Now, throw Taesang into the mix and we'll have ourselves a party! LOL

  • @Skipping_to_Olympus
    @Skipping_to_Olympus Год назад +6

    Yumi is back!!! Wooooo!!!! 😄😄😍😍

  • @carolemerle9995
    @carolemerle9995 Год назад +2

    Growing up in PA, I walked to school the entire time I was there and it was 2 miles one way. Kids nowadays have it made.

  • @julieb3996
    @julieb3996 Год назад +2

    One of the surprising things about moving from a private school where students wore uniforms and cared about what they wore, to going to a public school where I thought there would be more freedom to wear what I wanted, was the fact that all the public school students wore sweat shirts and sports wear, and did not care as much.

  • @mister_veee7143
    @mister_veee7143 Год назад +5

    OMG! Yumi and Hanna are back! 🥰❤❤❤❤

  • @hwaguo8383
    @hwaguo8383 Год назад +1

    Hanna is back ...love it!

  • @mentalrebllion1270
    @mentalrebllion1270 Год назад +2

    My experience with high school was one where I rode the school bus for the first time, at least until I got my drivers license which I got right when I turned 16. I have siblings and they liked to pack their after school schedule with extra curricular activities so I was always being chauffeur as I was the oldest and had the freest schedule (no clubs really interested me and I could do homework while I waited anyway). Driving to school was fairly common because it was somewhat of a rural area that was quickly developing into a suburban area. It’s almost fully suburban now but it wasn’t uncommon when I went to high school there that one would be late because they got stuck behind a tractor. This was a perfectly acceptable excuse for being late. The roads were still rural so it was impossible to drive around these vehicles when you had to share the road with them. I’ll admit I made the excuse a few times when my sister would make us quite late getting to school (my sister had never been good about being on time). Um let’s see, what else about my experience. Ah, we had tornado drills regularly and bomb drills too. There was shooting drills too but those have increased far more in frequency I have heard since I graduated due to the rise in such tragedies. So I probably faced those less than the younger students and generation. Oh let’s see, um, uniforms are not common, at all, in my old high school. There was a big fit about implementing such a change but was dropped due to push back against it. Actually, there was more an issue with the dress code being too restrictive to female students as it was. We did have the problem that is post about of female students being unfairly targeted, to the point that there was male students who wore skirts to school in mass protest of it. It was televised or reported but it did get school administrators to back down on how strict they were for a time. I’ll just say there was plenty of animosity between the student body/their parents versus the administration there. For all that the administration wanted to have the positives of a growing school district like ours, the transition was difficult culturally for them and so the clashing was almost inevitable. I don’t think it calmed down until a few teachers got promotions that placed them up that high and were able to better soothe ruffled feathers for both sides and enact changes that the student body and their parents wanted. My school went through some major cultural changes too. Like most rural schools the popular thing was football so the football team, and marching band, had the highest portion of the budget for extra curricular activities. It started shifting vastly when I was in school there. I will admit part of that is because of the activities my siblings and I were in. We ended up helping the school refocus their budgets back into the Arts due to accolades we brought in or pushed the school to even compete for and showed them they had the talented kids for it. In my case I pushed for the Fine Arts department to compete in competitions at all (apparently the previous art teacher had no interest in signing students up despite the amazing talent there) and also pushed for programs that taught vocational skills like cooking and such. I also participated in the tech part of theater which is important later. For my siblings, my brother was band major of the band and was the, I forget the name, but the one who conducts for the marching band. He didn’t limit his activities there though and was in choir and theater. For choir he pushed for there budget to be higher as it was ridiculously low and mostly funded by the teacher, it was so bad. Between the accolades he managed to scrap by he secured a bigger budget and also started other choirs instead of a single one, including a Glee club before he graduated. As for theater, he mostly participated in the musical we would do because he was one of the few male students who could sing that would audition for roles. He was one of the big reasons they did Will in competitions too and managed to bring in money both from the competitions and also having the ear of the directors enough to help them choose plays and musicals that would also bring in a lot of people wanting to watch. Which was good because that would