@@mrbigbrain3116 its a reference to the deleted channel unus annus. If you see any more of my fellow cult members out there, tell them "memento mori" for me.
I remember in highschool one of my classmates in chemistry had a hoodie with the chemical formula for LSD and our teacher loved it until the dean was doing a tour
@@Youthinasiaa Yeah, my science teacher always let us have some rest for like 10 or 5 minutes or let us take a nap. Also she let us choose to go to the lab or learn in class sometimes.
in Malaysia, all school uniform all across the country looked the same unless you are in private which unlock the blazers (i think, never gone to private school before) and the colors of the pants is change.
@@akkico Malaysian here. You only unlock the blazer or vest option if you become a prefect but other than that, the only thing that changes is the colour of the pants, the tie design, or the colour of the shirt.
@Benjamin Armitage I think for me, the price of the uniforms was never an issue. For Elementary and Middle school, I had a simple uniform that didn't cost much, and then for high school I had a more pricey uniform but I went to a Charter School so my parents didn't mind shilling that much.
@Benjamin Armitage Damn, I wore it up until 6th where I then transferred. It was really expensive, and darn, my private school had 20 kids maximum in a grade.
my school uniform was almost always made by my mother and I didn't understand at the time why she did it, but towards the last 2-3 years of school she finally offered to buy one and I realized how unnecessarily expensive it was
My secondary school had an own clothes day and I saw one guy who was in my year just walking around wearing a full suit by choice. I asked him why and he just said he does it all the time.
my secondary school has no own clothes day and I'm happy cause I used to never participate in own clothes day bc I had no good clothes and I didn't want to get bullied but my friend were disappointed whenever I would wear nothing and the one day I wore something one of my teachers said I looked like my mum and I felt so embarrassed
Conners story about his presentation about conspiracy theories reminded me about my classmate who held a presentation about torture methods. The teacher wasn't pleased by that, but since the goal was just to improve presentation skills, you could choose your own topic.
a boy in my class, when we could pick our own topics to practice presentation skills, choose to talk about the process of making canned food Edit: I talked about the lore of FNaF (don’t know why, i’ve never even played the game)
@@aimlessequation5390 I live in Norway, and I don't know anyone who've had to wear school uniforms, and I've only had one kinda old English teacher introduce themselves by (just) their last name.
same as a swede i couldnt imagine having to call teachers by their last names. or having to have a school uniform. if a teacher would demand to be called by their last name id probably think they were super full of themselves.
6th form is called that because its at the same site as the secondary school is held, and college is its own completely separate place with no connections to a previous school but yes it also does then specialise in certain curriculums because of that. And now you HAVE to go to either or get a apprenticeship at 16
Sixth form originates from how the years used to be called. Secondary used to start again with 1st year, 2nd year etc so Sixth form started in the 6th year
Not all sixth-forms are connected to a secondary school. I went to a sixth form college (it calls itself that) that wasn't connected to a secondary school at all - the campus was literally just the sixth-form, nothing else.
For those who are confused: A sixth form is attached to a high school and doesn't have mature students. A college isn't attached to a high school and does have mature students. You're more likely to have to wear a uniform if you go to a sixth form. Colleges tend to have more diversity in course types as most sixth forms only offer A-level courses. Sixth forms tend to be more academic-focused. Whereas colleges tend to be more focused around preparing you for adult life. In my experience; people attend sixth form if they want to stay with their friends/ try to get onto a prestigious university course. Whereas people tend to go to college if they aren't planning to go straight to uni at 18 and want to pick up more life skills, or they plan on doing non-A-level courses to get into a university (like a b-tech). Colleges also tend to be a lot larger than sixth forms in terms of both campus size and population. That's all just a rule of thumb though. I think the only official distinction is the first paragraph.
You forgot the best one ... Sixth Form Colleges: These had the prestige of Sixth Forms but they weren't attached to high schools and were completely separate. The best of both worlds. Edit: Sixth forms sometimes policed shit like clothing and you weren't allowed to leave the school between classes. Sixth form college/colleges let you where what you want and leave when you want.
Tbh I only went to sixth form because it was easy, I knew the teachers that would teach me and how to get there basically I didn’t think I could deal with change , most of my friends went college. I didn’t want to go uni and a few people in my year went sixth form because they were lazy and didn’t want to do the college interviews
We had these damn planners in middle school that we were required to fill out for homeroom. Everyone fucking hated these things. They were plastic and everyone got one. We had to write literally all of out assignments down by subject in this damn planner and we were graded on this. It was to "Instill good organizational habits and planning". Well, you know how much good that did me? none. I did the planner for those two years. I still really hate them to this day.
We had homework journals where you wrote down the hw for each class that day and you'd get it signed weekly by your parents, if you had a class where you didn't get hw but didn't write down anything you'd get in trouble for disrespecting the teacher by not prescribing yourself self study it was stupid as hell. Also if you didn't do the hw the teacher would write a bad note that needed to be signed and students with more than 5 notes a term weren't allowed compete in sports for the school...
There are schools in America that have school uniforms. I went to one of them! It was a public advance school that required uniforms because they said it would help people stay focused on their studies.
private schools definitely have uniforms or at least a strict dress code, public schools only have them if they are in a city and/or poor area and honestly only in like the last 10-15 years. suburban public schools don't seem to use them. in my area it was mainly to stop random delinquents from being able to mingle within the school body easily and causing trouble. it also levels the socioeconomic disparity between kids a bit, not to mention its more money for the school system(which poor inner city schools never seem to have enough of.)
You can still leave school at 16 in England, but you have to be in some form of education until 18. You can go to 6th form, or you can go to college or an apprenticeship
@@henryellis9390 is that just in England? I haven't heard anything about it in Wales, that's a bit of a joke to be fair unless you want a trade or to go to university college is a waste of time in the uk
I'm so glad to hear I'm not the only person who love to wear the school uniform for the main reason of worrying what to wear next and just using it for the whole week. In our Philippine University, we call own clothes day, "wash day" and I would wear my uniform because I'm comfortable with it especially it's lightweight. Even during summer classes where uniforms are not compulsory, I even wear uniform, practical reasons. A teacher even called me out for wearing uniform while others are not.
In my country. A 2 year college course is called an Associate Degree. A 4 year course is an Undergraduate Degree. The next stage is Graduate school. Which is Law School, Medical School, MBA and Masters degree. The 3rd and final stage is Doctorate studies. Where you get your PhD and Doctorate degree.
Meanwhile in Scotland (who just had to do something different from Wales and England) - you have primary school (ages's 4/5 to 12/13) and then high school/secondary school (ages's 12/13 to 17/18 but you can leave after 4th year, at 16, if you're born between 1 March and 30 September). After high school there's either college (which covers NQ [National qualification], NC [National certificate], HNC [higher national certificate] or HND [Higher national diploma], some colleges do have uni qualifications, but few and far between) or go onto University.
