No this is about Average across to the rest of the United States when you’re not in a major city is about average, it’s not above average is not below average. This is about what the average school looks like. Sorry you didn’t get to go to one of those what I mean I’m just saying.
@@timothydixon2545Maybe it’s average for larger cities but it’s definitely not average for high schools across the US dude. My high school was the largest in our county in SouthEastern Ohio. Same school Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals QB went too. And our school was no where near as large as this one.
@@timothydixon2545 definitely slightly above average, as a former military kid I feel like there's always one school like this in suburban areas that are slightly nicer and larger than the other surrounding schools with areas for extracurricular other high schools normally don't carry
@@Saturnnsaturn trust me this is more than just a little above average I’m a military brat too and I’ve been to DOD schools here in the US and overseas and civilian schools I graduated from Glenbrook south in Illinois and we had an indoor Olympic sized pool I’ve been in above average schools trust me when I say
An indoor track makes perfect sense for the area, considering the winters in the Chicago area. In other places, the track would be outside, often surrounding the football field.
There are two tracks, one indoor and one outdoor, and two separate seasons. The indoor track season in Illinois is from late January to end of March, second from April to May, with the second one the most famous. Many of the larger schools in the Chicago Area have "fieldhouses" that allow spring and fall sports to practice indoors or during inclement weather, like OPRF
@@mariahx9428 Most of the North Suburban Chicago high schools have indoor and outdoor tracks. Some of them like Oak Park-River Forest have full fieldhouses.
@@mariahx9428 yea, like it’s crazy when some of those open sports arenas playing football. This bad storm delayed a game for, I think an hour. Wonder how many folks may have missed their rides home or paid B sitters twice? I realize it’s cheaper to go without but…. If it had been a covered dome, just saying.
US towns and cities are more spread out. You need the busses for three full cycles of students, coming and going. When the UK schools are within walking distance, then they can all start at the same time.
omg yes!! My bus came at 6:30 am we arrived at school by 6:50 am and we had to be in Advisory (our first class of the day) by 7:15😭i would've given anything to start school at 8
Hey Thurston, just to let you know.. a class with AP in front of it means Advanced Placement for example his first class AP English means he is getting university credit while he is in high school. It is an honors class for students who are what are called above average student "smart" but also self driven and independent meaning self motivated. The AP classes are more intense than regular classes.
AP is just more challenging. International Baccalaureate classes count as college credits. My nephew did those and you can't start med school early, so he had to add a second major. Already fluent, he laughed and picked Spanish. Went to college in Spain. My neice did AP, scholarship to Harvard.
Actually, you don’t get credit until you take the AP exam. In my school, we have AP, and Duel Credit classes. Duel credit classes count as 6.00 on a 4.00 scale. They are actual college classes for high school students. Duel credit classes are taught if they can get a PHd to come in and teach it. You can earn up to two years of college while still in high school through Duel Credit. AP classes are only 5.00, on a 4.00 scale, and are just advanced high school classes, where you may or may not receive college credit depending on exam results.
High school Friday night football games are so much fun! The stands they showed here were only the "home" side. There was another set of bleachers on the "away side". Most schools get a few thousand fans. Pretty much the whole school goes, it's a social event for the students. Our school had girls gym, boys gym (much larger), baseball field, soccer field, basketball courts outside, tennis courts, and an outside swimming pool. Me and my twin sister were cheerleaders and got to participate with the marching band. Best days of my life!
I remember back in the day - lol... I was the center for the high school football team. At halftime, I would swith into my band gear. I played tuba. Had a solo one time for a game, Teacups For Two? Anyway - back into the dressing room to get geared up for the game again. We were pretty good. Went to State playoffs. Fun fact, Jay Novacek was the QB. His dad was the coach. Jay went on to play for the Dallas Cowboys. You might remember him? He was in my class/grade.
My high school stadium has a capacity of 11,249 spectators. But football is extremely big in the south and we were won Sports Illustrated and ESPNs contest on the best high school sports town in the US. Our nickname was always Winnersville USA
Many schools across America are the only high school in their town so the whole town supports them and many of the towns residents will go to the games.
Yep. That’s the way it was at my high school. The whole flippin county supported them. The games were a big deal. Students loved to go to socialize with other students even the out of town visitors sometimes. And all the adult alumni of the school would show up cheering on too. It was a carnival like atmosphere around the concession stand where they would be serving hotdogs, hamburgers, popcorn and other treats. The home and visiting bands and cheerleaders would compete with each other during the game and at halftime. Just a great all around experience.
Theres like 8 highschools here with thousands of students and people still come out to the games.... they get such big crowds that they can't host at the highschools anymore and use the college stadium that's bigger! And local vendors come out and make money selling tacos and lemonades etc... so it isn't just small towns that get into it
This was my high school. Oak Park and River Forest High School. In Oak Park. It's a well off school, financially. But not all schools have the money to have the same things we did. It's not really a new school. It's about 150 years old now. But they do take pride and keep it up. OAk Park is a Suburb across the street from Chicago West side.
The current building was built in 1907. Oak Park is a wealthy town but it takes on the feel of being in the city because its laid out on the same grid as Chicago. It is bordering the west side of Chicago which is one of those very high crime rate areas of Chicago.
@@jacklewis5452 They do keep adding to the school and fixing it. When I was there I know they said it was over 100 years old. But maybe they meant the school itself, when it was still like one smaller building with the tunnel leading the the other part of it that was (I think) across the street. The tunnel is still there in the green room. But now it leads the the Main Auditorium (I believe). They used to tell us ghost stories about the tunnel when we had to go through it. Haha.
I'm from Nebraska. In the early 80's I had a couple buddies from Oak Lawn. We all went to WYO Tech in Wyoming. We roomed together, and later got hired by the same company down in Houston. I always called it Illinoisy? Drove them nuts, lol. Good times.
Oak Park and River Forest High School is in an upper class neighborhood of Chicago named Oak Park, so they have the tax base to support really nice schools. This school has a “field house” where all the sports equipment, etc contained, so indoor track, basketball courts, racquet sports, but it also has outdoor baseball, football, soccer and track. It’s quite cold and snowy during the winter in the Chicago area, so indoor sports is necessary. High school football games are usually held on Friday nights and is a big deal. There was even a television drama titled “Friday Night Lights”, a reference to the lights on the field. Since his sister is a freshman “ninth grade” she’s probably on the junior varsity team, they play before the varsity team, which is generally older students, like juniors and seniors. He’s part of the school yearbook class, the name of the yearbook is the “Tabula” and they work on it almost all year. so that’s why he was watching and photographing the football coach speaking to the team.
We had a german foreign exchange student stay with us for a year. He was pretty well shocked with high school here. Even the cafeteria was mind-blowing. He was pretty athletic and joined several sports teams. I thought he was going to cry his last day of school here
There’s a TV show called ‘Friday Night Lights’ about high school football inspired by a book of the same name. Friday night lights refers to the stadium lights during the games. High school and junior high football teams typically play or Fridays. Of course the TV show is set in a Texas town that takes high school football way too seriously, for most schools like this one the games are fun but fairly laidback community events. Gym can refer to PE class, and apparently he took ping pong. Or the gymnasium where indoor sports and most indoor PE classes take place, or even the whole associated area like locker rooms etc. They have an indoor track because Chicago winters are very cold and have lots of snow.
When I went to high school back in the day, we had six classes each day at 55 minutes each, 30 minute lunch, and our first class started at 7:10 am and school was over at 2:10 pm. If you had to stay after school for detention or extra help, it ended at 3:35 pm. Any sports practices would start at 3:35 pm and end around 5:30 or 6:30 pm.
It is a big school. It's located in a fairly wealthy suburb of Chicago. The school buildings and athletic fields cover 5 city blocks, and even include a multi-level parking garage. The original building in the complex was built in 1907 in "Prairie Style" architecture
Preschool is 3-4 year olds Kindergarten is 5-6 Elementary is 1st year through 5th year so 6 up to 11 years of age . Middle school are ages 11-14 High school is 14-18 ( foot ball , basket ball huge games )
High School started at 7:30 am for me and ended at 2:10 pm. We had 7 periods (classes) that we would switch through like he did throughout the day. Varsity football and basketball games typically start at 7:00 pm on Friday night and always have a good turn out of students and parents. Plus you have the cheerleaders and band playing at the games.
Sports are an important for junior high and high school. Games get lots of press and attendance. Some high school games are on a special TV station and are reported on during the local news programs.
To us Gym class is PE to Europeans and other countries. Not all schools have an indoor track, but depending on the climate, if your school is in an area where it gets cold and/or it snows, they're more likely to have an indoor track, apart from the usual outdoor track. I went to school in NYC, we had an indoor track above the basketball gym. When there were basketball games, apart from the normal bleachers, we would watch the game from up on the track, it was nice tbh. Depending on how cold it is, and if it's not raining or snowing, we could've still had PE outdoors, but if it was too cold, we would most likely stay inside. We also had an indoor pool, so a lot of swimming meets were held at my school.
Advisory is what we called Homeroom. It was where we met before First Period for roll call, announcements, and get ready for the day. As for the facilities, it depends on the school, the district, the city.
All sports are generally kept in one section of the school. The music you heard when he was going to the gym was more than likely the school band, also usually kept close to the sports area so it doesn't bother other classes. And games like this start in middle school. For elementary age children there are generally little league teams. They are not connected to schools, and yes they do still draw crowds of friends and family that show up to support the children.
I am 75y/o and my public high school was very much like this one. The school has grown over the years and it continues to thrive and ranks among the top US schools academically. The community is a middle-class suburban area of Philadelphia. The house that my parents built when I was 4 y/o still looks beautiful. It is a great area for families to grow and live.
So in Southern California you don't see that many schools with indoor halls and tracks ever and that's because it doesn't snow. In Chicago their weather is very humid and hot parts of the year and lots of snow so it makes sense. Also the football games at my kids high school were played at a college football feild. They are huge events. With the entire marching band and all of it.
Hi Thurs, Glad you enjoyed this video. This is very typical of an American High School except these days you will often see metal detectors and officers checking your bags before you get in the door. Very sad we have come to that. Loved your reaction. Great Job.
I have a grandson in highschool football, and two in baseball. I try to make all the home games. They're really a lot of fun to go to. You bring your portable seats that attach to the bleachers, sit back with a bag of popcorn, and enjoy the evening watching the game.