mean profit that could be filtered into needed things in other areas of the theater program, especially more plays and paying for transportation and other such needed expenses for more competitions. So my brother helped build up the musical arts section of the school into decent prominence which definitely made the administration sit up and take notice. With me in tech I also pulled my own contacts in the fine arts department to contribute in painting and designing for the sets so we had pretty good stuff from that. And the cooking department I even pulled in to cater some of the fundraising activities we did around some of the plays (cooking department was less home cooking and far more vocational focused). As for my younger sister, she was also in theater and choir but she was also in the debate team and got the focus pulled that direction too. She took some business focused class on top of that and talked the teacher into helping with the advertising of the plays and the fundraising activities around them and even advertising for the choir and fine arts competitions. One of my sister’s biggest roles was fulfilling the club I did try to start with my friends but never could get going (scheduling and ran out of time). Basically the idea was for a student led tutoring program after school. My sister got it put together and running and it became a staple even after she graduated. This helped the school refocus almost completely away from its hyper focus on football. My sister didn’t stop there though. She was also the school mascot. At the time, the mascot program was so small that it was combined with the cheerleading program, not exactly a norm, but by the time my sister graduated it was it’s own program. My sister won some accolades for the program which made it possible, especially when she fought for the funding she had earned for that be properly set aside for the mascots instead of added to the cheerleading program (they did not bring in accolades to excuse their high budget). All this pushed out various friends to push for their favored programs to gain notice. The dance team broke off from the cheerleading program and the flag people (forget the official name) broke off from the marching band into their own programs. The various vocational programs got more funding and expanded. They gained a lot of attention and popularity eventually. The fine arts program finally was able to display their work and was given a space in the school to do so. I believe a few science based clubs were started around my sister’s time before she graduated. So yeah it was a huge transition for my school. Football was still popular enough as a social thing, it’s a cultural thing for the state I live in, but it no longer was the sole activity that focused on to the exclusion of all others. I believe they even finally set up an orchestra which was difficult for my brother to get going (though he got a jazz band going and they would even perform at festivals). It took us showing that these programs could bring positive notice to the school for the administration to take us seriously but I’m proud of the mark left from our efforts. Anyway, that’s a good portion of my experience in a high school in the USA. Not the entirety but it’s there. As for the drugs and fights and such, well, my circle of friends didn’t deal with that. My siblings could tell you more since their circles were more in contact with that but I’ll tell you it was more a social thing. My group dealt more in information, welcoming new students, and lgbtq+ issues and basically being the “good kids” who were maybe a lil bit like mobsters lol. In that we protected our interests I mean. We dealt with bullies too and kept in check many of the other groups who were less savory. We just were a group with good connections is all and since we handled all the newcomers, we also had contacts everywhere willing to help us. In any other school we would have been too much of outcasts to have much power but with the upheaval of the fast cultural transition my school was goi through at the time, such things took a backseat since almost everyone was “new” and so you were just happy that someone was nice to you and showed you the ropes and helped you find a suitable friend group for you to fall into. Since my group filled that role, outcast wasn’t a negative label for our group at this time. That time has passed though but I will say I am still friends with almost everyone from back then. In fact, my girlfriend is my best friend from back then. We have been dating for over 10 years, 11 in December of the year I post this. I’m quite glad I had the experience I did in high school, because I made some lifelong friends and met the love of my life.

  • @Henry_Pribadi
    @Henry_Pribadi Год назад +4

    Finally Princess Yumi is backkk... We miss you

  • @svmmer8151
    @svmmer8151 Год назад +2

    So happy to see hanna again

  • @helenadawn5
    @helenadawn5 Год назад

    Yaay new video !!

  • @nancyluois5041
    @nancyluois5041 Год назад +15

    Please bring back more challenges with bom and yumi😊😊

  • @justinwill7420
    @justinwill7420 Год назад +2

    I'm happy to see that Hanna has returned

  • @NumoNe101
    @NumoNe101 Год назад +2

    Hanna is backkk!

