The Week #258
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- π Leo has been asking for a basketball for weeks. He didn't have enough to buy one, but I told him I'd help him. We went to the sports shop and looked at the basketballs. At first I went straight for the basketball I had (orange Spalding), but it was Β₯3300 β just over 3x what Leo had. We were about to get it and then I saw they had some black no-name basketballs for Β₯1500. I showed them to Leo and told him this was closer to his budget and...to my surprise (as it's not orange) he agreed.Β
We went to the cash register to pay and, turns out, they take points and I had just enough points to get the price down to where he could afford it! So Leo bought his basketball by himself entirely with his own money! He's proud and telling everyone π. - π³ With basketball in hand, the next day we went to the closest basketball hoop we know of Shonandai park. It's too high for Leo to be shoot and make a basket, but we had fun anyways. In typical Japanese park fashion, the hoop doesn't have a proper court, just hard dirt, but I look forward to the day when we can play some HORSE. Leo is determined to get big and strong and tall so he can get that ball into the basket.
- π« We started exploring the possibility of sending Leo to an international school rather than local public schools. The catalyst for this is we don't feel like the system is providing the kind of education and thinking we want to encourage. There are some good parts of the system as well, school lunch, responsibility for the classroom spring to mind first.
Japanese schools are always teaching for the next test. Junior high entrance exams, high school entrance exams, college entrance exams and those exams often encourage/require kids to attend cram-schools. For international schools he'd attend the same school for all 3-levels so that entire system just doesn't apply.
However, the thing I'm most skeptical about is the commute to the school. We bought this house with the idea being he'd be a nice easy 3 minute walk away. The potential schools are all in Naka-ward in Yokohama so they'll require 30 minutes to an hour to get to. Which I think I can handle in the mornings. But how about the evening pickup? The logistics make me question the long-term viability of living where we do. Families move to be closer to schools all the time (at least in the US), but also it's not an immediate concern. We haven't even applied (and hence got a spot).