Kyushoku: The Making of a Japanese School Lunch
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- Опубліковано 6 вер 2018
- Ever since 1954, kyushoku (school lunch) has been an official part of the Japanese school curriculum. Over the years, the laws and menu items have changed, from adding the role of a nutritionist to including rice. Get an inside look into how the Japanese school lunch is made and what food education looks like in one of Japan's public elementary schools.
SUBTITLES!
I have two English versions. The regular "English" only translates the Japanese portions. The "English UK" subtitles have captions for the entire video. If you don't know how to change your subtitle settings, check out support.google.com/youtube/an....
Special thanks to Umejima Elementary School in Adachi-ku, Tokyo, that let me film over two days. You can see their school lunch menu at www.adachi.ed.jp/adaume/kyusyo....
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Watch the Q+A video I did about Kyushoku at • Japanese School Lunche... .
Additional sources of information for the video are:
- School Lunch Program in Japan - www.nier.go.jp/English/educat...
- Museum of MEXT - www.mext.go.jp/en/about/museum...
- On Japan’s school lunch menu: A healthy meal, made from scratch - Washington Post - www.washingtonpost.com/world/...
- Hayato Ikeda By Koch, Eric / Anefo - [1] Dutch National Archives, The Hague, Fotocollectie Algemeen Nederlands Persbureau (ANeFo), 1945-1989, bekijk toegang 2.24.01.03, Bestanddeelnummer 914-5294, CC BY-SA 3.0 nl, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
- San Francisco Peace Treaty www.mofa.go.jp/mofaj/area/tak...
- Peace Works peaceworks.afsc.org/world-war-...
- Tanabata By ★Kumiko★ from Tokyo, Japan - 七夕, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
- Household income by wards in Tokhyo - nbakki.hatenablog.com/entry/Ho...
- Japan: Governance and Accountability ncee.org/what-we-do/center-on-...
- Japan Might Be What Equality in Education Looks Like - www.theatlantic.com/business/...
- School lunch program for health promotion among children in Japan - www.apjcn.org/update/pdf/2012/...
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SUBTITLES!
I have two English versions. The regular "English" only translates the Japanese portions. The "English UK" subtitles have captions for the entire video. If you don't know how to change your subtitle settings, check out support.google.com/youtube/answer/100078
Hello, I frequently add subtitles in spanish from the english version but in this case I can't add them before 2:24 and you speak before that. Do you know if Is somehow possible to fix it?
Is there a Japanese version too? Oh, I see, you're talking about the subtitle settings.
Where's the Australian English version?
Doesn't matter anymore, I already solved it :)
Great, that's good to hear.
When a poor school in japan is best than a luxury school in your country
wena monito vidal
When monito Vidal is better than a luxury UA-camr in your country
*better
I saw actual produce for meals. Whole Foods. I know some schools in the US are prepackaged and just heated up or taken out of a package and dumped into a tray. So sad.
Mary Snodgrass well in my school we don't even have lunch meal 😂😭 we have to buy it and they sell pizza, croissant and Lays, Doritos. Oh and it's a private school 😀
It's sad that if they tried having students rotate duties like cleaning and serving lunch in the US, a lot of parents would protest and say that the school is making slaves of their children. But the real goal is to teach the students humility, develop their character, and to make them a better person. Also, I think the students would think twice before littering because they know that eventually they would have to clean the mess they created.
It’s about culture. For Japan it’s their culture they’ve been doing it forever. But if it’s going to be just introduced In America in 2020 then it’ll definitely not go down well.
I found some comments that US had classroom cleaning and some preparation work long ago.
I read some, very rarely, insists littering is also a right.
And then there are some who hate Japanese conformist tendency.
So I think the US people don't like the teamwork style in shown in the video.
The Montessori philosophy has children taking responsibility for assisting in serving, clean up, etc. It’s something I loved about it.
They grow up to be more appreciative and industrious too, by serving the lunch in a such a safe and well mannered way.
Funny enough when I was in elementary, students were offered the opportunity to work as lunch workers and we’d rotate weekly. It’s honestly a great experience and lots of us all wanted to do it. I was surprised when I learned other states didn’t do the same, or even other cities! For context this was in California and to my knowledge I don’t know of other states that did this.
I spent two years working at Japanese junior high and elementary schools and ate kyoushoku every day and have to say it was always excellent. The quality and variety was great. More countries need to examine how schools in Japan are run.
If my school lunch was like this, I would’ve been motivated to actually come to school and have work finished.
I grew up in Japan. When I was in elementary school, we got school lunch menu for the month and I marked the days I don’t wanna miss because of school lunch 😆 like curry, tonkatsu, the days with dessert (which is rare) etc.
ua-cam.com/video/nxrgOqNzBcg/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/E5DGr6M0TDc/v-deo.html
Most western countries are failing by design.
it honestly makes me feel a little emotional, how much everyone cares about the kids, how well they all seem to get along, and how integrated the sense of appreciation and understanding of the food is into their lives. the community cared so much and made the school nice for them while they had the opportunity, and everyone works together to keep it running well...and again, they really seem to actually care about the happiness of the kids. it's just so nice. I wish the rest of the world was more like this.
i had this exact same feeling, of getting so emotional over the way the community comes together to care for the kids, how happy the kids are, the care that goes into the menu (not to mention the rebuilding of the school), and teaching them to be respectful and grateful of the process of the food getting to them. having all of the kids serve each other, regardless of grade, is SO, so sweet. and the menu looks delicious AND healthy!! im also jazzed about the gratitude showed at the end of the video towards everyone, from the kids, to the teachers, to the nutritionist, principal, and the kitchen staff who painstakingly prepare the meals. its a wonderful thing, and i also wish more of the world could adopt something like this.
This video showed more than food lunches. It showed children being raised to learn about community, respect your teachers and peers, social skills, nutrition, hygiene, helpfulness, not to be selfish, manners, food preparation, being grateful, learning and writing, life skills and many for habits which will help them in life. No doubt they learnt this from their parents, but the school reinforces ethics and values and give them more than just reading and writing.