  • @noah_hs
    @noah_hs Год назад

    My favorite duo is back 😍😍

  • @_nixxyy_02
    @_nixxyy_02 Год назад +3

    The best duo ever 🔥

  • @RedRose-vj2rz
    @RedRose-vj2rz Год назад +2

    Missed them!!!

  • @jonhunter8774
    @jonhunter8774 Год назад +1

    great video wish you could post every day

  • @rickhoover6479
    @rickhoover6479 Год назад

    Welcome back Hanna! It's good to see Yumi and Hanna together.

  • @misterflamingo
    @misterflamingo Год назад +2

    Finally!!! Yumi Hanna and the GOOD giggle format! Damn i missed this 😁

  • @dwogilvie_aka_wallythecrow
    @dwogilvie_aka_wallythecrow Год назад +1

    She is back. ❤. Yumi and Hanna. ❤

  • @blossomlove1291
    @blossomlove1291 Год назад +4

    Where I come from (Nigeria) all schools wear uniforms both public or private...people go to public schools but there are a lot of private schools. I go to a private school and there are a LOT of rules. You can't make coloured hair extensions,you can't paint your nails to school, you can't wear a jacket that is notpart of the school uniform, you can't bring phones to school,no make up is allowed, you can only wear normal clothes if there is a public celebration (e.g Christmas, independence day,children's day, if there's a party in school),youmust not be caught kissing the opposite sex,Our bags are checked every morning for gadgets ,alcohol, make up,sharp objects......if you make coloured hair to school you are asked to loosen it before the Next week,if your hair extension is more than bra length they cut it to bra length,no beads or hair accessories apart from black scrunchies or black clips,bullying is a big deal here if you bully someone you either get detention or suspension (but that doesn't stop them from bullying others obviously ) once you get to the 12th grade you have a lot of classes,after school lessons,early morningclasses because of the upcoming exams .....I guess my school is really not that strict😂

  • @Shane-xy4og
    @Shane-xy4og Год назад +1

    HANNA'S BACK!!!!! 😍🥰❤❤❤

  • @jadejimenezschrodingerskitten
    @jadejimenezschrodingerskitten Год назад +12

    Not really. I went to public school with uniforms. I lived in Florida. Since I grew up in the hood we had locker checks and random bag checks lol Metal detectors too

    • @joonie9347
      @joonie9347 Год назад

      same bruh i was like damn where she went to school at seems fun

  • @anacarolinagomes859
    @anacarolinagomes859 Год назад +1

    finally our giggle crew is back!!!

  • @DivineMike
    @DivineMike Год назад +1

    FINALLYYYY YALLL POSTEEDDD AGAINNNN
    IDK WHO WIPED THE PAGE FROM THE LAST 3 WEEKS BUT IM HAPPY YALL ARE STILL HERE

  • @maniacb9171
    @maniacb9171 Год назад

    1:09 "ooh yeah" the sound effect had me LOL

  • @weshammermeister9044
    @weshammermeister9044 Год назад +4

    I have been missing those two ladies. Hanna I wish yolu all the best with Miss Universe Pageant

  • @andreasenglund3101
    @andreasenglund3101 Год назад +1

    A new Giggle video? Yeeeeeeeeeeeeessss

  • @BookNerd4Music
    @BookNerd4Music Год назад

    lol-- I'm way too old to scream at my computer the way i did when I saw Hanna!!! Welcome back ladies!

  • @Draolven
    @Draolven Год назад +3

    My heart breaks. As a half African American, half Native American I too was well aware of the racism. That and bullying and making kids unsafe in school until they think to scare their bullies by bec9ming worse than them and bringing a gun. That is no life for children. When they need more Kevlar than the cops....so sad. We must do better. Be better. I once got to meet the Dalai Lama at my school and he said to me "Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible to be kind. I would have been honored to be you girls' friend in high school. The ones who bullied you missed out. Sucks for them.