@@seiwarriors You can do national 5's in college, but it's not a college course - they're paid for by yourself and just taught in a college as a night class normally
Northern Ireland schools equally have the most f’d up dress codes, in my old secondary school, you couldn’t wear a scarf inside, even if you were freezing your ass off, you still had to take off or else you were punished, also, you had to wear your school blazers in the hallways, even if it was June and was 30 degrees outside, you still had to wear it even if you were having heatstroke
they also got rid of normal ties in my school and enforced clip on ties which not only looked silly but you couldnt undo your top button if it was warm or whatever lol but in saying that our uniforms were actually okay compared to a lot of others in n.i
@@missingno88 I know, it was the same in my school, we had clip on ties as well and couldn’t undo the top button if it was hot, I know they wanted us to look professional but is appearance more important to them than education, to be honest I don’t care anymore because I left secondary school two years ago
Speaking of Northern Irish High school uniforms who else wasn't allowed to wear their PE jumper inside even tho it was snowing in like APRIL and the heating was turned off 🤣 , and if your tie or something else wasn't done right you where brought to a mirror and made to fix your uniform
@@Mrs.Cereal Oh yeah, that also used to happen as well, I always made sure my tie was on right so I wouldn’t have to go through the embarrassment of being told to go to a mirror and fix my tie
Schools in South Africa do school uniforms too. Then we get casual day which is own clothes day and sometimes we had to pay. My primary school's new principal started doing the pay for casual day almost every Friday. When I got to high school the blazers were mandatory
@@matt5991 Oof god I hate that, not to mention how expensive it is, I could buy 4 sets of clothes from mr price and have it last 3 times as long than expensive uniform
I remember my secondary school being absolute hell when it came to uniform, no joke. I got put in Remove for wearing white socks because it made me a bad influence to the other kids 😂😂
I really hate the fact, for my secondary school, I had a uniform, we had to buy and what really sucks was that the place you would buy the uniform at was shady AF. Because you can purchase clothes and then wait for them to call you back to come pick them hop later, yet these bastard would never call back and it’s not just me that it happened too. It happened to at least 4/10 people.
In the UK, the difference with 6th form and college is how much help you get with your work. College is more similar to uni in that you have to be more independent in your work whereas in 6th form, it's essentially just an extra 2 years of secondary. Also, the teaches tend to be more specialized in their respective fields in college.
At my school, we were so tried of getting punished due to uniform issues (i.e.: socks not reaching the knee) and other restrictions (i.e.: no dyed hair) that we made an organization to convince the principal to change the rules. i am shocked at how dress code straight up discriminates girls.
For outsiders. Here is the British school progression. Reception - Optional pre-school, intended to get kids ready for school, socialized etc. Basically a playgroup, where socialization is emphasised over learning. Usually composed of kids 3 - 5 years old. Primary school (lower) - Ages 5 - 8, primary education. Intended to get kids literate, and understand how the education system is going to work. You're graded in your performance here via the SATS test. And you start earning your GCSE's here. Wherein basically you take multiple tests over your education career, ramping up in difficulty. In your 3rd year, you take GCSE key stage 1 Primary school (upper) - Ages 8 - 11, More primary education, pretty much the same deal. But now you're graded via GCSE key stage 2. Secondary school (lower) - Ages 11 - 14, secondary education. This is where the big formative learning occurs. Intended to get students up to a point where they can generally function anywhere at a basic level. You're graded at the end of this period by a GCSE key stage 3. Secondary school (upper) - Ages 14 - 16, generally after your CATS test you're considered to be in the upper years. You usually have the option to choose certain classes you can specialize in, outside of the core lessons. So if you're interested in IT, you can fill your wildcard classes with IT. You're graded at the end of this period by the final GCSE test. GCSE's are considered the bare minimum qualifications when entering the work force usually. It's quite limiting getting work anywhere if you have no GCSE's. They're based on your whole school career, but heavily weighted towards your final performance. Sixth Form - Sixth form USED to be optional, and was basically 'Get a college level education, but you don't have to enrol in college, just get the college education here at school'. Not all schools offered Sixth Form, but now Sixth Form is now mandatory across the board until 18. College - A more focused specialized primer style education, the idea of college is that you go there with a future University/Career path in mind, and you go to college to get the grades and requirements needed to pursue that course in Uni. Both Sixth-Form and College use A-Levels as their grading system. A-Levels have a decent amount of value, they're enough to get you decent jobs in the analogous field. If you're really smart, you can get an A2 qualification, which guarantees you a place in Uni. University - Education end game, basically you can spec into any profession on Earth from here, assuming you got good enough grades from college. This is where you earn all your prestigious degrees, and honours etc. You can go pretty much as long as you want in Uni, studying what you can... *ahem* afford to study.
Just for clarification in the UK we have sixth form college where you can do A levels for 2 years (you study 3 or 4 subjects and do an exam at the end) and vocational college where you spend one or two years doing a specialised course
I love that Connor is referring to a state run school as a public school. In the UK a public school is a school that is operated in the public sector. AKA, private.
Sixth form is usually part of a secondary school and follows the school timetable something like 8:30-3:30. College differs that you only go in certain days in the week so it's a lot more flexible.
Too relatable. In high-school, the only time we wore anything that wasn’t school uniform was Christmas jumper day but we wore our blazers over our jumpers anyway 😂
Basically sixth form is connected to and run by a high school And college is the exact same thing, but more informal and not connected to a high school
Some American schools have uniforms and I'm talking about public schools. The elementary (K-5) and middle school (6-8) I went to had them, I only got to wear what I wanted in high school (9-12).
My High school had a very strange fascination with the top button being done up and tie being perfect. I never did that as the top button also was too tight and made me sick. Did not have a problem until a new headmaster arrives and one day stopped as he was walking past just to tell me personally to fix it, I was not the only one who did it. They also told a friend of mine to stop dying her hair when it was naturally ginger, that one made me laugh. Been a few years now and heard that it's not doing so well after I met with someone who was apparently an assessor or sorts in my University. When she went to check on the school a couple of students apparently threw a bucket of water on her or some thing like that.
It's so interesting because college in Canada is usually a 2 year diploma program, usually offering training in trades, whereas university is a 4 year bachelor's degree program like what you'd usually consider uni (in North America at least). Only uni offers masters and doctorates. Both need a high-school diploma to get into (so you have to graduate grade 12 basically). You can technically leave at 16 but you have a really limited job market.
For those who don't know, College in the UK is a type of 6th Form you can do before going to university, other types of 6th Form include A-Levels, BTEC, and Apprenticeships. Also I don't know this for sure but I'm pretty sure it's called 6th Form because secondary school ends after 5 years and 6th Form starts on the 6th
I always forget that here in Scotland our school system is different because we don't have sixth form we just include it as 5th and 6th year. You can just leave at anytime after 4th year
Some American schools do have school uniforms, especially private and catholic schools. But generally speaking there's just more of a guideline which can be varying levels of strict or dumb on what you can wear. Still have school colors though even if it doesn't really show up outside of school teams, spirit week and (depending on their budget) the color of the walls, hallways, lockers etc. But then our version of like wear your own clothes day would be like pajama day where most people just show up in their pajamas. Tends to be later in the year after the big exams too so it's pretty fun and chill.
I just left school (I’m Scottish) last year and can confirm that students would get really excited for non-uniform day and the teachers would always ramble about “every year, the students are less well behaved on non-uniform day”. Hehe. To be honest, I’m glad I didn’t have to decide on my outfit every school morning.
yeah, we don't have sixth form college and the age/year groups are totally different. i also think scottish schools are more lenient/less traditional but that could just be me
Connor is right for those looking for clarification. In the UK we have: Primary School (Ages 5-12) Secondary School (12-16) Sixth Form/College (16-18) University Sixth Form and College are the same thing but a Sixth Form is usually attached to a Secondary school, while a College tends to be a separate place.
I do remember back when I first started watching anime. I was hooked on the idea of having a school uniform. However now years later im so glad we never have to deal with that shit. Imagine having to pay that much money for your kids clothes which, depending on what time they hit puberty, would maybe fit them for half a year at most before you would need to buy new.
I remember when I left secondary school and went to college. I just had this crisis when I realised people would know if I wore the same shirt everyday. Never thought I’d miss school uniforms but they were so easy ;-; Still miss the blazers. Year 7s had these huge camping bags with them before they realised our blazers had enough pockets to carry everything you’d need, several bricks, and a burger.
Wore uniforms in elementary and middle school but bot highschool. I really didn't care about the uniform and even with no uniform i cycle the same 3 outfits every week.