5 likes for this comment! yup, it's not all about food
well said
And yet it didn't show that Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.THE WORLD
There are many concerning factors, cultural, and social affecting Japans high suicide rates but it is in no way the highest. A 2015 worldwide, standardised study, placed Japan at No.30 - comparable to the USA at 34 out of a study of 138 countries with Guyana being No.1 and Russia also being right up there at No.3... But you are right, this social conditioning, placing moral emphasis on duty, conformity, honour and expectation, can place young people at risk to mental health problems ...but I sure would like to see my kids cleaning up an brushing their teeth once in a while LOL.
i agree. look how orderly they are. school system is so different than north america
Japanese schools have nutritionists. Freshly made food from scratch. The principal tests the food before the children ever eat. Maybe it's time we learn from these schools.
I wonder how long it would take to teach the children to appreciate the food provided and not whine for pizza or chicken nuggets.
Hope Fletcher No one will whine if parents don’t spoil their children and parents actually help their children develop good eating habits.
The Japanese are much more advanced culture it seems, they actually care about their people and healthy eating is taken seriously, after all you are what you eat. In America it is a more savage society, more concerned about profits than himanity.
Different cultures. Will never have something like this in America.
@@Connetification the japanese culture have a god level of discipline, its amazing how they do it. An example to the world
As a kid at a Japanese school, I learned how to negotiate with others (especially girls who didn't eat much) to give me food and bribe the caterer to serve me extra food. Good times.
You are a heavy eater like me
@@candiceruth10 stop
Nice skill you are developing there. Keep it up and you'll go places.😁
😅🤣😂😁
Bribe the caterer😂Well, I did no such things but yeah, good times, I totally agree.
No joke, this food looks absolutely delicious and I would eat this everyday now. It doesn’t matter that I’m a grown person and many years out of elementary school!
To be honest, the school lunch is up to junior high school, so before graduating from junior high school, everyone said, "In a little while, the time will come when I can't eat this anymore."
imagine going to a school that actually cares about their students and their health all the while helping them grow ... DAMN
Can’t relate
WittleWeeb
Can’t relate either LMAO FML 😑
@* Sadly, I can’t relate. ;( Japan’s such a civilised country. The high-quality technology, entertainment, services and healthcare. The locations and places even look hygienic and clean, and the education system. I’m so envious but I’m glad these people are living well.
LMAO You'd NEVER find that in America.
* kinda can relate, in italy is kinda like that, the difference is that they serve to children (like in restaurants) then when you have 11 years old you stop eating at school and go home
I love that the food cooks are dressed like they’re about to perform a surgery
It's to keep hygine good.
Agree
Better than some school in america that wasn't using any protector and often accidentally sneeze or cough on the food :)
@@faizmuldjabar6884 truth :v
Theyre prepared for coronavirus XD
This is true. I'm a Kyoto resident for 20 years now. The school where my kids attend have a garden where they grow their own food. Sometimes, as an Italian vegan chef, I got invited to teach them how to prepare healthy foods. I even have a name for it, Tachibana Happy Meal🍱
What a great contribution you make!
@@deadby15 Grazie arigatou😃
Tachibana Happy Meal. I just remembered the other Tachibana, who makes me happy too.
I am talking about Kyoto Tachibana SHS Marching Band.
@@nelsonmkawakami3760 Hey, what a small world. My wife gets her hair done by KT lead drummer Comare's mom, a great hairstylist in Kyoto.
@@rizzoconiglieri6250 I’d love to visit Japan but I’m scared of flying over the water. Are there any cruises available to Japan?
懐かしすぎて涙出てきそう
お昼の放送聴きながら、みんなでワイワイ食べて、食べたあとはドッジボールしたり図書室行ったり…
この頃にもう一度戻ってみたい
給食当番嫌がってたけどまたやりたい笑笑
背の小さい女の子がおかわりに行ってて勇気あるなぁと感心したわ 私は恥ずかしくてできなかった でも大食いだったので、遠慮なくおかわりできる男の子がうらやましかったw
給食員に感謝なんかしたこと無かったけどしとけば良かったって後悔してる
@@blanche4481そういうジェンダーバイアス最近なくなり始めるらしいよ😂
Kids in Japan: can serve their own lunches
Kids in America: can't even return all of the markers
So tru
Bang Si Hyuk I keep seeing you everywhere. :0
@@lamiah.2938 Hitman bang... What are you doing here?? 😂
@@thvyty I like being everywhere...
And pencils.. don’t forget about them pencils.
You know, I'm struck by how many customs or habits that Japanese kids get simply just from going to school. From things like helping serve the food, clean up, itadakimasu, gochisousama, brushing their teeth, if your doing this stuff everyday I can see how it contributes to how Japanese people are "Japanese".
that is why Japanese think how to be helpful for another - not how to get profit like do an American education
Matthew Lawton I believe a balance would be great. It seems like the Japanese system is very much in the collective while the western system is very much in the individual.
They are always concerned with family concept. Like how no one should feel different and to have equality among them💜.
Jane Doe There’s a lot of places where the population is homogeneous but they’re not as successful as Japan or the US are.
So political correctness isn’t the one to blame or immigrants who are coming to the US.
Can you believe that kids in america nowadays don't even know where their food comes from?
I went to Japan in 2009 with a rather large group. We were there representing our home city as we are partnered with a Japanese city. Where ever we went, if it was going to be a meal time, the folks where ever we were made sure there was food like this. One day we visited an elementary school to watch a performance of their jazz band. Afterwards the children served us lunch the same way they do here. I thought it was a special treat until I spoke with our guide. She informed me that this was a very normal part of the school day. Once we were told that, many of our group offered to help clean up afterwards. In western society, someone treating you to a good lunch would shoo you away. Instead they gladly accepted the help and taught us how to stack everything and sweep up. It was a quite the experience.
中学生までは給食が義務付けられていて栄養をきちんと取れて生活出来ていたけど、高校生になってから片親育ちで栄養をあまり取る機会が無くなって栄養失調で何回か体調不良になったことある。ほんとに給食大好きだった。動画内で小学生が配膳準備してるのを見て懐かしく思えた。戻りたい……
I am a Japanese. 66years old.
When I was a child, I had the same style of lunch called Kyushoku.
It means more than 50 or 60 years kyushoku has been kept in Japan. Isn’t it incredible ?