  • @Logovanni
    @Logovanni Год назад +2

    She said some untrue things. Middle schoolers aren’t driving themselves to school, for one. Only really rich kids get a car as a birthday gift. The leading cause of death of teenagers in the US is unintentional injuries (accidents). The second leading cause of death is suicide, the third is assault/homicide. Plenty of high schoolers take the school bus. Students of public school are never required to take public transportation. It isn’t illegal to leave your kid at home alone when they’re old enough, and 15 is definitely old enough.
    There are definitely high school kids who think it’s cool to be an asshole and racism against foreigners is an easy outlet for that. I honestly can’t imagine it’s significantly different in Korea in that regard.

  • @HossBonaventureCEO
    @HossBonaventureCEO Год назад +5

    Does Yeseul from Peach work for GIGGLE on the side? Both channels stopped uploading around the same time and then they both come back within a day of each other.

  • @Koakoa45
    @Koakoa45 Год назад +5

    Where I live in USA school uniforms are mandatory in public schools from k-12. They went to uniforms to stop fights and bullying over clothes and shoes. Students can drive to school in 3rd and 4th year of high school. You need a permit, driver's license, good behavior and good grades. School busses are often called Twinkies here cause many have white tops and look like the desert LOL ALL schools have police especially high schools! Too many shootings, drinking and drugs. Backpacks have to be see through or mess, lockers are not used any longer anywhere pretty much in America. School food is gross especially that cardboard greasy pizza.

    • @Alici_Evans
      @Alici_Evans Год назад +1

      At my school, backpacks don’t have to see-through/mesh and the lockers are available - you just have to request them. Everybody just finds it faster and easier to get to your class by not having to use a locker.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      ​@@Alici_Evans are lockers were provided we didn't need to request them this was high-school. Elementary didn't need them there'd wasn't any need to you had the same class teacher and material wasn't much to take home a book here and there most are just packets. You could have any bag you like. Times were simpler back then so much has changed that it seems to much now.

  • @Shay45
    @Shay45 Год назад +1

    Even if she didn’t say “Orange County, California” you can still tell she went to school in a rich area.
    Schools in the USA will change depending on what state or district it is in.

  • @hanng1242
    @hanng1242 Год назад +23

    Hanna is wrong about the leading cause of death for teenagers. The leading cause of death for teenagers in America is unintended injuries - about of third of teenager deaths are caused by accidents. Another 20% comes from suicides. Around 18% come from homicides, but that number includes all homicides - not just school shootings. Additionally, one needs to be clear on what counts as a school shooting. Are we including just the Columbine-type things, or any shooting that happens at a school? For example, at the end of "American History X," the younger brother gets murdered in the school bathroom because some other kid thought he dissed him the other day. Do we count this as a "school shooting?" What if instead of happening in the school itself, it occurred on the street as the victim was walking home from school? When people hear the phrase "school shooting," they think of the Columbine situation, but the 18% rate includes the intentional killing of the teenager anywhere, and with any (or no) weapon.
    As for kids staying home alone, it is not illegal (at least not in most of the U.S. - California is particularly officious when it comes to parenting). What has happened though, is that more and more parents have become helicopter parents, and more people are inclined to report normal parents to the department of human services because they think that they should be helicopter parents. In the sane parts of the U.S. (e.g. not California), nobody has a problem with a normal 6th-grader walking to and from school and staying home alone until his parents return from work. These places also have no problem with kids getting on their bicycles and riding all around town or playing in a park w/o parental supervision. Some of these places even have no problem with a student having a rifle in his truck in the school parking lot because he either went hunting before school, or he is going hunting after school.

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 Год назад +2

      The #1 cause of death for anyone in the industrialized world, after they make it out of infanthood and up until old age, is accidents (or, "unintended injuries.") Except, of course, in S. Korea, but, let's not discuss that.

    • @BlackSmokeDMax
      @BlackSmokeDMax Год назад +1

      Great info here!