School uniforms are extremely useful tools to kill unnecessary attention seeking tendencies and preventing some basis for bullying. You americans might not see the benefit, and i used to watch american shows with kids not wearing uniforms and think that was cool but now it's just a no brainer to have uniforms. The only "advantage" of not wearing uniforms is a bit of choice of wearing what you have, which by the way showed your economic class and purchasing power of your parents. We all know that sunday visits to church is primarily to show off your good clothes to your other community members and show that you're quite well off. Having a good uniform with sensible dress regulations teach a lot to children.
I’m my School here in Peru at the start of the day we prayed then they gave us a short story with questions, and then we would go outside to be in formation to later on raise our school’s and country’s flag, sing our country’s anthem and then march. I don’t know about you but I loved that.
Went to a private school k-12 in the US, so uniforms pretty much every day, but we'd have Jeans days where you could wear jeans and a school polo (with an occasional dress up day especially during spirit week). But the idea that a uniform was less stressful is wild to me, because you'd get judged based on the brand of coat, kahkis you worse, and even the shoes you had. It was a big deal for me for a while to convince my parents not to get me pleated pants so I wouldn't look as much like a dork
We called that dress down day. Also I am so glad we had school uniforms because when I was younger, like I would get straight up robbed for everything some days. Somehow I just had an invisible sign on my head that said, "victim" and "kick me." I have no doubt that I'd have walked home with less clothing that I left the house with, if I had to go in my own cloths, that coupled with the fact that I didn't behave a tonne of cloths to begin with.. and I wasn't even the richest kid man, screw that for a laugh. School uniforms were the lesser of 2 evils for me. XD Also 6th form is just A-levels for uni or higher education generally and college is further education where you can do anything from level 1 which is secondary school grade to level 8, which is degree level, pending the courses available.
In Scotland when I was growing up, High school was 'first year, second year, etc' and you could leave between 4th and 5th year but those last two years weren't called anything different or special. They were still high school. It purposefully gave a sense that leaving at 16 was leaving halfway through your education.
In the US and Canada, only private schools have uniforms; I used to go to a private school in Canada, and we had those "Own Clothes" days Garnt and Connor mentioned, but we called them"Free Dress" days. But like, my school's uniforms were the most boring thing (but then again, this was elementary/primary school), so I always looked forward to free dress days lol
Ugh, blazers. The college I attended here in the Philippines required us to dress, a White Shirt + Long Sleeve Uniform + Blazer, in a 30+ degree Celsius temperature. I remember one time there was a earthquake drill in our school, we have to go outside on a blazing temperature in the middle of summer and we're forbidden to take off our blazer, a student fainted because of it. Because of that the blazers there are now an optional thing to wear or required only on special occasions.
You actually don't have to do sixth form in the UK. You have to stay in education until you're 18 but that can be any sixth form, college, or an apprenticeship.
The days you didn't have to wear uniform were called "non-uniform day" where I live. My school uniforms: Primary School: Grey socks. Grey shorts (summer) or trousers (winter). A white polo shirt (summer) or long sleeved shirt (winter). A navy blue tie with lots of little herons on it (winter). A navy blue jumper with a heron on it (over where the breast pocket would be) (optional during summer). A gold brooch style badge showing your school house - either yellow, red, blue or green, with a golden heron in the middle (optional). For girls, they had a navy blouse in winter, and a blue and white checked dress in summer. P.E. kit was white shorts, a white polo shirt and grey daps. Secondary school: Year 7-11: Grey socks. Grey trousers. A white shirt. A royal blue tie with yellow and red stripes. A grey V-neck jumper (optional). A royal blue blazer with the school's coat of arms on the breast pocket. For Games there was a reversible rugby shirt with matching socks, with your house colour on one side and the school's royal blue on the other (along with the usual shorts, polo shirt, daps, football boots, etc. depending). Sixth form: The tie is now navy. The blazer is now navy. Prefects: A special tie, with kind of flowers on it. Observators: They also had a gown to wear, with a stripe to show their rank - yellow for regular observators, blue for the school vice captain and red for the school captain. They only wore it when doing observator duties, though (during assemblies, speech day and so on).
As someone from the UK. When I finished school in the UK at 16 I went to college because my school did not have a sixth form. The college I went to did qualifications up to level 5 but also allowed you to take a level 6 course there where you would get a bachelor's degree if you did a third year and the degree would be from a university they have a partnership with. So sixth form is certainly not a given and college is definitely a thing. Like the college I went to literally had nothing to do with my school.
It's interesting to me that some of these same developments happened in Malaysia. We have 6th form which is like a precursor to going to university that you can either take or not take (the alternatives are going to a matriculation college or getting a diploma at university before taking your degree). 6th form in Malaysia used to wear uniforms, but in recent years they were allowed to wear their own clothes, though still required to be formal clothes and had to adhere to the same rules and the smaller kids. Maybe it's because Malaysia uses a system sort of inherited/copied from the British, (because you know, bri'ish empire innit), that any developments in the British system are observed and adapted locally as well.
In germany (where i live) there are no rules to clothes, the only thing is that u cant go to school in a bikini the rest is no problem. Just when u sit in the classroom u cant have ure hat or smthg similar on And there is the Elementary school from the 1-4 grade than they analize ure grades and put u in one of 4 diffrent schools There is the "Gymnasium" (goes from 5th-12th Class level) where the kids with the good grades go than there is the "Realschule" (from the 5th-10th class) where the people with the middle grades go and than there is the "Mittelschule" (5th - 10th class) where the people with the bad grades go and than there is the school for the really really bad grades (i forgot the name but it can go from the 3rd- ** grade) normally the disabled kids go there but there kids that just have really bad grades and go there wothout any diseases or smthg else. And if ure bad on the school where u are u can fall down to one of the schools that are not as good as ures was. I dont like it, like the people in the "Mittelschule" they dont care about grades bcs in theire joblife it depens on wich school u were going. The kids in the "realschule" have the most prblms they have to face life more than anyone else bcs they arent just bad at school they nees to keep up bcs its for most people a disappontment when u dont go to the highest school and i dont say that the others dont have prblms but i think the people in the "realschule" have it not as good as the others + they need to go to another school to make the other 2 classes and than after that they need to go to college. The people in the "Gymnasium" dont face life, the only thing u see is that theire rude, think that they are smthg better than the others and all or most of them are bullies. They dont understand what it is to really failing smthg just bcs ure mind doesnt memorize it. I was in the "Gymnasium" a half year, and i fcking hated it soo than i failed (Not with intent) and now i'm in the "realschule" i can say i'm lucky bcs my class is really Relaxed just that the whoule school hates us for no reason and the teaches hate us all. Wich causes anxiety, depression and nobody can learn anything and we are from all of the schools (bcs all of them are Next to each other) the worst class, when it goes about grades. So its basicly Assassination classroom without the killing and a fun koro-sensei. If there are any germans here correct me if i said smthg wrong
I see, we don't have any sophisticated stuff like that in India, we have the same school (atleast I did) from preschool to 10th grade (you're 15 or 16 years old) then we have higher secondary school from 11th to 12th grade (17 or 18) here, it's pay to win literally. If u are a low scorer, u just pay a shitton of money and u can get inside anywhere (especially if u consider the caste system) except government colleges :(
In India, we enter primary school (3-4 to 5-6) its called LKG (lower kindergarten) and UKG (upper kindergarten) then we enter elementary school its like divided into two parts 1st is (7-8 to 10-11) 1st grade to 5th grade then the 2nd part is (11-13) 6th grade to 8th grade then its senior year again divided in to so the 1st part is (14-15) 9th and 10th grade I we have to study a lot cuz it will affect us in the last 2 years 10th grade the most important part in this then comes the 2nd part is (16-17) 11th and 12th this 2 years decides our career we have a system of streams its like science (for all the science type of jobs) and commerce (for jobs like accountant, etc) these two are the major streams the comes minor streams they are arts (this is for all art kind of thing and literature),(there are more but it will make a long list) the streams system is like the our guidance period. And so the schooling is over then we enter professional education. We go to collage for about 4 years or even 3 years of bachelor study. The 2 or 3 years in masters (which is optional) that's pretty much it 🤔 so if we take masters then you'll be 24 by then. Now am 15 years old so it makes me sad to see that I'll have to study 10 more years 😢 😔 😞 💔
they didn't have uniforms when I was in public schools. usually, private schools have a type of uniform that parents agreed to and paid for. when I was in public school we wore whatever we wanted as long as it met the school dress code. 2 years after I left school, they started enforcing uniforms in a lot of public schools across America and my district was one. one reason is that a lot of teachers can't keep their pants around their waists or skirts around their thighs.