Amazing! I wish I could live in Japan. Truly beautiful.
That’s amazing.
I think So, too. I was raised in a very small town. even in the country, same style of kyushoku was provided. At that time too, It was delicious.
i wish my country has the same kyushoku system zzzz
akira saito
You are so lucky :)
The fact that the principal regrets not being able to eat with th children just shows how amazing and humble Japan as a country is
pizza I worked at several Japanese schools myself and they Principals and Vice Principals never stay in the office. I come to work and usually see them pruning shrubs, raking leaves or sweeping up the school’s long driveway. Then they stay outside and greet the kids coming into the school. They aren’t usually in suits. They come in suits, but then change into their athletic gear because they do manual work about half the day. It’s amazing.
My kids (now teens) have eaten at McDonalds once in their life. No exaggeration. That was only when it was literally the only option at that moment.
@@someoneelse6934 Hi I am from India (worst county of the world)
@@rasgulla6488 yes righr. I am from India . Young generation lack of moral values. They are just running for marks and job. School system is worst.Student`s only do time pass and abuse each other in foul languages.
Yeah, really tells me how much I am missing
I have been to Japan twice and believe that Japan is one of the most impressive countries in the world. Bravo Japan and the wonderful culture you have.
I honestly wish I could have been raised as a Japanese child. I understand there would be things I’d dislike about it of course, but at least I would have far more discipline and far more ability to see myself as part of a group, as well as have more patience and understanding. I would have gotten more out of my education also. Massive respect for Japanese parents, teachers and students alike.
You can still change, just try.
If you have a time machine, lend it to her.
More Americans would benefit from having "giri". A sense of obligation to others.
私は日本人だけど、何度も欧米とか自由な国に産まれたかったと思ったことある。
The romanization goes crazy
"we don't cook the same food item more than once a month"
me : *shook asf because I literally had the choice between stuffed shells, chicken patty, or pizza every single mf day*
Esh Bomb my school feeds us chicken at least 4 times a week but I don’t school food
Esh Bomb IT ISNT EVEN GOOD!!!!!!!! School food sucks or the food at my school.
American school lunch sucks. Its all frozen, premade, canned, and not real food. Only one school I went to, and we had genuinine salad bar with lots of options.
Japan schools : Have nutritionists
My Country: You can still eat the bread, just remove the molds.
Omg please don't do that invisible mold exists too😂
@@sagnikballabh4828 I think he was being sarcastic, no school would serve moldy bread
We are what we eat 😅😂🤔🤔
From Germany? 😂
You guys are getting bread? (Guy from India here..)
This is exactly the same as it was about 40 years ago when I was in elementary school and nothing has changed. School lunches in Japan are the best.
このチャンネル良いね。
誇張せずに現実の日本をありのまま撮影してくれてるのが良いね。
“We don’t Cook the same meal more than once a month”
America: *serves the same greasy/frozen pizza and stale fried for a week straight*
Your school district must suck i never see that where i live
@@fucker661 Same.
To be fair, my Schools served Pizza only once or twice a week, but yes there was at least one fried item every day.
My school has a set menu so it does get boring sometimes
Be grateful atleast u Americans get free lunch whereas not all kids n countries are able to do this service
"We take life from vegetables so we can live (and we must appreciate this)." That's a quote I won't soon forget. 8:58
I second that, It got stuck in my head as well!
Checkmate vegan 😂
Itadakimasu another meaning
Yup, the Western distinction of what counts as life doesn't apply there. I think the Japanese view is more in line with the science. No matter what we eat, eating is inherently about killing off other lives, including plants'.
@@Toschez I don't think cultural nuances apply here. It's the wording that takes a bit getting use to in this case. I mean, naturally, people (all over the world) do not consider vegetables sentient beings, therefore they consume them for their nutritional content without considering the philosophical aspects of its purpose.
My USA school lunch was reheated frozen fast food basically - completely void of nutrients and they deemed French fries as an appropriate vegetable.
A couple of times I almost broke a tooth on plastic pieces inside of a chicken patty in the sandwich I ate. Japan really takes care of their children and citizens ❤❤❤
Taking turns in preparing, serving, and cleaning up lunch for the school lunch duty, and having the children clean up their own classrooms before going home are also part of the social learning experience that helps them learn the significance of voluntarily keeping the environment clean through their own experiences.
All of this is part of the idea that in order for each child to grow into an independent adult, school is not only about learning, but also about learning about society through their own experiences during their daily school life.
They learn the necessity of these basic daily behaviors through real-life experiences and develop habits in their children.
While it is very difficult to change one's behavior as an adult, it is easy to acquire them as a child, and once acquired, life thereafter becomes easier and smoother.
These Japanese-style education teaches children wisdom and basic behavioral habits at school that will help them survive in social life when they become adults.
Of course, the reason why this concept has been taught in Japan since ancient times as a form of discipline education for children,
and has continued to the present day, is because it is a necessity that everyone living in Japan must learn in order to survive in the unique natural environment of Japan, a warm and humid island nation surrounded by the sea, which is geopolitically very different from life on the continent.
In Japan, during the period of compulsory public elementary school education (ages 6-12), children attend school and go to school under the guidance of the Board of Education of each local prefectural government, which determines the system of attending elementary schools under its jurisdiction independently for each region.
In many cases, elementary school students in the neighborhood where they live form a group as ”a children's association”, and each year, a leader student is chosen and the children gather in groups under the leader to go to school alone.
This is called the "group school attendance" system.
In public schools, children from all neighborhoods, regardless of parental wealth, gather together and go to school alone. Each children's association has its own fixed route to school.
Therefore, there is no need for parents to drive their children to and from school.
The PTA organization, consisting mainly of parents from the community, takes turns assisting the children to school at designated areas, such as busy and dangerous intersections, with volunteers including mothers of children in the children's association and retired elderly people from the community.
(They carry yellow flags for traffic safety and assist with traffic signals, etc.)
There are two advantages to this system:
One is that the children's parents can commute to their own jobs in the morning, saving time from having to attend to the children's transportation to and from school every day.
The second benefit is that children do not have to depend on their parents to go to school, and instead, they are able to foster a sense of independence and self-reliance by going to school together.