I grew up 30 minutes south of San Francisco California. At our high school it's much different. We had long rectangular buildings, one story with out side hallways between them. Our lockers were outside on the exterior walls of the buildings. Our track was outside going around our football field. We had an outdoor swimming pool, and lots of field hockey and soccer fields. Our cafeteria was outside. We had a stage in the middle of the school in the middle of a grass area where we all sat on the grass and picniced for lunch while listening to bands play on stage and sometimes we had a local radio dj come play while we ate. We had a normal lunch line with lunch food, but also a salad bar and different windows for Pizza hut, Burger King, Taco Bell and other fast food places along with a desert bar. We could also walk home and eat thencome back to school. School started at 7:30am and ended at 2:30. We wore whatever we wanted and the sports were always fun games and packed with people.
When I was in HS in the 70s, we had a juke box in the cafeteria. We also had a lean to made from wood, leaning against the school just outside the back door. It was for smoking weed. No teachers addressed it too.
We had one in my high school cafeteria as well. I graduated in 1991. We absolutely loved it. They used the quarters from it to fund different student activities during the year.
The football game in this video could have been shot in my high school football stadium in 1968, except we had a marching band and a hot dog stand. Very cool reaction video. Thanks for the memories. Go Team!
High School football is BIG stuff in the US. There was even a TV show about it called "Friday Night Lights". You'll have the cheerleaders and marching band out there on the field too. We have "Homecoming" games which are usually between your biggest rival school, and there will be a dance afterward and a crowning of the Homecoming Queen and King. It is a big deal. We have elementary school, usually grades Kindergarden to grade 4, middle school which is grades 5-8, and high schools which are grades 9-12. People start getting serious about sports during the upper middle years, like 7th & 8th grade.
High school football is the training ground for college football, it's huge. Even middle schools have football teams and cheerleaders. All the high schools in my area, Houston suburbs, have pools. Swim teams are popular around here. Most neighborhoods have their own swim teams. High schools start at 7:30am
Tabula was the name of the school yearbook, Evry high school will have yearbook with all of the staff and student's photos and special class and sport photos. I it a custom to have your Friends and Teachers sign them. Most of the sports game are later in the day so parents and siblings and friends can come and watch.
There will be a number of people saying that this is a particularly rich school, but I will echo something I saw another comment say --- this one is just a bit above average. The gym facilities seem upscale, especially the indoor track+basketball court, but you have to keep in mind that the weather in that area leans towards really cold, so compensating in that way makes sense for a school in a decently-funded district. Other than the athletics aspect, I'd say the school is clean but otherwise unremarkable; the classrooms look a little small, and the meal options for lunch are typical. Their computers were nice, but 'nice' in that way of 'to standard' rather than 'sub-standard' that you would find in poorer schools. You were surprised by the photoshoot area, but I think that's just cultural difference rather than a upscale vs lowscale thing; yearbooks and yearbook club/committee seems exclusive to the US, so it makes sense our schools would have 'fancy' photography equipment and schools in the UK wouldn't. This is just the 3rd or 4th time I've seen someone react to this video, and I'm a little irked by the many people that throw shade at the original creator for saying he goes to an average American high school. It's hard to declare what is and isn't 'average' since the US school system doesn't have a national or even state-wide standard, but instead has self-managing school districts (and so a school in Illinois will be very different than a school in Texas, and a school in Dallas won't be too much like one in Houston, either). Still, the one we see here is simply well-maintained, not really lavish at all.
@@Ojisan642 meaning? Ok 52% of Americans labeled themselves as living in the suburbs on the census (not assigned by an agency) but there is no true definition of the suburbs (according to the census where you got those numbers from) but what is defined is cities Metro area where 82%of Americans live. Oak park is an affluent suburb/township not the middle , own police, mayor ; Again, the majority of American schools is not like this, read the comments of the kids that went there telling you this, not far from Ferris Beuller suburbs
They don't destroy things. Inner city schools get more money per student than wealthier areas but they destroy things and fight. Baltimore is one of the worst something like 9% of middle school kids can do grade level math. There's a lot of articles about how bad the schools are. Teachers are quitting because kids are so awful. Stop giving kids iPads, teach them to read.
We had a indoor pool. For swimming meets the pool had 2000 seating. Every student had to have 3 months of swimming each year. You always had 45 minutes of a sport each day during school. Then take a shower before your next class. We had an indoor track as well.
In my city the gym is connected to the main academic building by walkways and passage ways, but it's a separate building, close to outdoor fields and facilities.
My school was pretty well funded because of our status as a magnet high school. We had three gyms with different purposes. We had a regular gym for basketball and dodgeball, a gym that has an Olympic swimming pool we use for swim lessons but also the water polo team uses to practice. The third gym is hidden from the main school but it was very much new. It’s where the football players train and practice. We also had a football field and track. There is also a weightlifting room in the pool gym. Our science program was second to none as we were always allowed to ask questions and do experiments. We also had a world class physics lab for industrial physics and science based physics. Our business program was designed with real world applications in mind with businesspeople actually teaching us what works and what doesn’t in design. We also have a medical doctor teaching anatomy and is charge of the medical rescue team who responds to emergencies on campus with a team of student doctors in training. They are also at every game making sure players get off the field in one piece. Chicago has a medical program designed around the cook county general hospital which specializes in emergency medicine aka trauma aka A&E. They are world class doctors in the making. They also have great business education programs too.
I'm in Northern California and went to school in the 90s. This looks pretty standard for my area. When i grew up your first sports teams were through the city and you could choose baseball, soccer or football (the kid's versions). Then when you hit Jr High (11 yrs old for us) you could quit the city teams and join the school teams (same 3 sports, plus swim team and tennis). Baseball and soccer games were right after school and parents and some classmates would attend. Football games were Friday night and family, classmates and the whole town would attend. Sometimes there would be a school dance afterwards.
My high school was smaller than the others but we did have a football team and cheerleaders. The games were always done in the evening... I recall that my younger brother played in the little league baseball. That was fun to cheer for his team.
I lived urban poor but we ALWAYS had macs in our schools we had grocery stores were people saved their receipts, that would put money to whatever school they wanted, so if they spent like a $100 like maybe $10 a bit, the store would dedicate towards whatever schools district they wanted and that paid for the Mac computers. So yeah, even though I was in like a poor area, we always had very high-end computers. And even tablets that we got to take home
We had two gyms or two basketball courts. One of which was used specifically by members of the basketball teams. And of course two swimming pools. One for diving,we had diving platforms up to 10 meters. And the other for the Swim Team.
Our high schools begin at 7:05 and end at 2:35. We have uniforms in our parish. Yearbook (his last class) is a publication that covers the events of the year. Students design it, conduct interviews, take the photographs, write the copy and sell the books.
the gym at 5:30 looks very similar to the 'old' gym at my high school, where 95% of the PE classes were held. we also had a weight room, track, football, baseball, and soccer fields surrounding the school. a new theatre and gym were built shortly before my year started there, but it was rarely used for normal classes. we also had several shops, including woodworking, metalworking, automotive, Agriculture, etc. as well as a greenhouse. even so, we only had around 3-400 students across all four years that were attending.
My High School started at 7:20 am and finished at 2:02 pm. Classes were 42 minutes with a couple of minutes to travel between. Gym and P.E. are interchangeable terms here. We had Basketball courts indoors that we used for a lot of activities and Baseball, Soccer, Football fields and the Running Track outdoors. Apple donates or sells a lot of tablets and computers to schools here. Think it's actually more for marketing/getting people hooked on their products. Most organized sports start between 5 and 10 years old here and everything gets crowds in attendance.
Yes, this is what most high schools in America are like. I'm from rural Kentucky and my school is similar in many ways. His statement about American school breakfasts and lunches being unhealthy isn't true. Elementary (1-5) had a scheduled daily menu plan for the week. That is given out every Friday to parents for the next week. So, they can decide whether to pack their kids' food in case of specific dietary needs or allergies. Our middle school (grades 6-8) and high school (grades 9-12) had several different choices for breakfast & lunches with drinks and fruits. The options are listed below. Drinks: White & chocolate milk (whole, 2%, or skim), apple, orange, grape, or pineapple juice, and orange drink. Fruit: oranges, apples, bananas, and apple sauce We also had vending machines for snacks and sodas/pop available in the lunch room and break areas. BREAKFAST LINE 1) Scrambled eggs with bacon/sausage and toast/muffin. A side of grape, strawberry, or mixed jelly and choice of drink and fruit. LINE 2) Oatmeal with or without added fruit with toast/muffin or cereals that came in different brands. Choice of drink and fruit. LINE 3) Daily scheduled meal for the week. Ranged from breakfast pizza, breakfast burritos, waffles, pancakes etc. Choice of drink and fruit. LUNCH LINE 1) Hamburger/Cheeseburger or pizza with fries. drink and fruit LINE 2) Full Salad Bar. drink and fruit LINE 3) Daily scheduled meal for the week. This could range from grilled fish, chili, chicken, pot roast, burritos (beef/chicken/vegetable), tacos, etc. with drink and fruit SIDE DISHES: beans, mashed potatoes, baked potatoes, potato salad, green beans, peas, steamed carrots, steamed broccoli, macaroni & cheese, etc. 9th grade=Freshman 10th grade=Sophomore 11th grade=Junior 12th grade=Senior
Another sidenote, the USA is really big, and a while one state might have tropical weather, another might get deep snow and experience all four seasons dramatically. You will find a lot more indoor accommodations for a multiple of sports in more severe climate - impacted areas. Like in Minnesota, next to Canada, where you get the deep snow, you’re going to have an indoor pool and a lot of indoor accommodations. Track, etc. It’s just logical. In a milder climate, all track and field, etc., is based outside. Most often the pool will be outside.