    • @daeseongkim93
      @daeseongkim93 Год назад +1

      @@gravityissues5210 and Japan..... they have it worst

    • @ronaldbartell4968
      @ronaldbartell4968 Год назад

      I should have read this comment before I went and wrote a book. Oh well I did get some other info out. It sounds like the Los Angeles gun controllers were trying to get her programmed.

  • @mingan3781
    @mingan3781 Год назад +24

    Honestly when I was 12 I was often left at home. Legally it probably shouldn't be that way but most people don't care. I agree that if you're under at least 12 you shouldn't be left at home alone

    • @Alici_Evans
      @Alici_Evans Год назад +1

      I think it should be fine if you’re like 10, but I understand for like 4 or 6 year olds.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      Lol most here were fine at 7 wasn't illegal still isn't in California but we're not in the city also so different rules. They go by if your responsible enough then you can stay home alone at 12 people here are babysitting.

  • @victoriajustice8239
    @victoriajustice8239 Год назад +1

    When i was in highschool there was a surprise check up where they have metal detectors and they will search ur bag but i was in New York.
    For marijuana it was hard to catch because there were multiple dealers and edibles were big so who could tell when it was in gummy or brownie form

  • @nativetexan9776
    @nativetexan9776 Год назад

    Most talkative people on earth!

  • @taehyung8511
    @taehyung8511 Год назад

    I love it ..

  • @im_just_vidu
    @im_just_vidu Год назад

    Yumi and Hannah back again 💖

  • @e_eri_xo
    @e_eri_xo Год назад

    Wooowwaahhh finally after long time.... our yumi .....ㅠㅠ

  • @Gohularivarasan
    @Gohularivarasan Год назад

    Deadly duo #yumi & #hanna #giggle

  • @ssabae
    @ssabae Год назад

    오랫만에 업로드네요ㅎ

  • @ariify1248
    @ariify1248 Год назад

    yessss

  • @yydnas993
    @yydnas993 Год назад

    I like it when she mentions fox news 🤣🤣 smh poor Hanna, just letting you know you are loved overseas ❤️

  • @mimikpopfan339
    @mimikpopfan339 Год назад

    5:02 it is till 5 grade in canada

  • @amirluqman9982
    @amirluqman9982 Год назад

    Love you ❤️❤️

  • @Emitan414
    @Emitan414 Год назад

    Hanna is so pretty !!! I want to look pretty like her too !!!

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Год назад +1

    A lot of schools have hidden metal detectors so a gun can’t slip through the cracks. It’s kinda annoying as you can’t see them because they are hidden so well. Other schools have gone the opposite way with overt metal detectors to catch everything that goes in and out.
    I went to a high school with a hidden metal detector and it was fine. Sometimes a ROTC student would forget a wood rifle somewhere and the school locks down until they find the thing and they would get a very stern lecture about it and just put it a designated bag next time. We never had the need to truly lock down as we were in a high traffic area with neighborhoods behind the school and a shopping center in the front. It was very quiet mostly besides the usual gossip and games on Friday nights.

  • @itzugbad280
    @itzugbad280 Год назад

    our school food in the UK is plain BUT they do give you desserts like ice cream, and muffins and if you would get it from somewhere else on a school day you can but you have to be in year 11 (11th grade) to be able to go out am sorry if it sounds confusing am bad at explaining

  • @itzugbad280
    @itzugbad280 Год назад

    My school was strict if we didn't get the right uniform they would make us go back home or lunch detention and there's this think called behavior points you get a slip that says break time detention and it would be blue colored and if you get 2x behavior points you get detention after school for 40 mins or 1 hour

  • @gyimahfrancis4204
    @gyimahfrancis4204 Год назад

    How i miss You guys nerr

  • @itzugbad280
    @itzugbad280 Год назад

    it's so different in the UK we don't get our driving license until the age of 17 so am 16 but when I was high school I had to go on a school bus and In primary I walked because I lived close to my primary school and if there was fights ppl used to come and see the fight they didn't fight on the roof they fought by the playground so yeah it's crazy and there's uniforms in high school and primary

  • @hyunnHAA_
    @hyunnHAA_ Год назад

    School uniforms are usually only for private schools. Public have a dress code but no uniform, like mine no showing shoulders no pants above the knee etc..