This is a great opportunity for children to experience and learn about social activities.
This is possible because all parents and adults share the awareness that "all children are the treasure of society" and that "helping children grow is an important factor in improving society in the future.
It can be done because all adults (not just their own children) share the awareness that "helping all children in the community in which they reside grow up is an important factor for the betterment of their own country and society," and because they believe it is important to "support and help each other to grow up, not just their own children, but all children in all communities."
They also believe that by allowing children to go to school alone, this activity will help them to lose their habit of relying on adults, to look after their environment and protect themselves by themselves, and to grow in the spirit of self-responsibility and self-reliance.
I didnt see one overweight child. And most plates were clean after, theyre doing something right for sure.
The food I had as part of kyushoku was delicious. There is a heavy emphasis there to not waste food. I literally had a fellow student scold me "mottainai (wasteful)!" for fruit I had not eaten. He ate this piece even though he was done with his tray :D
Yeah the traditional Japanese diet is very healthy
Dustin Powell all are skinny like my husbands doctor said America’s food makes you gain weight fast !
Americans really have an obesity problem. My Taiwanese mom has a fat friend, and she said to me, “Can you believe this is the ONLY fat Asian person I’ve met? I’ve literally never seen it before.”
But the principal said that town has high rate of obesity and diabetes among adults.
So there are some issues we share, though probably not on the same level as America
They don't offer the same dish more than once a month? Man that's dedication, above and beyond!
Also more amazing is balancing the school budget which I think is equivalent to $2.09 per meal!
My high school had to meal sets A set and B set
Week one : A set
Week Two : B set
So forth.
Wait what we have the same food every other day
at my former school we often had the same meal twice a week because there were certain things our kitchen was good at and others they couldn't do at all ^^ although we did have a small menu to pick from (had to be ordered a week in advance and a meal often cost up to 5 €). Public school in Germany btw
She only talks about chicken curry. She only offer it once a month or once in two months but other mels they can offer it any day
ウチのお母さんが『給食食べてるから大丈夫!』って給食の栄養バランスに絶対的な信頼を置いてたな(笑)
給食が大好きだった♥️
じゃんけんでデザートの残りを勝ち取るのは全国共通だよね?
I wish there is a way that Japan could share their manner teaching techniques / food etiquette and processes / school programs and many good quality processes with the whole world. Loved this video!
It's a cultural thing. Japanese culture emphasizes the common good over individual wants and needs, so people are expected to conform to those values. That's why they have students taking turns as food servers----to make them aware of each position in a social institution.
Japan: full meals set by strict regulations and designed by dedicated directors hired by local schools
America: 1 frozen sliced pizza, take it or leave it
Oof
In the meanwhile they call themself first world country.where this terms coming from? l do not know
The teachers unions in the US have been milking the system dry for years. We spend more on education as compared to other first world countries and we continually get substandard results.
@@benhaj7662 because the US has a developed infrastructure and a decently good economy
Go to a real third world country and experience suffering yourself, kid
@@Goblinhandler OH ok this is why cowboy...understand grand pa
Congratulations. You won the approval of the school authorities to enter the school to make this video, and I am sure that they were not disappointed in the trust that they put in you. You have given us a view into the schools in Japan, and into the way that Japanese society values children.
And that's no easy feat!
@anders damin "highest ever"
still order of magnitude lower than other developed nations
But wait there’s more!
Anime
@@666Tomato666
Also, when you consider the extreme working hours that many Japanese go thru, which is how they managed to create an economy that ranks in the top five of the world.
@@danpt2000 They spend more time in bars and in cafes than you think. they get more break time than you are led to believe. they don't "work" the entire "work" day. The American worker works 60 - 70 hours a week and it's spent WORKING and at work. no nap times or morning exercise time . . . yeah, you don't see that in these videos . . . .
Japanese school lunches use a variety of ingredients for children with allergies. There is a mechanism that allows each person to take proper nutrition.
I work in a low-income school in downtown Minneapolis. When I say that watching this video is like watching something from another planet, I really mean it. The food we have here is frankenfood (meaning often processed foods, and lots of oils and salt), but it’s the best we can get right now because education in the states is NOT well-funded in comparison to military funding. Also the organization, the pleasant smiles, the manners, the serving of others, the sense of community and the peace of all this is just wonderful to see. It makes me sad though. My school is trying, but we still have stressed out kitchen staff screaming at the kids, deans overseeing lunch to handle fights that break out every two weeks or so, kids standing up and running around, and tired and hardworking janitors cleaning up all the messes that everyone leaves behind. It’s just sad by comparison.
I wish that we could find a way to change, but it’s only possible with an attitude shift, and that will take a loooooong time. So, I take hope, pleasure and encouragement in just watching the success of places like this with well-established nationwide attitudes that serve the community beyond just the self.
I'm a local Japanese. It's not only possible with an attitude shift. I do not believe this is such a simple issue. First of all, the most important thing for US policymakers is US hegemony in the world. In other words, military power and national security. In this context, I believe that healthcare and social security have become tools for money-making. As an extension of this, agriculture and the food industry, and inexpensive processed foods form the American food culture.
The strong US economy and military are due to this profit-driven mindset, and the Japanese way of doing things is sure to be condemned as " Socialistic ". I read other American's comment : It's sad that if they tried having students rotate duties like cleaning and serving lunch in the US, a lot of parents would protest and say that the school is making slaves of their children.
Later, kids will be the good customers of doctors and pharmacies
Japanese culture is so rich, humble, and beautiful. Like, this is actually beautiful.
The school lunch, 1 time around 2-3 dollar.
Now, some parents are no pay for their children.
they are not poor.
This is serious problem in Japan.
Unfortunately, it does come with lots of complications, especially how strict they are with certain topics.
So true that's why i love japan
No it's not, do some more research. They treat their workers like crap that comes from different country to work or school, let alone the child/female kidnappings & other things. Look into the dark side of Japan and you will think otherwise. :)
Taegers Inc. Uh I wouldn’t say peace because there are still gropers and murders and pretty much every crime around the world it depends on what area you live in
The nutritionist is such a beautiful person. Inside and outside.
bro you good?
Siiiiiimmmppppp
Hehe when all things you'll say and do with the opposite gender make you "simp". What a powerful word, it had lots of meaning...