Yes football is very popular. I'm in California and we don't have an indoor track, we don't get snow here like Chicago does so a lot of stuff is fine outside... the winters are around 55 F degrees during the daytime and it does not rain often. When it does rain we did an indoor gym game or activity instead. The summers are extremely hot though so I don't know how those football players aren't dying out there at the beginning of the season. It cools down at the end of October/beginning of November. I couldn't imagine having to workout and it's 105 degrees F outside! But late fall, winter and spring are awesome times of year to be outdoors. My school day was 8:30am-2pm when I was in high-school. It was nice getting out early =)
American High Schools vary in size and therefore vary in resources and funding. I went to a High School of 600 students in a town of approximately 4000 residents. We had two gymnasiums which is rare to have two but one was older and original to the school and the 2nd gym was added in the early 1960’s but they were both usable still and the second one was in great condition. We had Gym/P.E. In the gym during winter weather and we had Gym/P.E. outside during warm weather. So track, flag football, field hockey, soccer, archery, golf, tennis, etc. during Fall and Spring and then basketball, volleyball, ping pong, 4-square, gymnastics, etc. during winter and our high school also bussed us to our local bowling alley to bowl for P.E. and they also bussed us to the next town to the skating rink to skate during P.E. Here in the States pretty much every school from Grade/Primary School, Jr. High/Middle School to High School have their own gymnasium no matter how small the school or town is. Sports of all kinds are big here. Mostly big in Jr. High/Middle School through High School. Our children went to a very small High School where their graduating class was only around 70 students but yet our High School has an indoor track and an outside track, soccer field, baseball field, softball field, football field, pole vaulting, long jump, broad jump, high jump, we have a bass fishing team, wrestling team, volleyball team, golf team, soccer team, track and field teams for girls and boys, and football team. Most students who play sports, play more than one sport at their school. We also have band that competes against other bands and performs a half time show at all of our home football games and they play and get the crowd going at all our home basketball games too. We have cheerleaders at all our football and basketball games whether they are home games or away games. Our Jr. High/Middle School also has the same sports usually or at the very least they will have basketball, volleyball, football and band. Most schools start early in the morning and go til 2:30-3:30pm each day. Most sports practices are right after school til about 6-6:30pm. If we have a game that’s a home game then we have time to go home after school and come back for game time at 6-6:30pm. If it’s an away game then sometimes we have to leave school early to get to the game and the school gives us a pass from our afternoon classes and then bus us to our away games along with the cheerleaders. Sometimes our away games are an hour away so by the time we play and pack up our gear it’s midnight by the time we get back to the school and then drive home. The school you were seeing here was in Chicago so I’m sure they don’t get bussed that far living in a huge city but us rural schools have to go quite a distance to play a competing school. You work on your homework on the bus ride there and if you have any time before the game or before the bus is ready to take you back to the school then you work on homework then too. Just because you got a pass from your afternoon classes to go compete does not give you a pass on that days homework in those classes. You have to get your homework ahead of leaving for your game and it has to be turned in the next day like everyone else. Also in America you have to have at least a C average on your classes to play sports and to continue playing sports or band. If at anytime your grade in even one class drops below a C then you are ineligible to practice or play until you bring your grade up so you have to be diligent about your studies while playing sports. Also in High School we have something called 0 Hour P.E. Gym/P.E. Is a required course in school and you get a grade for it just like your other classes. Students who play sports sometimes have a hard time fitting all of their mandatory classes plus the classes they want to take into their school day so High Schools sometimes offer 0 Hour P.E. to help any student who doesn’t have enough room for all their classes during the school day and it’s also for students who work in the early mornings to go straight to school after work and then get off school an hour earlier. So our schools “0 Hour P.E. ” started an hour before school each day. We had to be dressed out in our P.E. Clothes and in our seat on the bleachers for roll call each morning at 7am. So I got up each morning at 5:30am to take a shower, put my makeup on, dry my hair and curl it, work on a little homework that I didn’t have finished from the night before or studied some more for a test, drove to the school about 6:45am and started P.E. at 7am. Did P.E. til 8am when first bell rang to let us know regular school would be starting in 20 minutes. So then went down to the locker rooms under the gym floor to freshen up then had to get to first class before bell rang at 8:20am. School went until 3:20pm and during tennis season and basketball season I went straight to practice right after school and practiced til about 6-6:30pm then went home and worked on homework til about 11pm and got up and did the same thing the next day. I had a friend who worked at a bakery and she went to work at 2:30am each morning and she had 0 Hour P.E. so she came straight from work to P.E. then school all day then basketball practice but she did have 2 study halls instead of elective classes just so she could get her homework done before practice since she had to sleep after practice so she could go to work at 2:30am We also have a thing called Co-Op at our school so if you have a job outside the school that starts before your school day ends at 3:20pm, our school would let you have all your mandatory classes in the morning and you could leave after lunch to go to your job. Mostly kids who knew they were not going to college because either they couldn’t afford it or they were interested in the trades would choose co-op as it helped them make money if they were poor and it gave them a skill or it helped those wanting to go into the trades get some on the job work experience before they graduated. We also had a class called Building Trades that boys could take that would teach them all the ins and outs of building a house from the ground up or doing a whole house remodel. So every other year the school Building Trades class would select either an empty property or a derelict abandoned house and either build a new house or remodel the derelict house and the guys would work on it every day for the last 3 hours of school and on weekends. When complete they would sell the house and recoup their money and our town would have a nice house instead of an empty vacant lot or derelict ugly house sitting there rotting. It was a great program at our school and so many guys ended up going into construction or starting their own businesses after high school. We also had shop class, homemaking, Foods, FFA, FHA, Student Council, German, French and Spanish classes, Oral Communication’s, Debate, Art, Weightlifting, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy where we dissected frogs and cats. History, Economics, Consumer Education, Calculus, Trigonometry, Algebra, Geometry, English Literature, American Literature, Mythology, Creative Writing, Composition, Advanced Composition, Accounting, Typing, Shorthand, Business, Graphics, Graphic Design, and also Entrepreneurship where we made our own merchandise designs for our school, marketed them and sold them and then other businesses outside of school would hire us to design things for them which were only things appropriate for a High School school age class. High School keeps you hopping if you are active in school activities besides your regular classes or you have a job too. Oh I forgot our local Grade School kids get to go swimming at our local pool when school first starts each year in August as part of their P.E. time each day until the pool closes for the season. Living in a rural area can have its perks school wise.
GYM is PE, many high schools in the states have their own swimming pools, tennis and racquet facilities, field sports: football pitch, baseball diamond, indoor and outdoor basketball courts, sometimes tennis etc., and some even have American football stadiums and paramilitary obstacle courses for the (DoD sponsored) military J-ROTC programs (Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps - specific to a branch of the US military, e.g: Navy JROTC, Marines JROTC, Army JROTC, etc).
my high school in eastern Pa was very similar to this one. we had 1000 kids per grade and all sporting events had a crowd. high school was definitely a fun time.
Starts at kindergarten, elementary school(primary), then middle school, high school (secondary), and onto college (university). Sports are worked into it all throughout the school levels depending on the area and resources
Schools: Pre-k (kindergarten) 3yr olds and 4 yr olds Elementary school Kindergarten - 5th grade Middle school grades 6-8th grade High school 9th grade Freshman 10th grade Sophomore 11th grade Junior 12th grade Senior Time: Seems early to you, but to save money.. same school buses to pick up high school students, wait a moment then off to pick up middle school students and then elementary students. As a rule you have to live at least a mile or 1.5 miles away from school to qualify for bus ride. Otherwise walk or juniors & seniors drive. You have to pay $$$ for a parking spot. We live in Illinois, winter or cold weather about 7months of the year. He lives in a affluent suburb of Illinois, so this dramatically nicer than other parts. My daughter’s school has 3 gyms and a swimming pool. So yes, depending where you live you will see difference in size and how well kept it is. We will have baseball (softball)fields, football field which also shares time with soccer games or lacrosse. You will have crowds at all games, but football is usually the most attended game. College Football is as popular at Pro-Football.
P.E. is gym and it's a required class. Preschool, elementary school, middle school, jr. high school and high school are the various breakdowns of school systems. My elementary school school is now a preschool. My middle school is now an elementary school. My jr. high is now a specialty school. Sports are started as early as elementary school in after school programs. I have a friend who's son is almost 8 and he plays basketball after school. His older sister who is almost 14 plays softball but also does band class. So extracurricular activities (football, basketball, baseball, tennis, soccer, marching band, etc) are just a way of life in US schools.
US schools are well kept ..they are cleaned every day, they clean during and after school, floors are cleaned daily, desks are cleaned. Floors waxed bathrooms cleaned multiple times daily. Locker rooms are cleaned daily too.
The more I see this the more I am absolutely certain this is a cold weather, snow climate area. It might even be Minnesota.! When I lived there as a teenager, they opened a brand new high school and it was so modern, it boggled the mind! It was like being at a brand new , highly polished university ! The music department, the science labs, were stellar! In Snow area’s, often they really go all- out. And the students are very polite, so that almost cinches itfor Minnesota.
My elementary school started at 8:45. My middle/high school started at 7! Needless to say, I quit eating breakfast after elementary school! When you have to be in class at 7, every school day during the winter started before the sun came up.
In one building makes sense in Chicago because of the cold. But in my high school in the deep south--land is cheap and it never really gets cold enough to snow or anything... So our gymnastics area, track, soccer field, tennis court, basketball court, and dance studio were all in one general area but not in just one giant building.
High schools are like that, but most are smaller. As for the computers, I graduated in 1975. The only computer we had was a donated mainframe which was not working. But in university, I studied computer science. I used teletypes, card punch machines. As technology progressed, we had some crt screens, and higher speed printing terminals. At the time PCs were a long way off, home kit computers were available but were very primitive. I became an IT consultant, programmer, system administrator, network manager, supervisor, manager, database analyst, and head technical consultant for the largest healthcare organization in my area. Eventually the work I performed was used in medical research, improving the healthcare of over 8,000,000 patients. One system decreased errors, reduced doctor workload, while improving the healthcare scores of our patients, saving over nine million dollars as well. So what a high school provides doesn’t always matter. What matters is curiosity.
I graduated from HS in ‘76. I think classes, for the most part were broken down to 8, and 2:30 pm was the end of the day, well, for me it was. It all depended on the classes that you opted for each year. Some may have had shorter days. Some students walked or took the bus, it depended for the most part on how far you lived from the school. On really nice days, I rode my bike. When my family lived in the city, my brother and I walked or had our Mom drop/pick us up. Depended on how she felt that day, I guess. In the warmer months, it wasn’t bad walking. We used to check to see how much money we had on the way home. If we had enough, we’d stop at Abbott’s Custard Stand. Back to our HS days , suburbia. We used to go to quite a few football games. I participated in a few clubs, Audio visual, Spanish, and the yearbook. Also intramural- high jumping or pole vaulting. I tried uneven bars, Horse, and parallel bars. I wasn’t so good with the last 3 though. Did some swimming. I was good enough to go in the deep end but not that great doing fancy dives or on high dives. Some years much later after joining military, I had thought before hand of getting into Coast Guard but there was an issue that would prevent me for going too far in the waters. Oh Pooh, ‘cuz I really wanted to save people. Oh, computers. Early 70’s, nothing like what we’re currently seeing and only certain students in the higher placed Math were able to use them.
