Monday, 2 August 2021

Eat Or Release?

that was the question facing Japanese students in classes 4th to 6th,


on July 21st, Japanese TV network FNN Original Prime Time broadcast a segment on the Class of Life at a middle school in Hamamatsu City, Shizuoka, and was reported here, where students were entrusted with the care of several young flatfish. In October of 2020, the teacher told students that they needed to become “the father and mother” of the fish for the next eight months, which meant feeding and monitoring them and the water they lived in, a part of the Sea and Japan Project sponsored by Nippon Foundation, the Class of Life was introduced in a number of schools across Japan in 2019, with the goal of teaching young students about the work that goes into land-based aquaculture, the challenges the activity involves, and last but not least, the importance of life, if some or all the fish die, they are given new ones and the children have to learn from their mistakes in order to raise them to maturity. Any mistakes are considered part of the learning process. But while seeing the fish die because of their mistake can be hard to overcome by the children, it’s nothing compared to the decision they have to make at the endo of the program,

two weeks before the end of the Class of Life, the children at the Hamamatsu school featured on FNN were told by their teacher that they needed to decide whether they wanted to eat the fish or release it back into the ocean, where it risked winding up in someone else’s net or being eaten by other fish. As the deadline neared, children debated on the correct approach, when the teacher asked for a show of hands in favour of eating the fish, 11 children raised their hands. With only 6 students having opted for the fish to be released, a chef was brought in to turn Michael and the other flatfish into sashimi for the children who voted to eat them, in the end, some of the children who had opted to eat the fish couldn’t even take a bite, but such behaviour is considered normal,


while seemingly cruel, the program and the decisions young children have to make are supposed to help them grow up and understand the importance of life, if this sounds familiar it may be because we made another post about the Class Of Life back in April 2020, but then it was about eggs and chickens, somehow with the snowflakes we have in the UK I can not see the Class Of Life appearing here anytime soon!


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