Graduations in Japan are very formal events, with teachers wearing black suits (white tie preferred) or traditional Japanese hakama in muted colors and students in standard school uniform. There are various speeches made by the principle, the PTA president, the class president, the student representative of the second year students, as well as guest speakers. There is a ceremonial way of bowing as diplomas are collected across the stage, two students at a time, as the Principle (wearing pristine white gloves and coat tails) gives the appropriate salutations. The event ends with singing, from the whole school to just the third year students.
(Here, students are practicing for the main event)
The third year students then return to their classrooms where they spent the last year learning and receive a sendoff-address from their homeroom teacher. Parents crowd the rooms and try to take as many photographs as possible.
Afterward, they march outside and leave the school gates as the rest of the student body cheers for them.

1 comment:
awww i guess since you took the pictures that means you purchased the black suit and went along instead of standing outside the school with a big congratulations sign. :)
Post a Comment