My high school starts at 7:40. They used to start at 7:05. An indoor track is necessary if five months a year the temperatures are around 0° daily. Outdoor tracks are more usual. High school football is huge in the U.S. A yearbook is a publication basically made up of the pictures recording the school year. Football games will usually be Friday nights or Saturday during the day. They may have a freshman team, a junior varsity team, and then the varsity team. They each play weekly. Kids start playing peewee football at about age 5. Elementary school, middle school, high school and college all have their teams.
Very similar to my HS in Suburbs of Minneapolis, MN. The gym and track areas are usually in a separate building or wing usually called "activity centers". I'd be willing to bet that this school also has an indoor swimming pool, indoor ice arena, and a full gym w free weights, as well as a circuit room gym w different exercise machines. Mine did, and my grad class was only like 350 students.
In USA, there’s elementary (1-5) middle (6-8) high (9-12). There’s junior varsity team who play first then varsity play later. Football is HUGE so playing varsity game in evening allows parents to go as well as alumni. Eat dinner first then go watch the game. Scores are sent off to local news who will show all area team matchup scores & news may pick a game or two as the weeks featured game then go there to get clips of it to show on tv that evening
In Texas, Friday night are reserved for high school football, Saturday is college football and Sunday is the NFL. College scouts from small and large school are mainstays at Friday night games looking for kids who may qualify to try out collegiate teams. If the kid proves to be a superior player, he could even get s full ride scholarship.
My son started T-ball which is beginner baseball when he was 3. Both of my kids did sports from kindergarten on. During the school year it keeps parents running nonstop to practices, games, competitions, etc
I did a LDS mission in the 80’s, and guess who lived a cross the street from the mission home!? A guy named Robert Plant, yes the legendary lead singer of Led Zeppelin! He would always have us come over to talk to him and hangout. He always wanted to know about what it was like growing up in America and going to high school. All my friends had muscle cars and we raced them. My, 66 Chevelle SS with a mod rear end, (456 gears). 16 years of age and having cars like that. Most English kids may not get their license tell they’re in their 20’s. My one friend had a 68 Mach 1. We didn’t know how much these cars would be worth later. Was Plant cool? He is the definition of cool, and brilliant! Love that guy.
That is a BIG, RICH school! Most schools are NOT like that. Usual school hours are between 7:30am to 3:30pm. Most schools do have a football field with bleachers. Games are usually on Thursdays for Junior Varsity (11th grade) and Friday is for Senior Varsity (12 grade). There are usually the cheerleaders and pep squad, plus the marching band. The games start around 7pm so that working parents can attend. Usually half the games are played at their home school and half are played "away" (in a different city). Football and basketball are the big sports and usually draw the biggest crowds.
My high school in the early 90's had metal detectors, police with dogs, and everybody's bags being searched upon entry. This is some tame fancy stuff right here lol.
Elementary school, middle school or junior high, then high school. This is a nice high school. It depends on where the school is as to how much the school offers by way of curriculum and amenities. My high school wasn’t that nice, but I know of other high schools that are even better than the one in the video. I also grew up in Texas, where high school football was a MUST on a Friday night. The whole community turns out to support the school and the teams. And, yeah, school starts early. Our bell would ring at 7:50am every morning in high school. End of the day was 2:30.
In the South & especially Texas our High School Football games are broadcast on local radio & TV public system so all the family that can't go, Grandparents not mobile enough or to sick, working etc...that way everyone can watch. I like following my local schools & my Grandsons school when they start school 2years & 1week shy of 1 year old.
Not all sports are at night...typically just football and basketball...others are right after school. Those 2 sports are also typically the ones that draw a decent size crowd as well. There are exceptions of course...if a school has an exceptional wrestling or soccer team for example, they'll draw a crowd.
Oak Park is a wealthy suburb outside of Chicago. That being said, it has state of the art equipment. Most high schools don't have an indoor running track that large. Newer schools do haveit so that students can run during the winters (especially in parts of the country that get really cold and lots of snow.)
I’m from Michigan, we had indoor track that’s overlooks the basketball court. Plus we had outdoors track around the football field. Weather has a lot to do with it. My school had an indoor pool and a planetarium. We wore whatever, nothing skimpy though. We moved to southern Georgia and schools here have uniforms. Sadly. We had chocolate shake machine, cheese fries, homemade fresh giant biscuits (not cookies), salad bar too. Yum
While a lot of the things in this high school are common, Oak Park is an affluent suburb of Chicago. High schools in rural America are quite different. American schools are divided into (1) elementary school k-5 (2) middle school 6-8 (3) high school 9-12 [Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior]
1) "AP" Advanced Placement (High academic university level standards). If you take certain classes in AP, you do not need to take the course in Uni. AP students can take the Uni. final exam for courses. If they pass, it counts for Uni. 2) Oak Park is a "Posh" neighborhood. 3) If you are in AP classes, you are a really good student. You get more freedom and trust from teachers.
Friday nights during the school year are the Big sporting nights. Football during the Fall (from like early Sept to like late November. I think we played 8 or 9 game regular season games, and then like up to 3 playoff games to determine State Champions. When I was going, we had really good teams. My Freshman Team (year 10 for you guys) only had 1 loss. But then my Sophomore Team may have gone undefeated, but I can"t remember. That was 36 years ago afterall. Basketball is then played during the Winter months usually kicking off with a Holiday Tournament around Christmas. That was always fun to go to. Getting to watch all the teams around the area play each other under one roof. High School in general can be a lot of fun, but just like any school, you can run into a lot of bullying, and fights over total BS. I was subject to bullying and it sucked for me a little bit.
I live in Virginia. We have a mixture of dress codes depending on the school district. Some public schools have no dress code at all, some wear mandatory uniforms & some give students the option to wear street clothes or uniforms (but it must be the designated colors/styles etc). One of my nieces (12 y.o) is currently in 6th grade (1st year of middle school). Last year she chose to wear uniforms Mon-Thurs & street clothes on Fridays or whenever they had anything special at school (assemblies, field trips, etc.) Now she attends a military prep type middle school (not for bad behavior.) They actually have to have a certain GPA, take a test, then be accepted to attend. She’s the 3rd member of our family to go there. It instills more discipline & the classes are a lot smaller than a normal middle school because they have approximately 200 kids in the whole school (3 grade levels).
Oak Park River Forest was built in the 1870s - they just keep it up very well. Oak Park and River Forest are 2 neighboring affluent communities that share 1 high school. this is one of the best high schools (academically) in the state of Illinois
I went to the smallest of small town schools, my graduating class was 60 people. We had three basketball courts, a weight room, a pool, a soccer field with paved running track around it, a football field and a baseball field. Since I graduated they tore down the old school and built an even better one. So yeah the US kinda goes wild with their schools.
Back when I went to school in the early 2000s we only had 4 "Lessons" or 4 subjects a day. 1.5 hours each. I can't imagine bouncing class to class every 45 minutes.
I had something similar. We had "block scheduling" where we did 4 subjects one day and then the other 4 the next day so we could have meaningful engagement instead of popping in and out of 45 minute classes all day.
@@anthonyorsini Same here we had "A day" and "B day" schedules... When I saw the 45 minute thing first thing I thought of was is that cause of the short attention span? If you have 8 classes that's like 7 or 8 breaks in between. probably 10 minutes each. Well over an hour in just brakes.
@@kraven4444 probably onto something there. My middle school had the typical 45 minute periods and I really welcomed the change going to HS and having 90 minute periods. Especially as someone who generally used the last 10 minutes of a period to do my homework for the next one 😜
Friday night varsity football is the social event of the week. You are at the game whether you are into football or not. Especially a 'home' game. You're gonna hang out with your friends, and go pile into someones car after, and go for pizza or something.
There are better high schools.
There are worse high schools.
This one seems a bit above the average.
No this is about Average across to the rest of the United States when you’re not in a major city is about average, it’s not above average is not below average. This is about what the average school looks like. Sorry you didn’t get to go to one of those what I mean I’m just saying.
@@timothydixon2545Maybe it’s average for larger cities but it’s definitely not average for high schools across the US dude. My high school was the largest in our county in SouthEastern Ohio. Same school Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals QB went too. And our school was no where near as large as this one.
@@timothydixon2545 definitely slightly above average, as a former military kid I feel like there's always one school like this in suburban areas that are slightly nicer and larger than the other surrounding schools with areas for extracurricular other high schools normally don't carry
@@Saturnnsaturn trust me this is more than just a little above average I’m a military brat too and I’ve been to DOD schools here in the US and overseas and civilian schools I graduated from Glenbrook south in Illinois and we had an indoor Olympic sized pool I’ve been in above average schools trust me when I say
@@timothydixon2545 NO it isn't. You sound like a snob.
An indoor track makes perfect sense for the area, considering the winters in the Chicago area. In other places, the track would be outside, often surrounding the football field.
There are two tracks, one indoor and one outdoor, and two separate seasons. The indoor track season in Illinois is from late January to end of March, second from April to May, with the second one the most famous. Many of the larger schools in the Chicago Area have "fieldhouses" that allow spring and fall sports to practice indoors or during inclement weather, like OPRF
nah ours was outside 😂 and i also live in the midwest
@@mariahx9428 Most of the North Suburban Chicago high schools have indoor and outdoor tracks. Some of them like Oak Park-River Forest have full fieldhouses.
@@romarobbins270 For shizzle ;).
@@mariahx9428 yea, like it’s crazy when some of those open sports arenas playing football. This bad storm delayed a game for, I think an hour. Wonder how many folks may have missed their rides home or paid B sitters twice?
I realize it’s cheaper to go without but…. If it had been a covered dome, just saying.
2:35 I live in Washington, my high school started at 7 Am. Every time I hear people from the UK say 8 Am for school is early, I weep inside.
US towns and cities are more spread out. You need the busses for three full cycles of students, coming and going. When the UK schools are within walking distance, then they can all start at the same time.
omg yes!! My bus came at 6:30 am we arrived at school by 6:50 am and we had to be in Advisory (our first class of the day) by 7:15😭i would've given anything to start school at 8
If anything, more time after = more break.