  • @davga91
    @davga91 Год назад +2

    Finally Yumi 🇲🇳🇲🇳🇲🇳❤️❤️❤️

  • @kaydeluxe
    @kaydeluxe Год назад

    Alot of public schools dress freely here but some also wear uniforms and the private schools also. ALOT of kids ride the bus here, mostly elementary and middle school but highschool kids too. BUT if u are in a wealthy area den u prob dont see it alot

  • @cloudsn
    @cloudsn Год назад

    lol, it's hard to say "most" when this girl just went to school in Orange County. It's different all over the US. Even a town 20 minutes away might be different. Where I grew up most kids took the school bus until junior year of high school. Then about half the kids got cars, and we all worked out carpool arrangements with our friends. A smaller portion got rides from parents, as that was seen as uncool.

  • @thorstenbrandt6256
    @thorstenbrandt6256 Год назад

    There Isn't a bike licence in germany, evreybody can ride it and most people do.
    But you get something called "Verkehrsunterricht" (=traffic lessons), at least when I was little somewhere in the last century ;-)
    We had it in first or second grad and later in 5 or 6 were a police officer came to our school to check our bikes if they're OK to be driven on the street. And that were the only times I have seen police on school grounds and they were real cops from the local police station or - in some cases - police man who specialized in teaching children about traffic.
    Here in Hamburg the police even has a Punch and Judy show (Polizei-Kasper) to teach pre-schools and chirldren in the first grades about the rules they have to follow to be save in traffic. And since kids here still use their bike, public transportation, or simply go by foot to get to school it's really important to teach such things.

  • @juliacleveland
    @juliacleveland Год назад +3

    The fighting part is not true 😅😅. It doesn't matter to the school if u attack first or not, you both get in trouble. Even out of school sometimes the victim gets in trouble. There was a man who broke into a house, fell on a knife that was on the counter, sued the person who's house he broke into, and won. I love their view points though lol. It is really interesting to see how someone views America. I was born and raised here so its always fun to see the differences! Especially with a country like South Korea (my favorite country!!!)

    • @migueldeannadodge4824
      @migueldeannadodge4824 Год назад +1

      I'm a teacher, and that's exactly right. If you both participate at all, you both get suspended.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      ​@@migueldeannadodge4824 nope not when I was in school the victim was the only one to get in trouble the person who did the bulling wasn't punished it still that way at a alot of schools.

    • @migueldeannadodge4824
      @migueldeannadodge4824 Год назад

      @@bellaswan1459 Well, that's not cool. Certainly is not how it should be.

  • @ivechang6720
    @ivechang6720 Год назад

    In most areas of the USA a children can only be left unsupervised for so many hours, the count varies with age of child. Not so much that they can never be home alone, but certainly not for extended periods of time.

  • @LoveMyAriel09
    @LoveMyAriel09 Год назад +5

    Lol I live in California and I didn't know there are cities where there's no public transportation. Schools in the U.S. are are different depending on the city or county. Like growing up I never saw a fully indoor school The only lockers we had was for P.E. and it was only big enough to fit your clothes, maybe a binder. In the area I grew up for elementary, middle school, and high school didn't really see a lot of school buses, mostly saw them for field trips, this was in L.A. county. I moved to San Bernardino county in high school and had to ride the bus since I lived more than 2 miles from the school.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      Transportation is little to none out in rual areas where I live in California. They used to have a bus like the cities but they got rid of it cause barley anyone used it and it cost to much as it was far away. Uber drivers won't even come out here and taxis wont also so you need a car to go anywhere. Schools busses are provided and there are free to everyone. My elementary owned the bus and worked on them on school grounds. One man owned all 5 and drivers were required to know basic fixes. He was a wonderful bus driver all of them were not so much in high-school to stuck up.

