Gallery
, aired in 2019, won an award for best children’s program at the Danish TV Festival. will have total five episodes centering on different topics. Kids must have parental consent to appear on the program; the middle schoolers and volunteers are not shown in a single shot; producers often check in with the students to make sure they feel comfortable.
Above are Danish students wearing their graduation caps. Just across the water, in Sweden, the headgear is the same, just in a different colour, the caps seeming to replicate the colours of the relative country’s flags.
Danish Students Strip For Teachers
Before all the partying begins, a quick summary of the Danish education system. In Denmark, school children don’t begin formal instruction until age 6 (by birth year) when they enter a local school in reception (or 0. Klasse). Typically kids stay with that exact same group of students for the following 10 school years, finishing primary in Year 9 (or 9. Klasse) – compulsory here. What comes next is an impressive array of choices varying from different levels of higher education to specific trade and vocational training. From here the option is up to each student.
End-of-high-school traditions usually begin with the last day of teaching. Unlike schools in the US, students are given dedicated time off just for exam study. Usually several weeks. Imagine that. So in Denmark, letting off a little steam at the end of formal classes tends to happen. The timing of this final class varies between programs as IB exams are administered nearly a month prior to those in the Danish system. Students in international education have testing dates set by the organization – normally at the end of May each year. The Danish schools set their own exam timing, but they usually occur mid to end of June, directly before Danish graduation (or Dimission.)

