I went to a few different schools growing up, but I went to one that had a uniform for my last two years. I genuinely liked it so much more, far less stress deciding on what to wear and you wouldn't get bullied based on what clothes you had.
As it stands in the UK. You go to primary school from ages 5-11. You then go to secondary school from 12-16. In the UK you have to be in education until you are 18 so there are 3 options. Firstly your secondary school has a sixth form so you stay on and do your a-levels there. 2nd option is you leave and go to a sixth college, regular collage or attend sixth form at another school and do your A levels. The last option is you attend college and study a specific field for example you might do an engineering apprenticeship or you might learn a trade such as plumbing or an electrician as apprenticeships in the UK require those who study them to submit coursework and such in order to become qualified.
Nah UK now is Primary school Secondary school And from that you can either go to college or 6th form College is where you study only 1-3 subjects for example i do Criminology Sociology Psychology And then 6th form is basically an extension of Secondary school where you have non specified lessons and school rules still apply like no phones and uniforms but college is non uniforms and phones aloud, basically more freedom
I only remember having homeroom in 7th/8th grade and it was in the middle of the day, not the start. One of those years my homeroom was a computer lab so we spent the whole time messing around with flash games/etc. Looking back on it, I guess maybe it was their way of giving a "recess" to kids that were too old to have a playground.
“Was your school run by Herbert the Pervert?”
“I’m not gonna get into that...” 😶
Is it related to Rolf Harris?
He was likely referring to Peter Nicholas Lennox
There’s a story there
@@DontuseMyRealNameYTplz1425 mind enlightening me..?
@@samuraijosh1595 oh I wouldn’t know. It was a joke considering how he said it sounded like he was implying something
As an English person, this is the most relatable show on the internet.
Why do I see so many people with you profile pic? I think this is the 4th I’ve seen.
@@mrbigbrain3116 its a reference to the deleted channel unus annus.
If you see any more of my fellow cult members out there, tell them "memento mori" for me.
@@096-w1b
Ok 👌
Thanks
As an australian i relate to joey
As an American I can't relate but it's interesting
The red shirt edit on Joey really tripped me out o.O
Bro, i had to rewatch it 3 times to make sure my eyes arnt fucking with me.
Bro I rewind the video for a multiple times for a double check
Im high and when i first saw that i went. How much did i smoke????
It took me way too fucking long before I realized it
??? Im not getting something here
I remember in highschool one of my classmates in chemistry had a hoodie with the chemical formula for LSD and our teacher loved it until the dean was doing a tour
bro highschool science teachers are the chillest people ever
@@Youthinasiaa There’s only one teacher like that ik, but I guess it’s because all the other science teachers are old so they’re always on ass
@@Youthinasiaa in my school that's only true cause my science teacher are young like my physics and chemistry teacher are in there late 20s.
@@Youthinasiaa Yeah, my science teacher always let us have some rest for like 10 or 5 minutes or let us take a nap. Also she let us choose to go to the lab or learn in class sometimes.
@Xenon 6752 my science teacher puts legit memes on our online tests
there is a RULE in the UK where the posher the school, the more absurd the uniform.
More like, the more absurd the uniform the posher the school
UK schools suck
@@chesterlockett4002 inniiiittttt
in Malaysia, all school uniform all across the country looked the same unless you are in private which unlock the blazers (i think, never gone to private school before) and the colors of the pants is change.
@@akkico Malaysian here. You only unlock the blazer or vest option if you become a prefect but other than that, the only thing that changes is the colour of the pants, the tie design, or the colour of the shirt.
Garnt: "I didn't give a shit about fashion until later in my life"
Says that whilst wearing the most Boujis turtleneck
Me: "yeah I can tell"
mans is wearing that anime milf sweater
@@ALASTOR101. lmao
I knew someone was gonna point out his turtleneck
Haha maybe he making up for lost days
bruh, he got moobs
Joey: Cause American High Schools don't wear uniforms
Me, an American that wore uniforms up until college: Ah fuck
@Benjamin Armitage I think for me, the price of the uniforms was never an issue. For Elementary and Middle school, I had a simple uniform that didn't cost much, and then for high school I had a more pricey uniform but I went to a Charter School so my parents didn't mind shilling that much.
@Benjamin Armitage Damn, I wore it up until 6th where I then transferred. It was really expensive, and darn, my private school had 20 kids maximum in a grade.
my school uniform was almost always made by my mother and I didn't understand at the time why she did it, but towards the last 2-3 years of school she finally offered to buy one and I realized how unnecessarily expensive it was
P
@@emanacacio324 I'm equally amused and terrified by this reply. So much emotion fills me by this simple "P".
5:48 ok, for a moment I thought that I was color blind
My secondary school had an own clothes day and I saw one guy who was in my year just walking around wearing a full suit by choice. I asked him why and he just said he does it all the time.
what a fucking chad
@@toppatblue no
my secondary school has no own clothes day and I'm happy cause I used to never participate in own clothes day bc I had no good clothes and I didn't want to get bullied but my friend were disappointed whenever I would wear nothing and the one day I wore something one of my teachers said I looked like my mum and I felt so embarrassed
ooh on our no uniform days, kids would wear the uniform of our rival schools just to troll.
In my primary there was a kid who’d always dress up in a scooby doo outfit. Even the head was Scooby, I miss him
Conners story about his presentation about conspiracy theories reminded me about my classmate who held a presentation about torture methods. The teacher wasn't pleased by that, but since the goal was just to improve presentation skills, you could choose your own topic.
Your friend was a madlad
a boy in my class, when we could pick our own topics to practice presentation skills, choose to talk about the process of making canned food
Edit: I talked about the lore of FNaF (don’t know why, i’ve never even played the game)
As a Scandinavian I'm just sitting here like "Uniforms?" while also realising I didn't even know half of my teachers' last names.
Where do you live in Scandinavia because that is not true everywhere you go and definitely not in every school..?
@@aimlessequation5390 I live in Norway, and I don't know anyone who've had to wear school uniforms, and I've only had one kinda old English teacher introduce themselves by (just) their last name.
At best there might be private schools where these are normal, but it's not really the culture here.
Oh yeah definitely. Half of the teachers even had nicknames
same as a swede i couldnt imagine having to call teachers by their last names. or having to have a school uniform. if a teacher would demand to be called by their last name id probably think they were super full of themselves.
at 5:50 the editor even changed the shirt from blue to red
So glad I wasn't the only one to notice it
Joey: Red & Black, Gryffindor.
Connor: Mossgreen, Slytherin.
Everything is starting to make sense!