Yep. Mine in both Maine and Washington state started at 7:15am.
I had band before school, had to get there at 6am 😩
Hey Thurston, just to let you know.. a class with AP in front of it means Advanced Placement for example his first class AP English means he is getting university credit while he is in high school. It is an honors class for students who are what are called above average student "smart" but also self driven and independent meaning self motivated. The AP classes are more intense than regular classes.
It is not automatic university credit. There is an AP test they must pass, but it is the top level of multi-level class offerings in the subject.
AP is just more challenging. International Baccalaureate classes count as college credits. My nephew did those and you can't start med school early, so he had to add a second major. Already fluent, he laughed and picked Spanish. Went to college in Spain. My neice did AP, scholarship to Harvard.
@@pinktastic6159 Depends on the school system. In the North Shore communities, all the AP classes are for college credits.
Actually, you don’t get credit until you take the AP exam. In my school, we have AP, and Duel Credit classes. Duel credit classes count as 6.00 on a 4.00 scale. They are actual college classes for high school students. Duel credit classes are taught if they can get a PHd to come in and teach it. You can earn up to two years of college while still in high school through Duel Credit. AP classes are only 5.00, on a 4.00 scale, and are just advanced high school classes, where you may or may not receive college credit depending on exam results.
When I went to school, classes started at 7:30am
I'm assuming the school day did start earlier, but the time stamp was just for the first class after homeroom.
Yup. We got on the bus at O-dark thirty. The milkman hadn't even got out of bed yet.
Yes, 7:15 am for me... Orlando FL.
In Iowa in the 80s, we started at 825am
Yup.
High school Friday night football games are so much fun! The stands they showed here were only the "home" side. There was another set of bleachers on the "away side". Most schools get a few thousand fans. Pretty much the whole school goes, it's a social event for the students. Our school had girls gym, boys gym (much larger), baseball field, soccer field, basketball courts outside, tennis courts, and an outside swimming pool. Me and my twin sister were cheerleaders and got to participate with the marching band. Best days of my life!
I remember back in the day - lol... I was the center for the high school football team. At halftime, I would swith into my band gear. I played tuba. Had a solo one time for
a game, Teacups For Two? Anyway - back into the dressing room to get geared up for the game again. We were pretty good. Went to State playoffs. Fun fact, Jay
Novacek was the QB. His dad was the coach. Jay went on to play for the Dallas Cowboys. You might remember him? He was in my class/grade.
My high school stadium has a capacity of 11,249 spectators. But football is extremely big in the south and we were won Sports Illustrated and ESPNs contest on the best high school sports town in the US. Our nickname was always Winnersville USA
Many schools across America are the only high school in their town so the whole town supports them and many of the towns residents will go to the games.
i love that culture so much
Yep. That’s the way it was at my high school. The whole flippin county supported them. The games were a big deal. Students loved to go to socialize with other students even the out of town visitors sometimes. And all the adult alumni of the school would show up cheering on too. It was a carnival like atmosphere around the concession stand where they would be serving hotdogs, hamburgers, popcorn and other treats. The home and visiting bands and cheerleaders would compete with each other during the game and at halftime. Just a great all around experience.
I never thought of that. I think we have 50 high schools in the city I live in. And, that's just the public high schools.
@@dianajemison105 For us, we had surrounding towns with HS, or who would we compete with? Although being on a B/B team, we did do some traveling.
Theres like 8 highschools here with thousands of students and people still come out to the games.... they get such big crowds that they can't host at the highschools anymore and use the college stadium that's bigger! And local vendors come out and make money selling tacos and lemonades etc... so it isn't just small towns that get into it
This was my high school. Oak Park and River Forest High School. In Oak Park. It's a well off school, financially. But not all schools have the money to have the same things we did. It's not really a new school. It's about 150 years old now. But they do take pride and keep it up. OAk Park is a Suburb across the street from Chicago West side.
The current building was built in 1907. Oak Park is a wealthy town but it takes on the feel of being in the city because its laid out on the same grid as Chicago. It is bordering the west side of Chicago which is one of those very high crime rate areas of Chicago.
@@jacklewis5452 They do keep adding to the school and fixing it. When I was there I know they said it was over 100 years old. But maybe they meant the school itself, when it was still like one smaller building with the tunnel leading the the other part of it that was (I think) across the street. The tunnel is still there in the green room. But now it leads the the Main Auditorium (I believe). They used to tell us ghost stories about the tunnel when we had to go through it. Haha.
I'm from Nebraska. In the early 80's I had a couple buddies from Oak Lawn. We all went to WYO Tech in Wyoming. We roomed together, and later got hired by the same
company down in Houston. I always called it Illinoisy? Drove them nuts, lol. Good times.
Oak Park and River Forest High School is in an upper class neighborhood of Chicago named Oak Park, so they have the tax base to support really nice schools. This school has a “field house” where all the sports equipment, etc contained, so indoor track, basketball courts, racquet sports, but it also has outdoor baseball, football, soccer and track. It’s quite cold and snowy during the winter in the Chicago area, so indoor sports is necessary. High school football games are usually held on Friday nights and is a big deal. There was even a television drama titled “Friday Night Lights”, a reference to the lights on the field. Since his sister is a freshman “ninth grade” she’s probably on the junior varsity team, they play before the varsity team, which is generally older students, like juniors and seniors.
He’s part of the school yearbook class, the name of the yearbook is the “Tabula” and they work on it almost all year. so that’s why he was watching and photographing the football coach speaking to the team.
And John Hughes centered many of his movies there
We had a german foreign exchange student stay with us for a year. He was pretty well shocked with high school here. Even the cafeteria was mind-blowing. He was pretty athletic and joined several sports teams. I thought he was going to cry his last day of school here
There’s a TV show called ‘Friday Night Lights’ about high school football inspired by a book of the same name. Friday night lights refers to the stadium lights during the games. High school and junior high football teams typically play or Fridays. Of course the TV show is set in a Texas town that takes high school football way too seriously, for most schools like this one the games are fun but fairly laidback community events.
Gym can refer to PE class, and apparently he took ping pong. Or the gymnasium where indoor sports and most indoor PE classes take place, or even the whole associated area like locker rooms etc. They have an indoor track because Chicago winters are very cold and have lots of snow.
When I went to high school back in the day, we had six classes each day at 55 minutes each, 30 minute lunch, and our first class started at 7:10 am and school was over at 2:10 pm. If you had to stay after school for detention or extra help, it ended at 3:35 pm. Any sports practices would start at 3:35 pm and end around 5:30 or 6:30 pm.
1st class in the morning can be marching band. Outside, on the wet(from dew), grass.
It is a big school. It's located in a fairly wealthy suburb of Chicago. The school buildings and athletic fields cover 5 city blocks, and even include a multi-level parking garage. The original building in the complex was built in 1907 in "Prairie Style" architecture
Preschool: 4-5 year olds
Kindergarten: 5 - 6
Elementary: 6 -12 years old
Middle school: 11-14
High school: 13-18 years old
I've also heard elementary school called primary school.
@@wilhelm-z4t primary = k-2
pre-k = 3 & 4
Are there even 13 year olds in a high school?
Preschool is 3-4 year olds
Kindergarten is 5-6
Elementary is 1st year through 5th year so 6 up to 11 years of age .
Middle school are ages 11-14
High school is 14-18 ( foot ball , basket ball huge games )
I'm in southeast Texas, and my kids' high school begins at 7:15am.
ArkLaTex here .. 7:45-3:50 M-T
High School started at 7:30 am for me and ended at 2:10 pm. We had 7 periods (classes) that we would switch through like he did throughout the day. Varsity football and basketball games typically start at 7:00 pm on Friday night and always have a good turn out of students and parents. Plus you have the cheerleaders and band playing at the games.
Sports are an important for junior high and high school. Games get lots of press and attendance. Some high school games are on a special TV station and are reported on during the local news programs.
2:50 most schools start around 7am- 3pm
Back in the day, my HS classes started at 8:20 Am to 3.20 PM with 8 periods of 45 minutes each. PE or Gym was mandatory 2-3 days per week.
We had to have P.E. every day in the 70's. It was boring when you can't participate because of a disability.
We had P.E. everyday, but it was only required for the first 2 years.
To us Gym class is PE to Europeans and other countries. Not all schools have an indoor track, but depending on the climate, if your school is in an area where it gets cold and/or it snows, they're more likely to have an indoor track, apart from the usual outdoor track. I went to school in NYC, we had an indoor track above the basketball gym. When there were basketball games, apart from the normal bleachers, we would watch the game from up on the track, it was nice tbh. Depending on how cold it is, and if it's not raining or snowing, we could've still had PE outdoors, but if it was too cold, we would most likely stay inside. We also had an indoor pool, so a lot of swimming meets were held at my school.
Advisory is what we called Homeroom. It was where we met before First Period for roll call, announcements, and get ready for the day. As for the facilities, it depends on the school, the district, the city.
All sports are generally kept in one section of the school. The music you heard when he was going to the gym was more than likely the school band, also usually kept close to the sports area so it doesn't bother other classes. And games like this start in middle school. For elementary age children there are generally little league teams. They are not connected to schools, and yes they do still draw crowds of friends and family that show up to support the children.
Many schools have indoor pools as well, depending on the affluence of district.
I am 75y/o and my public high school was very much like this one. The school has grown over the years and it continues to thrive and ranks among the top US schools academically. The community is a middle-class suburban area of Philadelphia. The house that my parents built when I was 4 y/o still looks beautiful. It is a great area for families to grow and live.
Oak Park is a fairly affluent community, the schools and facilities are definitely on the higher end.
So in Southern California you don't see that many schools with indoor halls and tracks ever and that's because it doesn't snow. In Chicago their weather is very humid and hot parts of the year and lots of snow so it makes sense. Also the football games at my kids high school were played at a college football feild. They are huge events. With the entire marching band and all of it.
Also many seniors have zero period so school starts at 7:00 am
Hi Thurs, Glad you enjoyed this video. This is very typical of an American High School except these days you will often see metal detectors and officers checking your bags before you get in the door. Very sad we have come to that. Loved your reaction. Great Job.
I have a grandson in highschool football, and two in baseball. I try to make all the home games. They're really a lot of fun to go to. You bring your portable seats that attach to the bleachers, sit back with a bag of popcorn, and enjoy the evening watching the game.