Smooooth
I'm actually kind of concern... are you okay?
見ているだけでとても懐かしく感じました。もう一度あの時の給食を食べたい😭本当に美味しかったな。
後、給食のお陰で友達も増えた覚えもありますね。
The U.S. school lunchs have Never been this good with so many fresh vegetables & where the kids have to help with lunch so that things go faster & help each other. Great to see the students doing something to help.
yah....here in germany school lunch is absolut crap too even prison food is better and more healthy
It's sad because in the US, fruits and veggies are so expensive, whereas the boxed process foods are inexpensive. Making it harder to feed a family healthier foods. In Japan, fruit can be very expensive. Which is why you don't see them eating fruit in abundance. However, they still have plenty of fresh ingredients which are disposable to the average individual and family making for a healthier people.
The American experience of getting some frozen food, eating it, and suddenly knowing exactly where your school got their food.
what they feed American kids, I would not feed to the homeless.
@@tryphenarose384I honestly don’t think fruits like apples, bananas, watermelon, oranges are particularly expensive, especially when they’re in season. Schools can also purchase in bulk to lower costs, so I’d imagine half of something like a banana is unreasonable to provide to students
What shocks me the most was that after lunch the kids all sat at their desks and brushed their teeth together as a group, along with the teacher
me watching them: 👁👄👁
Yeah lol
I was surprised by that, too.
Isnt that normal?
I studied at a japanese university in a rural province once, and i remember being super impressed by their school lunches which were all made by local grandmas. Was delicious, nutritious, and cheap. I really miss those days ...
Have you also eaten American School food
What a great idea - to have the local grandmas cook the school lunches! Not only are they the best cooks, but they actually care and its a great way to keep them active.
@Carl John grandmas like that wont exist once our generation gets old cause all I see are thots
UA-camで探せば発展途上国の小学校の給食なども見れますが
日本の子供は思いっきり恵まれてますね。
それもこれも、戦争で負けてから国のために必死に頑張ってくれた老人たちの
おかげです。感謝の念で一杯です。
Japan should be an inspiration to the rest of the world - this is incredible.
The irony is that people think this level of quality is the result of government spending, but the reality is that this quality is the result of the careful care of the community and hard-working staff that work and care for the schools. There is an over-arching emphasis on the community and care of that community by the families and individuals inside the community. Something that Europe & America can learn from.
@Carson Hopper We really need another War for a Wake up call,Not just any War a total Full blown Global conflict.
PoLKadOYSTebOMb war only bring destruction and many people want to live their life in peace because life is short
If you are sad with your life then move to an other country or end it simply
You should know you should never say (we) because government is not your friend and never see you as a (we)
@@desertmoonlee6631 But as Chaos Ensues we know That Progress and Change Rapidly Comes,For better or Worse.Conflict is Human,Conflict is Natural For if there is War there Is Peace.
The sort of people that there are in this world... Calling wars and insinuating genocides following a video presentation on the organization of Japanese school lunches...
It's like it comes full circle; communities coming together to look after the kids, farmers geting recognition, help and support, teaching kids important lessons about our much needed agriculture sector, he kids are being active, learning responsibility and getting fresh air...the benefits are endless really.
I'm japanese dad who have two sons.elder son is high school student in 3rd grade,younger son is junior high school student in 3rd grade.
In general,junior high school and primary school has kyushoku system,but high school has not.I cook lunch box every single day for elder son🍴👍.But it's little bit harder😫
Kyushoku system is very good for us.it's so healthy and cheap(only 5000yen a month!),so helpful for parents such like me.
I appreciate to japanese school lunch system,so much❗
I'm sure your eldest son appreciates the effort put into his lunch.
Good job 👍🏻
Ok, not trying to go out of topic, but your user name is a bit.... 😂
@@orcacaca_
did you understand いや~んばか~ん?very nice japanese understanding👏
@@user-tl4xg5cj6j はいわかりました :v
5000yen is like... 50 dollars? Wow that IS cheap! :O
日本人として「自分たちで掃除をする(教室だけでなく、体育館や下駄箱、職員室、トイレなども)」「給食を自分たちで配膳し、余りがないように工夫をする」という学校教育って当たり前すぎて、今海外の方々に注目されてるなんてビックリ!
自分たちの身の回りの事は子どもであっても責任を持って行うっていう教えは確かに大人になった今でも教訓になってるんじゃないかな。
日本人はゴミを持ち帰るからビックリした。って言ってる海外の人いて、すごく誇りに思った😊
そしてなんと言っても給食は栄養バランスが本当にしっかり考えられていて、尚且つ…めちゃくちゃ美味しい😆😆😆
大人になっても毎日食べられたらいいのに😂
I love how you put history of Japan's school lunches in your video.
they have a school nutritionist? that explains it all...
Cano Korea and China also have school nutritionists. It's sort of a must... guess it's common in Asia.
alot of countries in Asia have one so do i lol
@@missgreenbeans1633 not really
Floral Stripes school nutritionists are required by law in South Korea. I'm not sure about china in general, I heard some provinces do..
@@missgreenbeans1633 I said not really, asian countries usually dh nutritionists it's not that there ain't any at all
I feel like they live in a separate world everything that they do is done smoothly and well organized.
Because each is taught to care for the collective. It's not about you the individual. This has its own drawbacks, but makes for a cleaner, more courteous society.
Feitan ikr
well, it's a bit more chaotic in first grade, but this is after 6 years of practice for them
Wdym mean? That’s probably predominantly in America that you get greasy fast food. Go to Europe. It’s quite similar. Go to a kindergarten in Germany. The children also pick fruits and vegetables from their own garden there.
I. Absolutely. Adore. The way these Japanese schools teach through their lunch program. And I love how seriously they take it. When I worked in our high school’s kitchen, we were lucky to have 5 people every day to feed 300-400 kids. There was always something going on, we’d have to send someone to another school, it was chaos. Thirteen would be a D R E A M. And I really love the variety in the dishes. There’s a repetition in that there are always stews and rice, but they’re different. Different sources of protein, different kinds of stews to introduce different flavors, and using what’s in season for the best flavors. Delicious!