6th form is called that because its at the same site as the secondary school is held, and college is its own completely separate place with no connections to a previous school but yes it also does then specialise in certain curriculums because of that. And now you HAVE to go to either or get a apprenticeship at 16
Or be in some other education eg college of them training courses
Sixth form originates from how the years used to be called. Secondary used to start again with 1st year, 2nd year etc so Sixth form started in the 6th year
Not all sixth-forms are connected to a secondary school. I went to a sixth form college (it calls itself that) that wasn't connected to a secondary school at all - the campus was literally just the sixth-form, nothing else.
theres a primary,secondary and six form all in one for my school but the primary has its own building
@@inkheart01 ye, all on the same property and connected to each other thats exactly what i meant
For those who are confused: A sixth form is attached to a high school and doesn't have mature students. A college isn't attached to a high school and does have mature students.
You're more likely to have to wear a uniform if you go to a sixth form. Colleges tend to have more diversity in course types as most sixth forms only offer A-level courses.
Sixth forms tend to be more academic-focused. Whereas colleges tend to be more focused around preparing you for adult life.
In my experience; people attend sixth form if they want to stay with their friends/ try to get onto a prestigious university course. Whereas people tend to go to college if they aren't planning to go straight to uni at 18 and want to pick up more life skills, or they plan on doing non-A-level courses to get into a university (like a b-tech).
Colleges also tend to be a lot larger than sixth forms in terms of both campus size and population.
That's all just a rule of thumb though. I think the only official distinction is the first paragraph.
That's such a good succinct explanation! 😀
You forgot the best one ... Sixth Form Colleges: These had the prestige of Sixth Forms but they weren't attached to high schools and were completely separate. The best of both worlds.
Edit: Sixth forms sometimes policed shit like clothing and you weren't allowed to leave the school between classes. Sixth form college/colleges let you where what you want and leave when you want.
@@Imn0rthern really?! 😮 don't think we had those in Northern Ireland 🤔 (maybe they do now, I'm too old 🤣)
Tbh I only went to sixth form because it was easy, I knew the teachers that would teach me and how to get there basically I didn’t think I could deal with change , most of my friends went college.
I didn’t want to go uni and a few people in my year went sixth form because they were lazy and didn’t want to do the college interviews
The Canadian school system is so similar to uk's
Changing the color of Joey’s shirt is such a small detail edited in, but it makes this so awesome. Love ya editor ❤️
lol I noticed too
noticed that too!
Bro same
Yes!! I was looking for this comment
Same here
Woah! How did Joey's shirt change from red to blue
Glad u mentioned it, thought I was tripping on something when I saw the color change
Yeah that was some funny editing haha
That was some big brain editing
Good, I knew something was odd. I'm not going crazy.... Yet
I thought I was tripping istg
We had these damn planners in middle school that we were required to fill out for homeroom. Everyone fucking hated these things. They were plastic and everyone got one. We had to write literally all of out assignments down by subject in this damn planner and we were graded on this. It was to "Instill good organizational habits and planning". Well, you know how much good that did me? none. I did the planner for those two years. I still really hate them to this day.
In my school we had to get our parents to sign them every week and if we failed to we'd get detention. What were they signed for? I'm fucked if I know
@@styxthistle497 OHH! I totally repressed that! We had to too and kids were constantly in in school suspension for it.
@@styxthistle497 Same lol, I would get a demerit is what my school called it, not signing your planner meant a demerit and 3 of those meant detention
We had the same thing but we weren’t graded or any thing most just did it to earn like this school money thing
We had homework journals where you wrote down the hw for each class that day and you'd get it signed weekly by your parents, if you had a class where you didn't get hw but didn't write down anything you'd get in trouble for disrespecting the teacher by not prescribing yourself self study it was stupid as hell. Also if you didn't do the hw the teacher would write a bad note that needed to be signed and students with more than 5 notes a term weren't allowed compete in sports for the school...
There are schools in America that have school uniforms. I went to one of them! It was a public advance school that required uniforms because they said it would help people stay focused on their studies.
Same I go to one of those schools
My school required uniforms til high school
My brother went to one of those.
Same, I went to a charter school, but then it got closed down
private schools definitely have uniforms or at least a strict dress code, public schools only have them if they are in a city and/or poor area and honestly only in like the last 10-15 years. suburban public schools don't seem to use them. in my area it was mainly to stop random delinquents from being able to mingle within the school body easily and causing trouble. it also levels the socioeconomic disparity between kids a bit, not to mention its more money for the school system(which poor inner city schools never seem to have enough of.)
*Online Class Uniforms:* Pajamas
✨A hoodie I’ve worn for 3 days in a row✨
Our online school still makes us wear uniforms.
@@Usoda_ same
@@whyamigae9666 why are you gae
shahriar hossain just dont do it lmao wtf they gon do ?
You can still leave school at 16 in England, but you have to be in some form of education until 18. You can go to 6th form, or you can go to college or an apprenticeship
Or you can just get a job 😂 there is no mandatory education after 16 in the uk
Or has it changed that much in the 12 years since I left school? 😅
No that's just wrong, you're now mandated to be in some form of formal education until 18 and it's been that way for a few years.
@@henryellis9390 is that just in England? I haven't heard anything about it in Wales, that's a bit of a joke to be fair unless you want a trade or to go to university college is a waste of time in the uk
@@mikehunt4265 yeah, they did it to distort unemployment figures. They're not unemployed if they're in school.
UK: Own Clothes day
U.S: dress down day
It's called that in the U.K too...
I haven't heard dress down day in my area of the uk
I always used to call it no uniform day, never heard own clothes day before
@@retardedmeliodas2042 in my school we said both no uniform and own clothes day
@@sunsetsstarsrise3011 Hmm, I mean, I live in Scotland so maybe that's why.
4:54 another moment of garnt and joey in sync
Sheeeeeesh
I'm so glad to hear I'm not the only person who love to wear the school uniform for the main reason of worrying what to wear next and just using it for the whole week. In our Philippine University, we call own clothes day, "wash day" and I would wear my uniform because I'm comfortable with it especially it's lightweight. Even during summer classes where uniforms are not compulsory, I even wear uniform, practical reasons. A teacher even called me out for wearing uniform while others are not.
In my country. A 2 year college course is called an Associate Degree. A 4 year course is an Undergraduate Degree.
The next stage is Graduate school. Which is Law School, Medical School, MBA and Masters degree.
The 3rd and final stage is Doctorate studies. Where you get your PhD and Doctorate degree.
Meanwhile in Scotland (who just had to do something different from Wales and England) - you have primary school (ages's 4/5 to 12/13) and then high school/secondary school (ages's 12/13 to 17/18 but you can leave after 4th year, at 16, if you're born between 1 March and 30 September). After high school there's either college (which covers NQ [National qualification], NC [National certificate], HNC [higher national certificate] or HND [Higher national diploma], some colleges do have uni qualifications, but few and far between) or go onto University.
Don't you have Scottish highers in college's too since there are many colleges in England where they have A levels courses thus then progress to Uni?
@@seiwarriors You can do national 5's in college, but it's not a college course - they're paid for by yourself and just taught in a college as a night class normally
As a German School uniforms are so damn fascinating but also sound like a pain in the ass haha.
Haha nice edit there.
