Tumgik
#japanese school
gureiti · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Fight with Shinobu Jacobs
29 notes · View notes
my-plastic-life · 8 months
Text
It's back to school time! I'm joining Monday 4 Dolls on Instagram with that theme! I had to go Japanese lol
Tumblr media
How cute is this Azone International desk? It's a perfect scale model of the desks you see in Japanese schools and in a vast majority of anime. It even has a little hook on the side for a school bag! Gluing that was super fun. It said on the box to use plastic cement, and I tried some other things first, but nothing held. So it was my first time using plastic cement, but it worked great!
Tumblr media
Why is there a chalkboard at the back of the room? Because it's common for more than one chalkboard to be used in a Japanese classroom - the one at the front is for teaching and learning while others, usually in the back, are for notes like cleaning and lunch duties, or even drawings done during downtime. Looks like this room has some talented students!
Tumblr media Tumblr media
And of course Japanese students wear uniforms, and those shoes Aika is wearing are specifically designed to only be worn indoors. Students have shoe lockers to swap between their indoor and outdoor shoes.
Aika is working, but she occasionally drifts off and stares out the window... probably ready for the school day to be over lol
Tumblr media
This ends today's lesson, also fitting for this theme!
38 notes · View notes
ciccerone · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
23 notes · View notes
cecicaps · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
15 notes · View notes
trauermarsch · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
15 notes · View notes
marumarunyan · 13 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Школа - классика японских хорроров.
Находиться здесь было одно удовольствие, местами страшно из-за возникающих (примитивных) скримеров, но очень интересно.
Особенно, когда тебя преследует манекен, которого, на минуточку, долбанули с размаху, и он вроде рассыпался на составляющие, но восстал и бегает за тобой по пятам, как гребаный 173-й. Вот это реально было крипово, хотя я человек не то, чтобы пугливый, ага.
В общем, это теперь одна из любимых локаций в Токио.
2 notes · View notes
kirnx-art · 2 years
Text
Btw I saved a lot of new pictures (for yansim references/inspiration and not only). Here are some of them
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
89 notes · View notes
diary-and-thots · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Iconic Japanese school
7 notes · View notes
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
DollZone Ray Gakuin Version
19 notes · View notes
usagi-best-boy · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Scenes from Koe no Katachi
2 notes · View notes
redheadinjapan · 1 year
Text
The End and The Beginning: Graduation Ceremony, Farewell Parties, and Entrance Ceremony
It’s about that time of year when school comes to an end, at least, it is in Japan. In America, we’re used to the September to June school schedule, but Japan’s schools run from April to March. This means the school year ended a few weeks ago and is just starting back up after a couple of weeks of spring break (for the students, not really for the teachers, at least not in my area). As such, I’ve just been through a lot of firsts: first graduation ceremony, first farewell party, and first entrance ceremony.
Depending on whether you have one school or many, you may be asked to attend the school’s graduation ceremony and entrance ceremony, which are usually held in the school gym. While I wasn’t asked specifically to attend either, if the day I was there overlapped with when they were happening, the schools made sure I knew where to go and what to do. The graduation ceremony at my middle school was short, about an hour, just long enough to watch the 3rd years (9th graders) graduate. The entrance ceremony at my elementary school, on the other hand, was a little more than an hour, maybe an hour and a half. For that one, they did ask me to stand with all the teachers when they announced our names and classes at the end. The entrance ceremony seemed mostly geared towards welcoming the students and the new teachers, which put me in a strange position because it was my first entrance ceremony, but I wasn’t exactly new. It also sounds like there was another entrance ceremony specifically for the first graders that weekend.
The other important event that comes with the end of the school year is the farewell parties. Known as sobetsukai (送別会) in Japanese, these farewell parties are for the teachers to–well–say farewell to any teachers leaving the school or retiring. They’re held after hours and are a nice, less formal environment to get to know the teachers you work with, especially non-English teachers who you don’t normally talk to. They usually hold events like these throughout the year for teachers to mingle, but because of Covid, this was the first time any of my schools has held one. Or, in my case, two, because two of my four schools invited me. Beware, though, they are hard on your budget. One of my farewell parties was 7,700 yen (about $77) and the other was 100,000 yen ($100)! But as long as you’re willing to pay that, you’re in for a fun night of fancy food and lots of drinks. At one farewell party, they even put bottles of beer on the table for people to pick up and use to refill other’s drinks. One of the English teachers told me this was a typical way to mingle at these parties, but it didn’t happen at the other one, so I can’t be too sure. 
And if you’re lucky, you might also be invited to a second party (nijikai / 二次会) or even a third (sanjikai / 三次会). After the fancy farewell party, any teachers that aren’t ready to go home will head to another bar or izakaya where things get even less formal in the more casual environment. It’s almost a little like barhopping. We went to a separate bar for nijikai at both my schools, and one school invited me to sanjikai which was basically just late-night soba. That school’s teachers said that you have to end the night with noodles, but I haven’t been able to confirm that either.
These end- and beginning-of-the-year events are a great way to become more a part of the community at your school (or schools). It can be especially hard to get involved in everyday things, like clubs and afterschool activities, if you have multiple schools, but these one-day events are a great way to get to know teachers and be there for your students. While the ceremonies might seem tedious, especially if you can’t understand any of the Japanese, and the parties are expensive, I highly recommend them if you want to make the most of your time working at a Japanese school.
2 notes · View notes
satans-left-cornea · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
12 notes · View notes
bansheehaunt · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
GeGeGe no Kitarō: Kiki Ippatsu! Yōkai Rettō (2003) - Game Boy Advance
2 notes · View notes
valiantjapanese · 2 months
Text
Japanese School in Tokyo - Valiant Japanese
We offer a complete learning experience at Valiant Language School. Furthermore, our approach facilitates students to learn Japanese in a conversational style. We have an interactive and engaging atmosphere, our knowledgeable instructors help the students understand the nuances of language and culture. In our lessons, we cover Japanese speaking, writing, and reading along with the traditional Japanese alphabet and writing systems such as Kanji.
1 note · View note
Video
youtube
Random Art AI Issue 34
Issue 34 of Random Art AI, each issue will have four randomly created pieces of AI art with a collection issue at the end of each month containing all issues for that month. These early issues probably won't be outstanding as I was still learning how to properly prompt for them. 
1. Intro 00:00 
2. The Digital Maestro A Young Netrunner, Lost in Her Tech Haven 00:10 
3. Morning Gathering Anime Japanese School Students Arriving for a New Day 00:30 
4. Gathering at Dawn Anime Japanese School Students at the Entrance 00:50 
5. Courtyard Commotion The Bustling Life of a Anime Japanese School 01:10 
6. Outro 01:30 
Twitter (Gaming & AI Art) 
https://twitter.com/zero2zedGaming 
Instagram (AI Art) 
https://www.instagram.com/random_art_ai/ 
For more issues of Random Art Ai visit this playlist for all currently published issues 
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFJOZYl1h1CFQwIos4hSlQEDNsb3gMdYd
0 notes
thechroniclegames · 8 months
Text
'Ello! I want to know if these uniforms for a fictional Japanese high school I made are accurate or not (if you were I usually make my sketches devided by colour so I won't get confused with the lines)
Tumblr media
Summer uniform
Tumblr media
Winter uniform
Tumblr media
P.E. uniform (I've heard that schools in japan changed from those ones that had something similar to bikini bottoms, but idk if it's true) (I have the word for that something in a lapsus ;-;)
1 note · View note