This is the last week of this school year in Korea. The school year begins in March. The kids come in for one week to say goodbye to friends, gather their belongings, move to their new classrooms, graduate, and have new students get used to their new school.
Most classes aren't actually taught. I was told to just let the kids do what ever they wanted, and just babysit them.
Here are some of the games the kids were playing to keep themselves occupied.
Thumb game - The students sit in a circle, and each take turns saying a number (from zero to the number of available thumbs). If the student is able to get the same number of thumbs up, as the number he said (eg, three... and three thumbs go up) then he gets to slap the other kids on the wrist.
Coin flipping game... The students put two coins on a book and slap the book. I'm not sure how to they score it, but it's something about getting the coins to turn over, without falling off the book. And naturally, they hit the loser.
Slapping game - I didn't watch long enough to figure out the rules, but the basic idea is that you smack your hands on the desk together, and if you are able to trick the other person in to moving the wrong direction, you get to slap the offending hand as hard as you can. You can't see it well in the video, but the backs of their hands are bright red.
As you can see... they're peaceful, gentle, calm children who have nothing in common with American middle-school kids.