Northern Ireland schools equally have the most f’d up dress codes, in my old secondary school, you couldn’t wear a scarf inside, even if you were freezing your ass off, you still had to take off or else you were punished, also, you had to wear your school blazers in the hallways, even if it was June and was 30 degrees outside, you still had to wear it even if you were having heatstroke
they also got rid of normal ties in my school and enforced clip on ties which not only looked silly but you couldnt undo your top button if it was warm or whatever lol but in saying that our uniforms were actually okay compared to a lot of others in n.i
@@missingno88 I know, it was the same in my school, we had clip on ties as well and couldn’t undo the top button if it was hot, I know they wanted us to look professional but is appearance more important to them than education, to be honest I don’t care anymore because I left secondary school two years ago
This is so true, it could be pissing rain and you would be punished if you walked into the school with a coat on
Speaking of Northern Irish High school uniforms who else wasn't allowed to wear their PE jumper inside even tho it was snowing in like APRIL and the heating was turned off 🤣 , and if your tie or something else wasn't done right you where brought to a mirror and made to fix your uniform
@@Mrs.Cereal Oh yeah, that also used to happen as well, I always made sure my tie was on right so I wouldn’t have to go through the embarrassment of being told to go to a mirror and fix my tie
Shout out to the editor for literally changing Joey's blue shirt to red to show an example of Joey's red and black uniform. Bravo
Connor straight up did a Million Dollar Extreme skit in homeroom.
As a homeschooler, this is the most unrelatable vid I’ve watched in awhile. Not complaining.
Don’t worry, it’s unrelatable for a fuck ton of people, since there are many countries who do not use school uniforms.
nah just the US @@koenma932
@@vorpalchoppers I thought even Europe didn't have uniforms...
@@JarlBalgruff_ it had uniforms, always
@@vorpalchoppers Hmm I c.
Anybody else notice at 5:38 joeys shirt turned from black and blue to black and red as he was talking about his red uniforms
Schools in South Africa do school uniforms too. Then we get casual day which is own clothes day and sometimes we had to pay.
My primary school's new principal started doing the pay for casual day almost every Friday. When I got to high school the blazers were mandatory
My man
Blazers and Matric Jackets were the one pro.
Same
@@yammoto148 unless they choose from a few designs but pick the trash one
@@matt5991 Oof god I hate that, not to mention how expensive it is, I could buy 4 sets of clothes from mr price and have it last 3 times as long than expensive uniform
I remember my secondary school being absolute hell when it came to uniform, no joke.
I got put in Remove for wearing white socks because it made me a bad influence to the other kids 😂😂
I really hate the fact, for my secondary school, I had a uniform, we had to buy and what really sucks was that the place you would buy the uniform at was shady AF. Because you can purchase clothes and then wait for them to call you back to come pick them hop later, yet these bastard would never call back and it’s not just me that it happened too. It happened to at least 4/10 people.
In the UK, the difference with 6th form and college is how much help you get with your work. College is more similar to uni in that you have to be more independent in your work whereas in 6th form, it's essentially just an extra 2 years of secondary. Also, the teaches tend to be more specialized in their respective fields in college.
5:45 I thought I was high thinking that Joey's clothes just magically transforms into red
5:45
Editor Actually turning his shirt into red
🔥
At my school, we were so tried of getting punished due to uniform issues (i.e.: socks not reaching the knee) and other restrictions (i.e.: no dyed hair) that we made an organization to convince the principal to change the rules. i am shocked at how dress code straight up discriminates girls.
For outsiders. Here is the British school progression.
Reception - Optional pre-school, intended to get kids ready for school, socialized etc. Basically a playgroup, where socialization is emphasised over learning. Usually composed of kids 3 - 5 years old.
Primary school (lower) - Ages 5 - 8, primary education. Intended to get kids literate, and understand how the education system is going to work. You're graded in your performance here via the SATS test. And you start earning your GCSE's here. Wherein basically you take multiple tests over your education career, ramping up in difficulty. In your 3rd year, you take GCSE key stage 1
Primary school (upper) - Ages 8 - 11, More primary education, pretty much the same deal. But now you're graded via GCSE key stage 2.
Secondary school (lower) - Ages 11 - 14, secondary education. This is where the big formative learning occurs. Intended to get students up to a point where they can generally function anywhere at a basic level. You're graded at the end of this period by a GCSE key stage 3.
Secondary school (upper) - Ages 14 - 16, generally after your CATS test you're considered to be in the upper years. You usually have the option to choose certain classes you can specialize in, outside of the core lessons. So if you're interested in IT, you can fill your wildcard classes with IT. You're graded at the end of this period by the final GCSE test. GCSE's are considered the bare minimum qualifications when entering the work force usually. It's quite limiting getting work anywhere if you have no GCSE's. They're based on your whole school career, but heavily weighted towards your final performance.
Sixth Form - Sixth form USED to be optional, and was basically 'Get a college level education, but you don't have to enrol in college, just get the college education here at school'. Not all schools offered Sixth Form, but now Sixth Form is now mandatory across the board until 18.
College - A more focused specialized primer style education, the idea of college is that you go there with a future University/Career path in mind, and you go to college to get the grades and requirements needed to pursue that course in Uni. Both Sixth-Form and College use A-Levels as their grading system. A-Levels have a decent amount of value, they're enough to get you decent jobs in the analogous field. If you're really smart, you can get an A2 qualification, which guarantees you a place in Uni.
University - Education end game, basically you can spec into any profession on Earth from here, assuming you got good enough grades from college. This is where you earn all your prestigious degrees, and honours etc. You can go pretty much as long as you want in Uni, studying what you can... *ahem* afford to study.
Actually you can still do apprenticeships at 16 in england
@glass_shids exactly
@glass_shids pity that. Let's hope as time goes on that changes. A lot of people are seriously considering going the apprenticeship route
Just for clarification in the UK we have sixth form college where you can do A levels for 2 years (you study 3 or 4 subjects and do an exam at the end) and vocational college where you spend one or two years doing a specialised course
They let the wannabe roadmen wear only the shirt and yet God forbid they catch you wearing a coat indoors.
ikr my little brothers are wannabe roadmen and its drill music all day long I'm getting sick of it now
I literally just noticed that the microphone in the logo is a trashcan.
Haha! I just noticed the trash can is a microphone after reading your comment.
Holy shit yea
Why did that take you so long 😂
@@asspargassa2233 I just be havin slow moments man
@@ameen-4527 same
I love that Connor is referring to a state run school as a public school. In the UK a public school is a school that is operated in the public sector. AKA, private.
Sixth form is usually part of a secondary school and follows the school timetable something like 8:30-3:30. College differs that you only go in certain days in the week so it's a lot more flexible.
Too relatable. In high-school, the only time we wore anything that wasn’t school uniform was Christmas jumper day but we wore our blazers over our jumpers anyway 😂
Basically sixth form is connected to and run by a high school
And college is the exact same thing, but more informal and not connected to a high school
If I was Connor's teacher and saw what he was presenting with the 9/11 conspiracy, I would laugh my ass of and give him a pass for that exact reason
As a person currently attending British college. The specialised courses were we earn btecs are college and the a levels are sixth form
Some American schools have uniforms and I'm talking about public schools. The elementary (K-5) and middle school (6-8) I went to had them, I only got to wear what I wanted in high school (9-12).
My High school had a very strange fascination with the top button being done up and tie being perfect. I never did that as the top button also was too tight and made me sick. Did not have a problem until a new headmaster arrives and one day stopped as he was walking past just to tell me personally to fix it, I was not the only one who did it. They also told a friend of mine to stop dying her hair when it was naturally ginger, that one made me laugh. Been a few years now and heard that it's not doing so well after I met with someone who was apparently an assessor or sorts in my University. When she went to check on the school a couple of students apparently threw a bucket of water on her or some thing like that.
Anyone else in England call it Tutor instead of registration or mufti day instead of own clothes day?
my school calls 'registration' Learning Family but my school calls it own clothes day
It's so interesting because college in Canada is usually a 2 year diploma program, usually offering training in trades, whereas university is a 4 year bachelor's degree program like what you'd usually consider uni (in North America at least). Only uni offers masters and doctorates. Both need a high-school diploma to get into (so you have to graduate grade 12 basically). You can technically leave at 16 but you have a really limited job market.