  • @SilverSpectre266
    @SilverSpectre266 Год назад +1

    I hope we get another Bom scary video before Halloween is over

  • @itzugbad280
    @itzugbad280 Год назад

    year 7 (6th grade), year 8 (7th grade), and year 9 (8th grade) we had the same uniform but when we went to year 10 (9th grade) and year 11 (10th grade) we wore different uniforms. In the UK we start high school in year 7 (6th grade) age 11 or 12

  • @roberts1922
    @roberts1922 Год назад +1

    Hi girls, you’re a powerful duo 💜R

  • @salmapedroza6141
    @salmapedroza6141 Год назад

    As some who lives in OC. We have a lot of buses. OCTA.

  • @clementinekanfom9003
    @clementinekanfom9003 Год назад

    I laughed every time she mentioned Fox News cause it’s very true 😭

  • @RG-3PO
    @RG-3PO Год назад +1

    The leading cause of death of teenagers is not school shootings, but I had to look it up myself. I used the Centers for Disease Control website, and their WISQARS database which has an interactive graphic called the "Leading Causes of Death Visualization Tool". The top 3 for ages 10-14 are "unintentional injury", "suicide", "homicide." The top 3 for ages 15-24 are "unintentional injury", "homicide", "suicide." Even when you look elsewhere for "school shooting" data you have to sift through it. They lump together all shooting data that occurs on school property or grounds (for example - school owned parking lots that might be down the street), all age groups, and shootings at all times. Actual shootings by school age kids, inside the school building, and during school hours are not as high as the news would leave you to believe. One thing the news should report on more, but does not, is the huge drug problem in America. It is huge. Even States that have tried to legalize some drugs get flooded by gangs running unlicensed greenhouses and there are no resources to shut them down.

    • @bellaswan1459
      @bellaswan1459 Год назад

      Gangs don't care about the law if the have one there are 10 more. People using drugs very between counties as for shootings there is alot when I went to school there was maybe if any 1 not mass causality just between two people that's it no one else was at risk cause that wasn't there intention forgot the reason but it was stupid. One kid got in a fight through desk over a damn paperclip another stab someone over a stick of gum just stupid reasons that was the most there was. It's different now but most do not understand gun control isn't and will not work cause they can easily get it from the streets. Criminals don't care about laws or rules in place they find other ways.

  • @faervas1234
    @faervas1234 Год назад +2

    The number one cause of death of teens are accidents mostly being car accidents. Number 2 is homicide, which is gang related this is mostly because of the 2 strictest states with gun control have the highest number of gun deaths. none of it has to do with with being in schools. The criminals don't care about the gun laws. Not people shooting up schools like this video implies.
    The laws on children being home alone is state to state. Also school buses do get used. That is a city to city thing. by the time you are 16 to 17 you are getting the school by car.
    School lunches in the US are based on popular fast food. In South Korea the culture has common dishes that everyone makes at home. In the US it has multiple cultures so what people eat at home is different. The most common meals are popular food chains. So Pizza and burgers, chicken tenders . . ..
    There is a total misconception about racism in the States. I have lived and/or visited most of the major cities in the US. The south is not as racist as media portrays. I have seen very little of it compared to living in Chicago, visiting LA and San Francisco. The first time I visited the bay area I saw more acts of racism on the trip from the airport to the hotel. Then I have seen all my time in Texas. I lived also lived in Georgia. The one acceptation in the south is Mississippi.
    I am not saying there is not racism it is not as prevalent in the south as the Media projects. The Media of the west and east coast project their issues on the rest of the states. Which has more to do with being in crowded cities.