日本人です。子供の頃のことを思い出しながら楽しく観ました。
私の母は、毎月配られる給食表をチェックして、家庭での献立が給食と被らないように考えてくれていました😊
地域ごとに給食メニューが違ったりするので、他の地域出身の人とメニューの話をするのも面白かったです。
I’m Japanese. I remember my mom always checked my kyushoku menu, which was provided by the school every month, and considered breakfast and dinner menu for my family to have us eat something different.
Sometimes each area has their own/unique menu, so it was fun to talk about it with people from other regions.
I'm 60. I went to a Japanese elementary school in a small local town in Japan.
Our school Kyushoku was so tasty every day. Amazingly It was 50 years ago.
@Danah ALHusaini mans ballin uno
😳
Being a father myself I almost cried watching this. The level at which the community and government cares for the children's nutritional well being is nothing short of amazing. This should be implemented the world around! Thank you to all those involved in this production!!
In what country do you live in? I'm not intending to be rude or anything I'm simply just curious :)
Sean M, I'm right there with you.
ComputerCatGaming bv
@@Bloodyred2010 His name's in Irish so I presume he's Irish
Not every country is rich
This is a very good lunch system for the kids. It teaches them many things like teamwork, self-sufficiency, the importance of cleanliness and nutrition, agriculture, responsibility, a sense of community effort and efficiency, etc. So many skills that can be applied to real life living and survival as they go out into the world in their adult lives. I have a high respect for the Japanese culture.
日本人です。栄養士の先生って、なぜか美人が多いんですよね!😂そして優しい。自分のいた学校の給食室は、信じられないほど毎日ピカピカに掃除されていました。自分が大人になって、それがどれほど大変な作業たったのか理解でます。過去の大人に感謝ですね☺️🙏🏾
I love how the food just goes straight from local farmers to the schools, and meals are planned by an accredited nutritionist who works at the school. There's no big greedy companies trying to act as the middleman to amplify their own profits, change national laws on nutrition, and indoctrinate kids into a culture of fast food consumerism like here in the U.S.
This way, it makes the economy goes around.
you mean like in the uk where the government allows £15 per week per child for school meals, but the catering companies take £10.50 of that money and provide you with what you would not feed to your dog?
349th Like
@@psims7342 imagine that but double. Thats american school food.
@@Kiz-0 you cant just make money out of inmate, investor need to see growth every year.
from their schools, you can see a country's future.
And high suicide rates
Desert Moon *those are made up by leftist westerners
Joeislayf wish it was true, sadly not
Ours look pretty bleak, that way.
@@desertmoonlee6631 bUt wHaT aBOut SuIcIdE rATes
SEETHING
I gotta say, as a Canadian, watching your videos sure gives me an updated view of Japan. From their seemingly well organized schools and their healthy lunch plans. I can see why Japan is a successful country.
I really appreciate the way children are given responsibility of preparing and serving of school lunch. Well behaved children. 👏
In America the lunch ladies and men microwave frozen chick nuggets
i agree same in uk frozen food
Don’t forge the canned overcook string beans. 😂 I never ate it in all my years in school.
:0
At my high school they had a sub bar put in, they heated up the bread in plastic bags.
And they charge you for it. Meanwhile, it's completely free in Japan for everyone.
America: “My kids can’t breathe with a mask on!”
Japan:
Exactly. In there culture they either have to wear one when sick, cleaning, serving or even in heavy populated places. It's a priority. After living in Japan for 5 years the culture shock after (moving back to America) was too real.
@@simplymusic1163 Women also wear one when didn't put on their makeup.
@bianca Victor The fact you're insulting shows that you're a trumptard as well. A deep, biological, genetic, unavoidable trumptard.
@Charlie Chaplin ?
@Charlie Chaplin oxygen passes through the mask you know
The elementary school where my son went distributed the month’s menu in advance, along with the list of all ingredients. In this way, the parents are assured of nutritional balance and can alert the school if the child has an allergy to particular ingredients (in which case, an adjusted menu will be provided to the kid). It is also an attempt to teach the kids the joy of tasting variety of foods. When the whole class eats the same thing, the kids will try vegetables, mushrooms, mildly spicy food or whatever they would not have at home. With the menu distributed, the parents know what the kids had and bring it up in conversation at home, knowing what they can now eat that they did not before. His school also had a couple of international dish days, Korean food, Indian food, etc.
It's been 6 years since this was filmed, but I just watched it and it's a very impressive film, and the Umejima Elementary School is magnificent, from the staff, kids, principal, dietitian, food, and school itself. I would never have imagined it to be a school in a more modest area of town.
In Japan, being a teacher is one of the top paying jobs. This explains why schools are so disciplined, and teachers are passionate. Not many countries can afford this, and those who could, chose not to do so, hence, the disparity in education quality.
Yes you’d need to be a teacher who’s passionate about the job and also disciplined. Japan has great food.
India’s better.
@@good-tn9sr ok
@@good-tn9sr ok
In Turkey, teachers are well paid, too. Anyway, many are not that passionate :-/
In USA
school lunch is pizza,deep fried potatoes chocolate milk, and chips
And pizza is count as vegetable in USA
Too bad to be true.
Sad but true
We bring our own lunches 😄
Wow
Not my son's elementary school. They get fresh foods from local farms here in North East Florida. But I do remember when I went to school it was pizza, nuggets, and spaghetti. Lol. It's something the schools have been implementing for improved performance in students.
When I was a teacher in Japan, I would eat lunch with the kids everyday. The food was nutritious and very tasty...
Wow what a bath of civilization for any public school in the USA to see. Awesome, cost effective, nutritious and educational lunch program.
I’m Japanese, actually I didn’t notice our school lunch was luxurious. Because these were my daily life but now I think this school lunch and system would really helpful for covering enough nutrition, also collaboration with my peers and appreciation with food and someone who cook for us.
Now I’m living Canada and I realize difference between Japan and other countries clearly, when I was in Japan I couldn’t figure out good points of Japan but there are lots of things just I can’t see. I love my country 😍 ( Canada too!)
i feel the same way. i grew up in texas and the school lunches were made fresh in the cafeteria, and once i moved to california, and saw their school lunches were all prepackaged food sitting under heat lamps, i instantly noticed the difference and really appreciated the school food i had in texas.