05:43 BRUH THEY EVEN CHANGED THE COLOUR TO MAKE IT BLACK AND RED
For those who don't know, College in the UK is a type of 6th Form you can do before going to university, other types of 6th Form include A-Levels, BTEC, and Apprenticeships. Also I don't know this for sure but I'm pretty sure it's called 6th Form because secondary school ends after 5 years and 6th Form starts on the 6th
My school uniform was basically navy blue suit with white shirt and black dress shoes. Loved it.
I always forget that here in Scotland our school system is different because we don't have sixth form we just include it as 5th and 6th year. You can just leave at anytime after 4th year
So basically Angus Young's outfit on AC/DC then. But then again it was HIS uniform.
Some American schools do have school uniforms, especially private and catholic schools. But generally speaking there's just more of a guideline which can be varying levels of strict or dumb on what you can wear.
Still have school colors though even if it doesn't really show up outside of school teams, spirit week and (depending on their budget) the color of the walls, hallways, lockers etc.
But then our version of like wear your own clothes day would be like pajama day where most people just show up in their pajamas. Tends to be later in the year after the big exams too so it's pretty fun and chill.
damn thats some smooth editing on Joey's shirt
I just left school (I’m Scottish) last year and can confirm that students would get really excited for non-uniform day and the teachers would always ramble about “every year, the students are less well behaved on non-uniform day”. Hehe. To be honest, I’m glad I didn’t have to decide on my outfit every school morning.
its always strange hearing the English perspective of school in Scotland its somewhat different
yeah, we don't have sixth form college and the age/year groups are totally different.
i also think scottish schools are more lenient/less traditional but that could just be me
Connor is right for those looking for clarification. In the UK we have:
Primary School (Ages 5-12)
Secondary School (12-16)
Sixth Form/College (16-18)
University
Sixth Form and College are the same thing but a Sixth Form is usually attached to a Secondary school, while a College tends to be a separate place.
I do remember back when I first started watching anime. I was hooked on the idea of having a school uniform. However now years later im so glad we never have to deal with that shit. Imagine having to pay that much money for your kids clothes which, depending on what time they hit puberty, would maybe fit them for half a year at most before you would need to buy new.
its pain tbh,there are too many tragedies associated with school uniforms.
I remember when I left secondary school and went to college. I just had this crisis when I realised people would know if I wore the same shirt everyday. Never thought I’d miss school uniforms but they were so easy ;-;
Still miss the blazers. Year 7s had these huge camping bags with them before they realised our blazers had enough pockets to carry everything you’d need, several bricks, and a burger.
American here, School uniforms sound horrible would much rather prefer to wear my own clothes.
I wear uniforms here in America, my whole school county requires it, and we're public lol
Wore uniforms in elementary and middle school but bot highschool. I really didn't care about the uniform and even with no uniform i cycle the same 3 outfits every week.
School uniforms are extremely useful tools to kill unnecessary attention seeking tendencies and preventing some basis for bullying. You americans might not see the benefit, and i used to watch american shows with kids not wearing uniforms and think that was cool but now it's just a no brainer to have uniforms. The only "advantage" of not wearing uniforms is a bit of choice of wearing what you have, which by the way showed your economic class and purchasing power of your parents.
We all know that sunday visits to church is primarily to show off your good clothes to your other community members and show that you're quite well off.
Having a good uniform with sensible dress regulations teach a lot to children.
I’m my School here in Peru at the start of the day we prayed then they gave us a short story with questions, and then we would go outside to be in formation to later on raise our school’s and country’s flag, sing our country’s anthem and then march. I don’t know about you but I loved that.
When I was in junior school, I had to wear a flat cap as part of my school uniform 🤣
Went to a private school k-12 in the US, so uniforms pretty much every day, but we'd have Jeans days where you could wear jeans and a school polo (with an occasional dress up day especially during spirit week). But the idea that a uniform was less stressful is wild to me, because you'd get judged based on the brand of coat, kahkis you worse, and even the shoes you had. It was a big deal for me for a while to convince my parents not to get me pleated pants so I wouldn't look as much like a dork
We called that dress down day.
Also I am so glad we had school uniforms because when I was younger, like I would get straight up robbed for everything some days. Somehow I just had an invisible sign on my head that said, "victim" and "kick me." I have no doubt that I'd have walked home with less clothing that I left the house with, if I had to go in my own cloths, that coupled with the fact that I didn't behave a tonne of cloths to begin with.. and I wasn't even the richest kid man, screw that for a laugh. School uniforms were the lesser of 2 evils for me. XD
Also 6th form is just A-levels for uni or higher education generally and college is further education where you can do anything from level 1 which is secondary school grade to level 8, which is degree level, pending the courses available.
What kind of fucking clothing were you wearing that made people just steal from you?!
In Scotland when I was growing up, High school was 'first year, second year, etc' and you could leave between 4th and 5th year but those last two years weren't called anything different or special. They were still high school. It purposefully gave a sense that leaving at 16 was leaving halfway through your education.
Big brain is having no dress code, and being allowed to literally show up in your pyjamas at school, if you wanted too.
hell yeah
Unless your school banned PJ's. Which a lot of school's do.
In the US and Canada, only private schools have uniforms; I used to go to a private school in Canada, and we had those "Own Clothes" days Garnt and Connor mentioned, but we called them"Free Dress" days. But like, my school's uniforms were the most boring thing (but then again, this was elementary/primary school), so I always looked forward to free dress days lol
Gigguk: In England we sometimes call sixth form college
Joey: Really? That's weird
I'm in Australia and grade 11 & 12 is called college in my state
Ugh, blazers. The college I attended here in the Philippines required us to dress, a White Shirt + Long Sleeve Uniform + Blazer, in a 30+ degree Celsius temperature.
I remember one time there was a earthquake drill in our school, we have to go outside on a blazing temperature in the middle of summer and we're forbidden to take off our blazer, a student fainted because of it.
Because of that the blazers there are now an optional thing to wear or required only on special occasions.
You actually don't have to do sixth form in the UK. You have to stay in education until you're 18 but that can be any sixth form, college, or an apprenticeship.
The days you didn't have to wear uniform were called "non-uniform day" where I live.
My school uniforms:
Primary School:
Grey socks.
Grey shorts (summer) or trousers (winter).
A white polo shirt (summer) or long sleeved shirt (winter).
A navy blue tie with lots of little herons on it (winter).
A navy blue jumper with a heron on it (over where the breast pocket would be) (optional during summer).
A gold brooch style badge showing your school house - either yellow, red, blue or green, with a golden heron in the middle (optional).
For girls, they had a navy blouse in winter, and a blue and white checked dress in summer.
P.E. kit was white shorts, a white polo shirt and grey daps.
Secondary school:
Year 7-11:
Grey socks.
Grey trousers.
A white shirt.
A royal blue tie with yellow and red stripes.
A grey V-neck jumper (optional).
A royal blue blazer with the school's coat of arms on the breast pocket.
For Games there was a reversible rugby shirt with matching socks, with your house colour on one side and the school's royal blue on the other (along with the usual shorts, polo shirt, daps, football boots, etc. depending).
Sixth form:
The tie is now navy.
The blazer is now navy.
Prefects:
A special tie, with kind of flowers on it.
Observators:
They also had a gown to wear, with a stripe to show their rank - yellow for regular observators, blue for the school vice captain and red for the school captain. They only wore it when doing observator duties, though (during assemblies, speech day and so on).
In our 6th form, you can wear your own blazer trousers tie etc also our school is mostly all boys apart from sixth form also i am in year 9
People be like "Americans don't wear school uniforms"
meanwhile in my area its a luxury to go to a public school that doesn't require a uniform
As someone from the UK. When I finished school in the UK at 16 I went to college because my school did not have a sixth form. The college I went to did qualifications up to level 5 but also allowed you to take a level 6 course there where you would get a bachelor's degree if you did a third year and the degree would be from a university they have a partnership with.