Yes, our school looked alot like this one!
I grew up 30 minutes south of San Francisco California. At our high school it's much different. We had long rectangular buildings, one story with out side hallways between them. Our lockers were outside on the exterior walls of the buildings. Our track was outside going around our football field. We had an outdoor swimming pool, and lots of field hockey and soccer fields. Our cafeteria was outside. We had a stage in the middle of the school in the middle of a grass area where we all sat on the grass and picniced for lunch while listening to bands play on stage and sometimes we had a local radio dj come play while we ate. We had a normal lunch line with lunch food, but also a salad bar and different windows for Pizza hut, Burger King, Taco Bell and other fast food places along with a desert bar. We could also walk home and eat thencome back to school. School started at 7:30am and ended at 2:30. We wore whatever we wanted and the sports were always fun games and packed with people.
When I was in HS in the 70s, we had a juke box in the cafeteria. We also had a lean to made from wood, leaning against the school just outside the back door. It was for smoking weed. No teachers addressed it too.
We had one in my high school cafeteria as well. I graduated in 1991. We absolutely loved it. They used the quarters from it to fund different student activities during the year.
The football game in this video could have been shot in my high school football stadium in 1968, except we had a marching band and a hot dog stand. Very cool reaction video. Thanks for the memories. Go Team!
High School football is BIG stuff in the US. There was even a TV show about it called "Friday Night Lights". You'll have the cheerleaders and marching band out there on the field too. We have "Homecoming" games which are usually between your biggest rival school, and there will be a dance afterward and a crowning of the Homecoming Queen and King. It is a big deal. We have elementary school, usually grades Kindergarden to grade 4, middle school which is grades 5-8, and high schools which are grades 9-12. People start getting serious about sports during the upper middle years, like 7th & 8th grade.
High school football is the training ground for college football, it's huge. Even middle schools have football teams and cheerleaders. All the high schools in my area, Houston suburbs, have pools. Swim teams are popular around here. Most neighborhoods have their own swim teams. High schools start at 7:30am
There's a reason US constantly wins gold metals at the Olympics when it comes to swimming (and many other sports aswell).
Tabula was the name of the school yearbook, Evry high school will have yearbook with all of the staff and student's photos and special class and sport photos. I it a custom to have your Friends and Teachers sign them. Most of the sports game are later in the day so parents and siblings and friends can come and watch.
There will be a number of people saying that this is a particularly rich school, but I will echo something I saw another comment say --- this one is just a bit above average. The gym facilities seem upscale, especially the indoor track+basketball court, but you have to keep in mind that the weather in that area leans towards really cold, so compensating in that way makes sense for a school in a decently-funded district. Other than the athletics aspect, I'd say the school is clean but otherwise unremarkable; the classrooms look a little small, and the meal options for lunch are typical. Their computers were nice, but 'nice' in that way of 'to standard' rather than 'sub-standard' that you would find in poorer schools.
You were surprised by the photoshoot area, but I think that's just cultural difference rather than a upscale vs lowscale thing; yearbooks and yearbook club/committee seems exclusive to the US, so it makes sense our schools would have 'fancy' photography equipment and schools in the UK wouldn't.
This is just the 3rd or 4th time I've seen someone react to this video, and I'm a little irked by the many people that throw shade at the original creator for saying he goes to an average American high school. It's hard to declare what is and isn't 'average' since the US school system doesn't have a national or even state-wide standard, but instead has self-managing school districts (and so a school in Illinois will be very different than a school in Texas, and a school in Dallas won't be too much like one in Houston, either). Still, the one we see here is simply well-maintained, not really lavish at all.
Oak Park is an affluent suburb of Chicago. Most inner city Chicago high schools do not look like this.
Most of America is not inner city Chicago.
@@Ojisan642most high schools are not in a affluent big city suburbs, including inner city and rural schools…let’s be real 😒
@@ThePhillyspade 55% of Americans live in suburbs. Some richer some poorer. This is in the middle.
@@Ojisan642 meaning? Ok 52% of Americans labeled themselves as living in the suburbs on the census (not assigned by an agency) but there is no true definition of the suburbs (according to the census where you got those numbers from) but what is defined is cities Metro area where 82%of Americans live. Oak park is an affluent suburb/township not the middle , own police, mayor ;
Again, the majority of American schools is not like this, read the comments of the kids that went there telling you this, not far from Ferris Beuller suburbs
They don't destroy things. Inner city schools get more money per student than wealthier areas but they destroy things and fight. Baltimore is one of the worst something like 9% of middle school kids can do grade level math. There's a lot of articles about how bad the schools are. Teachers are quitting because kids are so awful. Stop giving kids iPads, teach them to read.
We had a indoor pool. For swimming meets the pool had 2000 seating. Every student had to have 3 months of swimming each year. You always had 45 minutes of a sport each day during school. Then take a shower before your next class. We had an indoor track as well.
In my city the gym is connected to the main academic building by walkways and passage ways, but it's a separate building, close to outdoor fields and facilities.
Damn Bro I thought only the weather was depressing in England. But it sounds like Childhood is too.
funny!
sports are huge in america regardless of level. my middle school & high school had gigantic stadiums. game days and spirit weeks are serious business
My school was pretty well funded because of our status as a magnet high school. We had three gyms with different purposes. We had a regular gym for basketball and dodgeball, a gym that has an Olympic swimming pool we use for swim lessons but also the water polo team uses to practice. The third gym is hidden from the main school but it was very much new. It’s where the football players train and practice. We also had a football field and track. There is also a weightlifting room in the pool gym. Our science program was second to none as we were always allowed to ask questions and do experiments. We also had a world class physics lab for industrial physics and science based physics. Our business program was designed with real world applications in mind with businesspeople actually teaching us what works and what doesn’t in design. We also have a medical doctor teaching anatomy and is charge of the medical rescue team who responds to emergencies on campus with a team of student doctors in training. They are also at every game making sure players get off the field in one piece.
Chicago has a medical program designed around the cook county general hospital which specializes in emergency medicine aka trauma aka A&E. They are world class doctors in the making. They also have great business education programs too.
I'm in Northern California and went to school in the 90s. This looks pretty standard for my area. When i grew up your first sports teams were through the city and you could choose baseball, soccer or football (the kid's versions). Then when you hit Jr High (11 yrs old for us) you could quit the city teams and join the school teams (same 3 sports, plus swim team and tennis). Baseball and soccer games were right after school and parents and some classmates would attend. Football games were Friday night and family, classmates and the whole town would attend. Sometimes there would be a school dance afterwards.
This kind of stuff is normal for Jr High and High School.
College is bigger, far bigger Football games with thousands of people
The music in the hall is the OPRF Fight song.
My high school was smaller than the others but we did have a football team and cheerleaders. The games were always done in the evening... I recall that my younger brother played in the little league baseball. That was fun to cheer for his team.
I lived urban poor but we ALWAYS had macs in our schools we had grocery stores were people saved their receipts, that would put money to whatever school they wanted, so if they spent like a $100 like maybe $10 a bit, the store would dedicate towards whatever schools district they wanted and that paid for the Mac computers. So yeah, even though I was in like a poor area, we always had very high-end computers. And even tablets that we got to take home
We had two gyms or two basketball courts.
One of which was used specifically by members of the basketball teams.
And of course two swimming pools.
One for diving,we had diving platforms up to 10 meters.
And the other for the Swim Team.
12:04 I always facepalm when people ask what the Tabula bit is about when it says yearbook right next to it
Our high schools begin at 7:05 and end at 2:35. We have uniforms in our parish. Yearbook (his last class) is a publication that covers the events of the year. Students design it, conduct interviews, take the photographs, write the copy and sell the books.
Even our middle school basketball games were packed.
the gym at 5:30 looks very similar to the 'old' gym at my high school, where 95% of the PE classes were held. we also had a weight room, track, football, baseball, and soccer fields surrounding the school. a new theatre and gym were built shortly before my year started there, but it was rarely used for normal classes. we also had several shops, including woodworking, metalworking, automotive, Agriculture, etc. as well as a greenhouse. even so, we only had around 3-400 students across all four years that were attending.
My High School started at 7:20 am and finished at 2:02 pm. Classes were 42 minutes with a couple of minutes to travel between. Gym and P.E. are interchangeable terms here. We had Basketball courts indoors that we used for a lot of activities and Baseball, Soccer, Football fields and the Running Track outdoors. Apple donates or sells a lot of tablets and computers to schools here. Think it's actually more for marketing/getting people hooked on their products. Most organized sports start between 5 and 10 years old here and everything gets crowds in attendance.
Yes, this is what most high schools in America are like. I'm from rural Kentucky and my school is similar in many ways. His statement about American school breakfasts and lunches being unhealthy isn't true. Elementary (1-5) had a scheduled daily menu plan for the week. That is given out every Friday to parents for the next week. So, they can decide whether to pack their kids' food in case of specific dietary needs or allergies. Our middle school (grades 6-8) and high school (grades 9-12) had several different choices for breakfast & lunches with drinks and fruits. The options are listed below.
Drinks:
White & chocolate milk (whole, 2%, or skim), apple, orange, grape, or pineapple juice, and orange drink.
Fruit: oranges, apples, bananas, and apple sauce
We also had vending machines for snacks and sodas/pop available in the lunch room and break areas.
BREAKFAST
LINE 1) Scrambled eggs with bacon/sausage and toast/muffin. A side of grape, strawberry, or mixed jelly and choice of drink and fruit.
LINE 2) Oatmeal with or without added fruit with toast/muffin or cereals that came in different brands. Choice of drink and fruit.
LINE 3) Daily scheduled meal for the week. Ranged from breakfast pizza, breakfast burritos, waffles, pancakes etc. Choice of drink and fruit.
LUNCH
LINE 1) Hamburger/Cheeseburger or pizza with fries. drink and fruit
LINE 2) Full Salad Bar. drink and fruit
LINE 3) Daily scheduled meal for the week. This could range from grilled fish, chili, chicken, pot roast, burritos (beef/chicken/vegetable), tacos, etc. with drink and fruit
SIDE DISHES: beans, mashed potatoes, baked potatoes, potato salad, green beans, peas, steamed carrots, steamed broccoli, macaroni & cheese, etc.