  • @OfficialAwkbe
    @OfficialAwkbe Год назад

    For the first thing, not all schools that have uniforms are necessarily private. My high school was a public school but we had to wear uniforms in that school district. Our uniforms were so ugly, too. They said that it was basically to prevent bullying so we couldn't even wear certain colors, designs, etc. Anything with logos was a big nope and ladies couldn't wear jewelry. Guys also had to shave their facial hair and keep their hair a certain length, otherwise they were taken to the office with a razor or had to leave school. The rules were so strict. Everyone had to wear a belt on their pants and we couldn't wear shorts and skirts in high school. Only exceptions were for religious reasons.

  • @marysmith2060
    @marysmith2060 Год назад

    I went to a private girls school by choice. I loved the uniforms. All you needed was a clean , unwrinkled uniform. If I needed any period supplies. No problem. Ibuprofen or Tylenol, you ask anyone and get some.

  • @b.christensen9669
    @b.christensen9669 Год назад

    During the summer there was a bus that took us to the beach

  • @valholla100
    @valholla100 Год назад +2

    iidk, maybe its where i live but i never see or hear of asian hate and i'm in LA, not saying there isnt but i see very little if at all here

  • @kaydeluxe
    @kaydeluxe Год назад

    Never needed a babysiter. From 8- Now im 12, I grew up wit, "keep the doors lock and dont open it for NOBODY not even me. An STAY OUT THE WINDOW ion care who knock dont open it." 💀💀😂

  • @jaitsadi-gee
    @jaitsadi-gee Год назад +1

    I went to an excellent private school in DC, and we didn't wear uniforms. Also, through middle school, most Kids' parents (or their drivers) brought them to school. However, there was no shame in taking public transportation, especially when there was a group of us. It was fun (although, sometimes, we were not very well-behaved).🥴 (The school I graduated from is the one that turned down the Trump kid.)
    Generally, the lunches were pretty good, though (and there were places nearby where we could get food we preferred).

  • @paolaanimator
    @paolaanimator Год назад

    I wish I have a car when I turned 16 lol. My family isn't wealthy, but thankfully during K-12th grade I have access to free school bus transportation, and if I needed to commute somewhere after school, there's access to bus and train public transportation which is very affordable and I commuted during University years for first half and then I worked remotely in other half thanks to the pandemic. I still take public transportation but now that I am done with University, I'm aiming for a driver's license. I may wait out and see if car prices goes down. Edit: I'll add more. I didn't wear uniforms in all of my school years, so yeah it means if I outgrew clothes, I shopped around for a few new clothes during back to school seasons. As for school lunch, I ate them as last resort because they weren't that tasty, they tasted even bland, even the pizza would be too dry or soggy, but the lunch provided is all free. I would make lunch at home and bring it to school myself. There were restaurants outside the school but I never went out because of being tight in money, hence why I make lunch from home and went to school. As for my experience with bullying, it's not physical but instead others would ignore me or they leave in groups. I never really fit in with anyone so I got used to eating alone. Before I'm 18, I would arrive to a babysitter or a family relative at home, since kids can't be left alone. That's my school experience in Massachusetts. One thing I love about living in the city is that even though it is more pricier to live here, everything is very accessible here, like public transportation, you can ride a bike, walk anywhere, it's really nice not being limited to a car as the only source of transportation. We need more walkable locations across USA.

  • @ladydiamondprisca
    @ladydiamondprisca Год назад +1

    I walked to school in all of the countries I've lived. Private or not.

  • @arisolano9482
    @arisolano9482 Год назад

    In America or most states in America that I'm aware of (like California) you don't get a driver's license untill you are are 18. You are permitted a drivers permit at the age after 15 or 16 if you pass a driver's test but if you have to have someone 18 or over WITH a divers license already if you want to drive a vehicle. Otherwise if you are under 18 without a permit and a licensed adult you with get a ticket or worse. (Depending)

  • @b.christensen9669
    @b.christensen9669 Год назад

    At my Orange County public school we had Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Hispanic, black, and white students.
    Races mixed according to interests. Sports, the arts, and more.

  • @pleaseparkjimininmygarage-6212

    Hanna is miss universe korea omggggggg