So sixth form is certainly not a given and college is definitely a thing.
Like the college I went to literally had nothing to do with my school.
"Why does is skip from 2 to 6"
Man Joey predicted Gura's shark math
It's interesting to me that some of these same developments happened in Malaysia. We have 6th form which is like a precursor to going to university that you can either take or not take (the alternatives are going to a matriculation college or getting a diploma at university before taking your degree). 6th form in Malaysia used to wear uniforms, but in recent years they were allowed to wear their own clothes, though still required to be formal clothes and had to adhere to the same rules and the smaller kids.
Maybe it's because Malaysia uses a system sort of inherited/copied from the British, (because you know, bri'ish empire innit), that any developments in the British system are observed and adapted locally as well.
In germany (where i live) there are no rules to clothes, the only thing is that u cant go to school in a bikini the rest is no problem. Just when u sit in the classroom u cant have ure hat or smthg similar on
And there is the Elementary school from the 1-4 grade than they analize ure grades and put u in one of 4 diffrent schools
There is the "Gymnasium" (goes from 5th-12th Class level) where the kids with the good grades go than there is the "Realschule" (from the 5th-10th class) where the people with the middle grades go and than there is the "Mittelschule" (5th - 10th class) where the people with the bad grades go and than there is the school for the really really bad grades (i forgot the name but it can go from the 3rd- ** grade) normally the disabled kids go there but there kids that just have really bad grades and go there wothout any diseases or smthg else.
And if ure bad on the school where u are u can fall down to one of the schools that are not as good as ures was.
I dont like it, like the people in the "Mittelschule" they dont care about grades bcs in theire joblife it depens on wich school u were going.
The kids in the "realschule" have the most prblms they have to face life more than anyone else bcs they arent just bad at school they nees to keep up bcs its for most people a disappontment when u dont go to the highest school and i dont say that the others dont have prblms but i think the people in the "realschule" have it not as good as the others + they need to go to another school to make the other 2 classes and than after that they need to go to college.
The people in the "Gymnasium" dont face life, the only thing u see is that theire rude, think that they are smthg better than the others and all or most of them are bullies. They dont understand what it is to really failing smthg just bcs ure mind doesnt memorize it.
I was in the "Gymnasium" a half year, and i fcking hated it soo than i failed (Not with intent) and now i'm in the "realschule" i can say i'm lucky bcs my class is really Relaxed just that the whoule school hates us for no reason and the teaches hate us all. Wich causes anxiety, depression and nobody can learn anything and we are from all of the schools (bcs all of them are Next to each other) the worst class, when it goes about grades.
So its basicly Assassination classroom without the killing and a fun koro-sensei.
If there are any germans here correct me if i said smthg wrong
omg same in finland
I see, we don't have any sophisticated stuff like that in India, we have the same school (atleast I did) from preschool to 10th grade (you're 15 or 16 years old) then we have higher secondary school from 11th to 12th grade (17 or 18) here, it's pay to win literally. If u are a low scorer, u just pay a shitton of money and u can get inside anywhere (especially if u consider the caste system) except government colleges :(
@@JarlBalgruff_ yeah its the same in iraq my cousins do that a lot (pay to win) its not just with money it can wbe with food or smthg else
“Own clothes day” is called Mufti day in Australia
we have school uniform day in my school in France haha
Wait so you had to wear a Uniform on a specific day
@@tinniesealjiji yeah, a full on suit
That's must've been annoying asf
@@pauze7572 it happened in my senior year, so the school didn't give us suits because we are leaving soon just like Connor's
In India, we enter primary school (3-4 to 5-6) its called LKG (lower kindergarten) and UKG (upper kindergarten) then we enter elementary school its like divided into two parts 1st is (7-8 to 10-11) 1st grade to 5th grade then the 2nd part is (11-13) 6th grade to 8th grade then its senior year again divided in to so the 1st part is (14-15) 9th and 10th grade I we have to study a lot cuz it will affect us in the last 2 years 10th grade the most important part in this then comes the 2nd part is (16-17) 11th and 12th this 2 years decides our career we have a system of streams its like science (for all the science type of jobs) and commerce (for jobs like accountant, etc) these two are the major streams the comes minor streams they are arts (this is for all art kind of thing and literature),(there are more but it will make a long list) the streams system is like the our guidance period. And so the schooling is over then we enter professional education. We go to collage for about 4 years or even 3 years of bachelor study. The 2 or 3 years in masters (which is optional) that's pretty much it 🤔 so if we take masters then you'll be 24 by then. Now am 15 years old so it makes me sad to see that I'll have to study 10 more years 😢 😔 😞 💔
We called it Non Uniform Day lol, such a peculiar day, but they'd ask for a pound whilst your at the gate
My ‘home room’ time was called DEAR (drop everything and read) where we got to either read books/webcomics or catch up on homework/assignments
College in the UK is where you train to become a plumber, electrician or learn hair and beauty to become a hairdresser lol
they didn't have uniforms when I was in public schools. usually, private schools have a type of uniform that parents agreed to and paid for. when I was in public school we wore whatever we wanted as long as it met the school dress code.
2 years after I left school, they started enforcing uniforms in a lot of public schools across America and my district was one.
one reason is that a lot of teachers can't keep their pants around their waists or skirts around their thighs.
Own clothes day
Bring a pound in!
Me:I have to pay to wear my own clothes? That's how much I payed for the damn things!
I went to a few different schools growing up, but I went to one that had a uniform for my last two years. I genuinely liked it so much more, far less stress deciding on what to wear and you wouldn't get bullied based on what clothes you had.
Own clothes day? I've always known it as mufti day.
@AcidTrip I guess it must be a regional thing.
I've always known it as 'free dress day'.
Mufti day/own clothes day doesnt matters means the same thing
In South Africa we'd call it civie day short for civilian.
@@dutch_asocialite are you from Austrailia or New Zealand?
As it stands in the UK. You go to primary school from ages 5-11. You then go to secondary school from 12-16. In the UK you have to be in education until you are 18 so there are 3 options. Firstly your secondary school has a sixth form so you stay on and do your a-levels there. 2nd option is you leave and go to a sixth college, regular collage or attend sixth form at another school and do your A levels. The last option is you attend college and study a specific field for example you might do an engineering apprenticeship or you might learn a trade such as plumbing or an electrician as apprenticeships in the UK require those who study them to submit coursework and such in order to become qualified.
Nah UK now is
Primary school
Secondary school
And from that you can either go to college or 6th form
College is where you study only 1-3 subjects for example i do
Criminology
Sociology
Psychology
And then 6th form is basically an extension of Secondary school where you have non specified lessons and school rules still apply like no phones and uniforms but college is non uniforms and phones aloud, basically more freedom
Actually the sixth form I went to had no uniforms and phones were allowed.
@@bluecat1659 oh fairs, I'm just basing off the 6th form I knew
Now that you can see the most replayed part of videos, I'm glad im not the only one who replayed when joey's shirt turned red
Man in catholic school during homeroom we had to pray and reflect on our sins with the class and shit it was wack as fuck
Try a school mass
I only remember having homeroom in 7th/8th grade and it was in the middle of the day, not the start. One of those years my homeroom was a computer lab so we spent the whole time messing around with flash games/etc. Looking back on it, I guess maybe it was their way of giving a "recess" to kids that were too old to have a playground.
You're talking about weird school rules in other country's while living in Japan lol.
I mean they didn’t go to school in japan
At 5:42, I realized that you guys have a damn awesome editor.