It's not so much luxurious, as simple ingredients are being prepared with a lot of thought and care. No wonder the people in Japan are so healthy.
That's the cleanest school I've ever seen
Japanese toilet is cleaner than your bedroom.
@@fij01i94 true
I read somewhere that, Amazingly, Japanese schools don't have janitors. Everyone chips in to help keep everywhere clean. Mopping floors, etc...
@gynecologist That's because they shut their country off to outsiders almost completely and have a very harsh screening process for people who want to live or visit there. I know because I lived there. I was probably the only American in my INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL.
@gynecologist It's culture, not race.
I am Japanese.
This is why there is no vegan in Japan. Balance is important for meals.
It is said that vegans are healthy overseas, but from the perspective of Japanese people, they are just a biased diet.
Humans are not herbivores.
そのとおり。子供にビーガンを強いるのは虐待だよね。
ただ、日本には精進料理というビーガン料理があるw
ほとんどの坊主は肉食ってますけどねw
Just want to say, all these so called "vegans" tend to be annoying pretentious people in the Western hemisphere.
Japan is a very great country.
Their rules, manner should be followed by all countries and countrymen.
Long live Japan ❤
all your videos is very high quality. National geographic should hire you
As if Nat Geo still makes documentaries and anything else than reality TV crap.
Or the Tokyo Tourism department. Damn...
Or Netflix!
NatGeo will make the OP do a documentary how Japan is failing. Have to somehoe fit into their agenda.
In USA, students will sue you for asking them to clean the classroom.
Vexcarius that’s so true
Or start a verbal or physical fight with the teachers . Then act like victims
In America they sue everyone
Idk where you went to school but where I went we cleaned up as well, in the US
Well I’m Manila they only tell one of us to clean if they are suspended they also need to clean our library after cleaning our classroom
I grew up in Japan and I ate these lunches everyday in elementary school! The one thing I disliked about it was that the only beverage they served you was milk, and honestly milk and rice do not go well together. But the other kids in my class didn’t seem to mind, seeing that there were always quite a few people that wanted second cartons of milk (only happens when someone is absent). Kids would have heated battles of Rock Paper Scissors over second helpings, especially over dessert.
Milk anr ice go extremely well together. I am from Bengal in India and in the eastern part of the country , rice plus milk is quite the staple. Try milk plus rice plus banana. Its heavenly.
@@djokerdevil In India you mainly eat Indica rice right? In Japan we mainly eat Japonica rice which is sticky and short-grained, so it doesn’t go as well with milk compared to Indica rice. I’d love to try milk, rice and banana though!
分かります!!カルシウムを摂るために必要なのは分かってても、ご飯と牛乳って合わないですよね😂😂なのでパンの日が嬉しかったのを思い出します笑
This is a public school ( funded equally by government ) and for primary and secondary schools the tution fee is free even for foreign students, the additional cost of school dress, lunch, books etc. cost around ¥4000 per year which is is very low compared to other countries, like in India in a normal local private school, the tution fee for an 6th grader is around ¥80000 per year ( including tution fees, annual fees, books, examination fees, dress) and the other costs like stationery, notebooks, lunch ( mostly students carry lunch from home ), school trip, activities etc will cost you around ¥100000 per year in total, while government schools are nearly free + mid-day meals for students upto 8th grade ( very very average meal that's why students prefer home lunch )
Imagine kids serving lunch and cleaning the schools in the USA, all the parents will freak out.
LOL! Parents will cry out "human rights violation!" So sad.
My younger sister wants to help cooking and they let her. Other students have helped in the past, serving food and cooking food. My school was in america and I would try to help by stacking trays after they eaten off of. It felt good to do.
I feel like we could learn how to help kids by doing something like this.
In the 40’s, mothers in Galveston, Texas would go to the Catholic School and bring lunch for the students. They would get together and prepare meals. They also would have gatherings where they would exchange uniforms their children had outgrown. They had gardens, recycled amd repurposed and lived frugally. But alas their ways were mocked and people thought they knew better. Worked out so well.
because it would be a mess if american kids did it
coming from an american
Watching this made me smile. Went on vacation last year at Japan and I experienced first-hand how these kids are being raised well by their parents and their school. My train card fell on the ground while I wait at the station and a nice kid immediately went back to pick it up before I did, bowed to me and ran back to his friends. That small gesture made me happy and he's gone before I can translate thank you into japanese. And I can see that older children are taking care of the younger ones as they ride the train back home by themselves. A nice example for other cultures.
Woah 400 likes and no replies?
When I visited my family, I accidentally left my wallet there with at least 200USD in it and I got it back
Definitely 🥰😌😘 Islam also teaches us Respects for the elders etc.. and Japanese have that..
Japanese people are really respectful and have high standards
you can tell when you visit
@@nawabahmed5400 Nice Joke. You guys cannot get along with each other of Your own
They brush they teeth after lunch wow just wow on everything this video showed👏🏻
In Japan, there is a curriculum called Dotoku, 道徳 moral. Children learn values, build character, and empathy. Also, kyushoku and other daily routine helps children learn routine, responsibility, discipline, teamwork, leadership, caring, and gratitude. Healthy habits and life skills are must as they move up to preadolescent and adolescent.
I made friends with a girl from Japan in HS, it was her 1st time at an American School and was exited about lunch....boy, the level of disappoinment was colossal! She would bring her own bento to school every day after that 😅😬
Oh no, that lunch probably scarred her for life 🤣
He ACTUALLY could..IF they allowed it.
@@Kettedoll Exactly! Of course you can bring your own food.
Yeah, I am not surprised she exited after that
Oh no lol, I think America need to bring healthy food for the children. It's all junk food and the kids have obesity and other health issue due to the poor food choices.
The cost of these meals is $261 yen per kid. Thats about $2.30 in American dollars. Thats pretty amazing.
Falcon262 yet chips at my school cost $3.00..
ayyy at my school it’s $0.75
boy ron Sc
In Germany, university canteen menu cost EUR 2.00 - 4.00 : 1 main dish (usually there are 3 main dishes to choose) with 3 side dishes. And they are quite good. Cheese medallion, fish and chips, lamb, etc
@@cksrufthsu where are you from where chips are $3?