9th grade=Freshman
10th grade=Sophomore
11th grade=Junior
12th grade=Senior
Another sidenote, the USA is really big, and a while one state might have tropical weather, another might get deep snow and experience all four seasons dramatically. You will find a lot more indoor accommodations for a multiple of sports in more severe climate - impacted areas. Like in Minnesota, next to Canada, where you get the deep snow, you’re going to have an indoor pool and a lot of indoor accommodations. Track, etc. It’s just logical. In a milder climate, all track and field, etc., is based outside. Most often the pool will be outside.
Yes football is very popular. I'm in California and we don't have an indoor track, we don't get snow here like Chicago does so a lot of stuff is fine outside... the winters are around 55 F degrees during the daytime and it does not rain often. When it does rain we did an indoor gym game or activity instead. The summers are extremely hot though so I don't know how those football players aren't dying out there at the beginning of the season. It cools down at the end of October/beginning of November. I couldn't imagine having to workout and it's 105 degrees F outside! But late fall, winter and spring are awesome times of year to be outdoors. My school day was 8:30am-2pm when I was in high-school. It was nice getting out early =)
High School football games are usually Friday nights
High school football = Friday
College/ University football = Saturday
NFL = Sunday
middle & high school usually goes from 7:50am - 2:50pm
American High Schools vary in size and therefore vary in resources and funding. I went to a High School of 600 students in a town of approximately 4000 residents. We had two gymnasiums which is rare to have two but one was older and original to the school and the 2nd gym was added in the early 1960’s but they were both usable still and the second one was in great condition. We had Gym/P.E. In the gym during winter weather and we had Gym/P.E. outside during warm weather. So track, flag football, field hockey, soccer, archery, golf, tennis, etc. during Fall and Spring and then basketball, volleyball, ping pong, 4-square, gymnastics, etc. during winter and our high school also bussed us to our local bowling alley to bowl for P.E. and they also bussed us to the next town to the skating rink to skate during P.E.
Here in the States pretty much every school from Grade/Primary School, Jr. High/Middle School to High School have their own gymnasium no matter how small the school or town is. Sports of all kinds are big here. Mostly big in Jr. High/Middle School through High School. Our children went to a very small High School where their graduating class was only around 70 students but yet our High School has an indoor track and an outside track, soccer field, baseball field, softball field, football field, pole vaulting, long jump, broad jump, high jump, we have a bass fishing team, wrestling team, volleyball team, golf team, soccer team, track and field teams for girls and boys, and football team. Most students who play sports, play more than one sport at their school. We also have band that competes against other bands and performs a half time show at all of our home football games and they play and get the crowd going at all our home basketball games too. We have cheerleaders at all our football and basketball games whether they are home games or away games.
Our Jr. High/Middle School also has the same sports usually or at the very least they will have basketball, volleyball, football and band.
Most schools start early in the morning and go til 2:30-3:30pm each day. Most sports practices are right after school til about 6-6:30pm. If we have a game that’s a home game then we have time to go home after school and come back for game time at 6-6:30pm. If it’s an away game then sometimes we have to leave school early to get to the game and the school gives us a pass from our afternoon classes and then bus us to our away games along with the cheerleaders. Sometimes our away games are an hour away so by the time we play and pack up our gear it’s midnight by the time we get back to the school and then drive home. The school you were seeing here was in Chicago so I’m sure they don’t get bussed that far living in a huge city but us rural schools have to go quite a distance to play a competing school. You work on your homework on the bus ride there and if you have any time before the game or before the bus is ready to take you back to the school then you work on homework then too. Just because you got a pass from your afternoon classes to go compete does not give you a pass on that days homework in those classes. You have to get your homework ahead of leaving for your game and it has to be turned in the next day like everyone else. Also in America you have to have at least a C average on your classes to play sports and to continue playing sports or band. If at anytime your grade in even one class drops below a C then you are ineligible to practice or play until you bring your grade up so you have to be diligent about your studies while playing sports.
Also in High School we have something called 0 Hour P.E. Gym/P.E. Is a required course in school and you get a grade for it just like your other classes. Students who play sports sometimes have a hard time fitting all of their mandatory classes plus the classes they want to take into their school day so High Schools sometimes offer 0 Hour P.E. to help any student who doesn’t have enough room for all their classes during the school day and it’s also for students who work in the early mornings to go straight to school after work and then get off school an hour earlier. So our schools “0 Hour P.E. ” started an hour before school each day. We had to be dressed out in our P.E. Clothes and in our seat on the bleachers for roll call each morning at 7am. So I got up each morning at 5:30am to take a shower, put my makeup on, dry my hair and curl it, work on a little homework that I didn’t have finished from the night before or studied some more for a test, drove to the school about 6:45am and started P.E. at 7am. Did P.E. til 8am when first bell rang to let us know regular school would be starting in 20 minutes. So then went down to the locker rooms under the gym floor to freshen up then had to get to first class before bell rang at 8:20am. School went until 3:20pm and during tennis season and basketball season I went straight to practice right after school and practiced til about 6-6:30pm then went home and worked on homework til about 11pm and got up and did the same thing the next day. I had a friend who worked at a bakery and she went to work at 2:30am each morning and she had 0 Hour P.E. so she came straight from work to P.E. then school all day then basketball practice but she did have 2 study halls instead of elective classes just so she could get her homework done before practice since she had to sleep after practice so she could go to work at 2:30am
We also have a thing called Co-Op at our school so if you have a job outside the school that starts before your school day ends at 3:20pm, our school would let you have all your mandatory classes in the morning and you could leave after lunch to go to your job. Mostly kids who knew they were not going to college because either they couldn’t afford it or they were interested in the trades would choose co-op as it helped them make money if they were poor and it gave them a skill or it helped those wanting to go into the trades get some on the job work experience before they graduated.
We also had a class called Building Trades that boys could take that would teach them all the ins and outs of building a house from the ground up or doing a whole house remodel. So every other year the school Building Trades class would select either an empty property or a derelict abandoned house and either build a new house or remodel the derelict house and the guys would work on it every day for the last 3 hours of school and on weekends. When complete they would sell the house and recoup their money and our town would have a nice house instead of an empty vacant lot or derelict ugly house sitting there rotting. It was a great program at our school and so many guys ended up going into construction or starting their own businesses after high school. We also had shop class, homemaking, Foods, FFA, FHA, Student Council, German, French and Spanish classes, Oral Communication’s, Debate, Art, Weightlifting, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy where we dissected frogs and cats. History, Economics, Consumer Education, Calculus, Trigonometry, Algebra, Geometry, English Literature, American Literature, Mythology, Creative Writing, Composition, Advanced Composition, Accounting, Typing, Shorthand, Business, Graphics, Graphic Design, and also Entrepreneurship where we made our own merchandise designs for our school, marketed them and sold them and then other businesses outside of school would hire us to design things for them which were only things appropriate for a High School school age class.
High School keeps you hopping if you are active in school activities besides your regular classes or you have a job too. Oh I forgot our local Grade School kids get to go swimming at our local pool when school first starts each year in August as part of their P.E. time each day until the pool closes for the season. Living in a rural area can have its perks school wise.
GYM is PE, many high schools in the states have their own swimming pools, tennis and racquet facilities, field sports: football pitch, baseball diamond, indoor and outdoor basketball courts, sometimes tennis etc., and some even have American football stadiums and paramilitary obstacle courses for the (DoD sponsored) military J-ROTC programs (Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps - specific to a branch of the US military, e.g: Navy JROTC, Marines JROTC, Army JROTC, etc).
my high school in eastern Pa was very similar to this one. we had 1000 kids per grade and all sporting events had a crowd. high school was definitely a fun time.
Starts at kindergarten, elementary school(primary), then middle school, high school (secondary), and onto college (university). Sports are worked into it all throughout the school levels depending on the area and resources
Schools: Pre-k (kindergarten) 3yr olds and 4 yr olds
Elementary school Kindergarten - 5th grade
Middle school grades 6-8th grade
High school
9th grade Freshman
10th grade Sophomore
11th grade Junior
12th grade Senior
Time: Seems early to you, but to save money.. same school buses to pick up high school students, wait a moment then off to pick up middle school students and then elementary students. As a rule you have to live at least a mile or 1.5 miles away from school to qualify for bus ride. Otherwise walk or juniors & seniors drive. You have to pay $$$ for a parking spot.
We live in Illinois, winter or cold weather about 7months of the year. He lives in a affluent suburb of Illinois, so this dramatically nicer than other parts. My daughter’s school has 3 gyms and a swimming pool. So yes, depending where you live you will see difference in size and how well kept it is. We will have baseball (softball)fields, football field which also shares time with soccer games or lacrosse. You will have crowds at all games, but football is usually the most attended game. College Football is as popular at Pro-Football.
P.E. is gym and it's a required class.
Preschool, elementary school, middle school, jr. high school and high school are the various breakdowns of school systems. My elementary school school is now a preschool. My middle school is now an elementary school. My jr. high is now a specialty school. Sports are started as early as elementary school in after school programs. I have a friend who's son is almost 8 and he plays basketball after school. His older sister who is almost 14 plays softball but also does band class. So extracurricular activities (football, basketball, baseball, tennis, soccer, marching band, etc) are just a way of life in US schools.
US schools are well kept ..they are cleaned every day, they clean during and after school, floors are cleaned daily, desks are cleaned. Floors waxed bathrooms cleaned multiple times daily. Locker rooms are cleaned daily too.
The more I see this the more I am absolutely certain this is a cold weather, snow climate area. It might even be Minnesota.! When I lived there as a teenager, they opened a brand new high school and it was so modern, it boggled the mind! It was like being at a brand new , highly polished university ! The music department, the science labs, were stellar! In Snow area’s, often they really go all- out. And the students are very polite, so that almost cinches itfor Minnesota.
My elementary school started at 8:45. My middle/high school started at 7! Needless to say, I quit eating breakfast after elementary school! When you have to be in class at 7, every school day during the winter started before the sun came up.
I worked for a local school district for 35 years, and the HS started at 7 30 or half seven as I believe you refer to it.
In one building makes sense in Chicago because of the cold. But in my high school in the deep south--land is cheap and it never really gets cold enough to snow or anything... So our gymnastics area, track, soccer field, tennis court, basketball court, and dance studio were all in one general area but not in just one giant building.
14:51 Elementary School brother.
it's a pretty normal American suburban high school in a middle class neighborhood.
sports are huge in the US at every level.