In Japan, most elementary schools and junior high schools have kyushoku, and in high school, kids bring mom's lunch box from home every day.
Each local government decides on menus and badget for evey kyushoku,they hand out the kyushoku menu at the beginning of evey month, so that moms know what their children eat for the lunch and can think about the dinner(try to cook with different ingredients) for each day.
Well I'm one of the moms who cook bento for her son every day, I usually get up 20-30min. earlier to make bento, try to avoid frozen food and cook healthy meals. Most moms do that, we even prepare the night before.
That is because we strongly believe in the concept that "what we eat makes our body and mind."
〜Further knowledge from Japanese mom in her 40's who also grew up with kyushoku
Sometimes i wonder how i would have turned out if i lived in japan(mom is japanese) instead of the netherlands(dad is dutch) i feel like i would be much more motivated and have more control and discipline
Japan: *gives its collected taxes back to the children by giving them a healthy full set lunch in school *
America: best I could do is war
@BathTubMongrel lol no we make sure the inmates are well fed.
@@russ1376 hell yeah we do
A war, and a pointless one. 20 years to achieve nothing and my school lunch was a poor excuse for a mini burger (which was burnt black), a side of soggy fries, two packets of ketchup and a carton of days old low fat milk.
WHAT a biased view. NO wonder YOU are griping.
@Flare They were referring to the last 20 years, not WWII,
Japan doesn't do it well, they do the best. The knowledge these kids are learning about food and respect for one another is beautiful!
They killed millions in ww2. Respect for others?
@@ml6216 Are we talking about the present or the past? A lot has changed in Japan since WW2, you know...
Poor logic...
@@ml6216 that was war, every nation or group of people has killed in order to conquer, defend and keep their lands. You can't judge a country on that.
@@ml6216 That was Imperial Japan, modern Japan has different values compared to it's past self.
I’m so glad that you have a good images about “kyusyoku”💓
I am a high school student in Japan. I ate “kyusyoku “ every day in junior high and elementary school. Most Japanese high schools don’t serve “kyusyoku” and we have to bring or buy lunch every day. My mom’s lunch is so good but I want to eat it again🥺🥺
Immense respect for the Japanese Culture. They have modernized but yet kept their values and traditions.
This leaves me speechless.
I used to be a head chef in a school cafetria for 7 years in Germany. We worked hard for good dishes made from fresh ingredients. We had half the money to spend and 1/4 of the staff. We cook double the amount of food per day.
How come a wealthy country like Germany won't spend money on the well being of their offspring. Here it is all about efficiency and making profit. The gouvernment kind of sets the rules, but private contractors bend these rules as far as possible.
Thank you for the inspiration!
We have become selfish. We think 🤔 if we have lots of money it'll make us happy etc No GREED NEVER MAKES US HAPPY BUT contentment with what we have GIVES us HAPPINESS. No worry no tension no rat race contentment and happiness all the way...
The government stopped caring about the German people
@@Neonagi shame 😅!
We didn’t have school lunches, and when we did it was some cereal if we were lucky.
@@deleqtronica8733 so you did have school lunches then
"What's lunch like where you're from?"
Screaming, loud talking, loud laughing, fights, and staff not caring.
Great.
So so true......total craziness
I don't really mind Lmao
Same..I wish it could be quiet and friendly
Somebody got pinned to the wall by the police at my school during lunch once
Resp0n s1bility but then, lunch would be boring.
the level of discipline Japanese kids have is admirable. I truly wish kids in other countries would follow suit but it starts with the parents. really impressive.
If the US was like this, being a teacher would be my dream job
Yadhiel Vargas sis what ar u sayin 💀
nicole dagelic your spelling😍
-reymark whats wrong with it
nicole dagelic “ar” “u” “sayin” that’s what’s wrong with it
I'd love living in the US more if it was like this.
"This lunch isn't that special."
* stares in American public school system *
lol
*sad American noises*
Still not special
*Nearly pukes at the memory of taking a bite of a public school “steak biscuit” in fourth grade*
(Actually puked back then when I ate it.)
Japan: Never cook the same meal more than once a month
America: Pizza and chicken nuggets every week, take it or leave it
I wish all school lunches were like this. It looks so good and it’s something I would happily eat. And credit to the cafeteria workers as well, they did an awesome job
I absolutely love the fact that the students help out!
I'm just curious how the Japanese who were born and raised in Japan feel when they travel outside Japan. They are so systematic and organized unlike other countries where life is rather chaotic I must say.
Exactly. I was thinking the same
I'd imagine it's a culture shock
For them it would be a nightmare to visit India. I had met a Japanese on Indian train, his simple advice was, why dont we put announcements on trains so that people can know which station has come and I was like "Huh, dont even start with what needs to be changed here"!
They drop dead as soon as they land in India.
@@osculocentric ....... you really dont put announcement in the train station?? Damn I really think that's common in the world. So how do you know which train you will get?
meanwhile in the US: *pizza is a V E G E T A B L E*
The tomato sauce is, anyway. But obviously the whole pizza is mostly starch and fat.
Don’t forget the French Friese!
Lol.. VOX tell us ..
bread cheese and tomatoes not to bad !!!
Shawn Elliott tomato is actually a fruit
Man, I’ll tell ya, Vietnam has nation-wide school lunches too! And its delicious !!!!! And plus, we also had to clean up after ourselves : Sweep the floor, put the mats down , push the desk together ( so we can take naps on the ground )
私の地元では年に一度バイキング給食があってそれがとても楽しみでした。主食、主菜、副菜、汁物、飲み物、デザート、それぞれ数種類ずつ提供されるのですが、事前にどんなメニューが出るのか、どんな食材が使われていて、どのような栄養素を摂取できるのか。好きなものばかり取らず、満遍なく色々なものを取りましょうね、という指導をされます。
今は同じ学校に子供達が通っていますが、一食当たり270円くらいだったかと思います。
子供達も毎日の給食を楽しみにしています。
給食だよりというプリントも毎月配られ、子供達がどんなものを食べているのか知ることもできるし、給食の人気メニューのレシピが載っている時もあり、参考になります。