High schools are like that, but most are smaller. As for the computers, I graduated in 1975. The only computer we had was a donated mainframe which was not working. But in university, I studied computer science. I used teletypes, card punch machines. As technology progressed, we had some crt screens, and higher speed printing terminals. At the time PCs were a long way off, home kit computers were available but were very primitive. I became an IT consultant, programmer, system administrator, network manager, supervisor, manager, database analyst, and head technical consultant for the largest healthcare organization in my area. Eventually the work I performed was used in medical research, improving the healthcare of over 8,000,000 patients. One system decreased errors, reduced doctor workload, while improving the healthcare scores of our patients, saving over nine million dollars as well. So what a high school provides doesn’t always matter. What matters is curiosity.
I graduated from HS in ‘76. I think classes, for the most part were broken down to 8, and 2:30 pm was the end of the day, well, for me it was. It all depended on the classes that you opted for each year. Some may have had shorter days. Some students walked or took the bus, it depended for the most part on how far you lived from the school. On really nice days, I rode my bike. When my family lived in the city, my brother and I walked or had our Mom drop/pick us up. Depended on how she felt that day, I guess. In the warmer months, it wasn’t bad walking. We used to check to see how much money we had on the way home. If we had enough, we’d stop at Abbott’s Custard Stand.
Back to our HS days , suburbia. We used to go to quite a few football games. I participated in a few clubs, Audio visual, Spanish, and the yearbook. Also intramural- high jumping or pole vaulting. I tried uneven bars, Horse, and parallel bars. I wasn’t so good with the last 3 though.
Did some swimming. I was good enough to go in the deep end but not that great doing fancy dives or on high dives.
Some years much later after joining military, I had thought before hand of getting into Coast Guard but there was an issue that would prevent me for going too far in the waters. Oh Pooh, ‘cuz I really wanted to save people.
Oh, computers. Early 70’s, nothing like what we’re currently seeing and only certain students in the higher placed Math were able to use them.
@@catw6998 yeah I am at the low end of genius. Could have joined MENSA but it seems lame to be in it.
My high school starts at 7:40. They used to start at 7:05.
An indoor track is necessary if five months a year the temperatures are around 0° daily.
Outdoor tracks are more usual.
High school football is huge in the U.S.
A yearbook is a publication basically made up of the pictures recording the school year.
Football games will usually be Friday nights or Saturday during the day.
They may have a freshman team, a junior varsity team, and then the varsity team. They each play weekly.
Kids start playing peewee football at about age 5. Elementary school, middle school, high school and college all have their teams.
Very similar to my HS in Suburbs of Minneapolis, MN. The gym and track areas are usually in a separate building or wing usually called "activity centers". I'd be willing to bet that this school also has an indoor swimming pool, indoor ice arena, and a full gym w free weights, as well as a circuit room gym w different exercise machines. Mine did, and my grad class was only like 350 students.
In USA, there’s elementary (1-5) middle (6-8) high (9-12). There’s junior varsity team who play first then varsity play later. Football is HUGE so playing varsity game in evening allows parents to go as well as alumni. Eat dinner first then go watch the game. Scores are sent off to local news who will show all area team matchup scores & news may pick a game or two as the weeks featured game then go there to get clips of it to show on tv that evening
In Texas, Friday night are reserved for high school football, Saturday is college football and Sunday is the NFL. College scouts from small and large school are mainstays at Friday night games looking for kids who may qualify to try out collegiate teams. If the kid proves to be a superior player, he could even get s full ride scholarship.
My son started T-ball which is beginner baseball when he was 3. Both of my kids did sports from kindergarten on. During the school year it keeps parents running nonstop to practices, games, competitions, etc
I did a LDS mission in the 80’s, and guess who lived a cross the street from the mission home!? A guy named Robert Plant, yes the legendary lead singer of Led Zeppelin! He would always have us come over to talk to him and hangout. He always wanted to know about what it was like growing up in America and going to high school.
All my friends had muscle cars and we raced them. My, 66 Chevelle SS with a mod rear end, (456 gears).
16 years of age and having cars like that. Most English kids may not get their license tell they’re in their 20’s.
My one friend had a 68 Mach 1. We didn’t know how much these cars would be worth later.
Was Plant cool? He is the definition of cool, and brilliant! Love that guy.
Typical suburban U.S. high school
That is a BIG, RICH school! Most schools are NOT like that. Usual school hours are between 7:30am to 3:30pm. Most schools do have a football field with bleachers. Games are usually on Thursdays for Junior Varsity (11th grade) and Friday is for Senior Varsity (12 grade). There are usually the cheerleaders and pep squad, plus the marching band. The games start around 7pm so that working parents can attend. Usually half the games are played at their home school and half are played "away" (in a different city). Football and basketball are the big sports and usually draw the biggest crowds.
My high school in the early 90's had metal detectors, police with dogs, and everybody's bags being searched upon entry. This is some tame fancy stuff right here lol.
Elementary school, middle school or junior high, then high school. This is a nice high school. It depends on where the school is as to how much the school offers by way of curriculum and amenities. My high school wasn’t that nice, but I know of other high schools that are even better than the one in the video. I also grew up in Texas, where high school football was a MUST on a Friday night. The whole community turns out to support the school and the teams. And, yeah, school starts early. Our bell would ring at 7:50am every morning in high school. End of the day was 2:30.
Basketball and American football at state playoffs are wild I love the homecoming weeks for football
We reference games, probably the same as you guys. DAY games, or After School Games, NIGHT GAMES, Home Games, Away Games.
Our high school football games where I went were huge. They sell food, drinks, the whole thing.
In the South & especially Texas our High School Football games are broadcast on local radio & TV public system so all the family that can't go, Grandparents not mobile enough or to sick, working etc...that way everyone can watch. I like following my local schools & my Grandsons school when they start school 2years & 1week shy of 1 year old.
Not all sports are at night...typically just football and basketball...others are right after school. Those 2 sports are also typically the ones that draw a decent size crowd as well. There are exceptions of course...if a school has an exceptional wrestling or soccer team for example, they'll draw a crowd.
Oak Park is a wealthy suburb outside of Chicago. That being said, it has state of the art equipment. Most high schools don't have an indoor running track that large. Newer schools do haveit so that students can run during the winters (especially in parts of the country that get really cold and lots of snow.)
We had a indoor pool high diving board & a regular diving board , tennis court Shooting range etc yes we practice shooting guns 😂
I’m from Michigan, we had indoor track that’s overlooks the basketball court. Plus we had outdoors track around the football field. Weather has a lot to do with it. My school had an indoor pool and a planetarium. We wore whatever, nothing skimpy though. We moved to southern Georgia and schools here have uniforms. Sadly. We had chocolate shake machine, cheese fries, homemade fresh giant biscuits (not cookies), salad bar too. Yum
Where in michigan?
I live in a small mountain town in Colorado so even seeing schools this nice and with so much to do is cool lol.
While a lot of the things in this high school are common, Oak Park is an affluent suburb of Chicago. High schools in rural America are quite different. American schools are divided into (1) elementary school k-5 (2) middle school 6-8 (3) high school 9-12 [Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior]
1) "AP" Advanced Placement (High academic university level standards). If you take certain classes in AP, you do not need to take the course in Uni. AP students can take the Uni. final exam for courses. If they pass, it counts for Uni. 2) Oak Park is a "Posh" neighborhood. 3) If you are in AP classes, you are a really good student. You get more freedom and trust from teachers.
Friday nights during the school year are the Big sporting nights. Football during the Fall (from like early Sept to like late November. I think we played 8 or 9 game regular season games, and then like up to 3 playoff games to determine State Champions. When I was going, we had really good teams. My Freshman Team (year 10 for you guys) only had 1 loss. But then my Sophomore Team may have gone undefeated, but I can"t remember. That was 36 years ago afterall. Basketball is then played during the Winter months usually kicking off with a Holiday Tournament around Christmas. That was always fun to go to. Getting to watch all the teams around the area play each other under one roof.
High School in general can be a lot of fun, but just like any school, you can run into a lot of bullying, and fights over total BS. I was subject to bullying and it sucked for me a little bit.
I live in Virginia. We have a mixture of dress codes depending on the school district. Some public schools have no dress code at all, some wear mandatory uniforms & some give students the option to wear street clothes or uniforms (but it must be the designated colors/styles etc). One of my nieces (12 y.o) is currently in 6th grade (1st year of middle school). Last year she chose to wear uniforms Mon-Thurs & street clothes on Fridays or whenever they had anything special at school (assemblies, field trips, etc.) Now she attends a military prep type middle school (not for bad behavior.) They actually have to have a certain GPA, take a test, then be accepted to attend. She’s the 3rd member of our family to go there. It instills more discipline & the classes are a lot smaller than a normal middle school because they have approximately 200 kids in the whole school (3 grade levels).
Oak Park River Forest was built in the 1870s - they just keep it up very well. Oak Park and River Forest are 2 neighboring affluent communities that share 1 high school.
this is one of the best high schools (academically) in the state of Illinois
I went to the smallest of small town schools, my graduating class was 60 people. We had three basketball courts, a weight room, a pool, a soccer field with paved running track around it, a football field and a baseball field. Since I graduated they tore down the old school and built an even better one. So yeah the US kinda goes wild with their schools.
they even all have their own days.
high schools play on Fridays, colleges play on Saturdays, and the nfl plays on Sundays.
Back when I went to school in the early 2000s we only had 4 "Lessons" or 4 subjects a day. 1.5 hours each. I can't imagine bouncing class to class every 45 minutes.
I had something similar. We had "block scheduling" where we did 4 subjects one day and then the other 4 the next day so we could have meaningful engagement instead of popping in and out of 45 minute classes all day.
@@anthonyorsini Same here we had "A day" and "B day" schedules... When I saw the 45 minute thing first thing I thought of was is that cause of the short attention span? If you have 8 classes that's like 7 or 8 breaks in between. probably 10 minutes each. Well over an hour in just brakes.
My school had roughly 40 minute periods back in the 80's and 90's.
@@kraven4444 probably onto something there. My middle school had the typical 45 minute periods and I really welcomed the change going to HS and having 90 minute periods. Especially as someone who generally used the last 10 minutes of a period to do my homework for the next one 😜
@@anthonyorsini what’s homework? lol
Friday night varsity football is the social event of the week. You are at the game whether you are into football or not. Especially a 'home' game. You're gonna hang out with your friends, and go pile into someones car after, and go for pizza or something.