It’s no secret—the rest of the world looks at how peculiar American culture can be and wonders if it’s even real.
‘Cause let’s face it—even if it looks fine for us, that doesn’t mean that having police patrol your school, paying for a ride to the hospital, and calling the toilet “restroom” when we all know very well there ain't nobody going there to have a rest shouldn’t raise a brow for others.
So this time, we are looking at what American things make our fellow non-American friends scratch their heads in simple, yet very spot-on questions below. Our dear American Pandas are also welcome to help separate what’s real, what’s rumors, and what only happens in movies in the comments! And after you're done with this post, check out our previous one with things Americans do that require an explanation for non-Americans.
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But taking off shoes and socks when you come in is nearly as good as taking off your bra.
We have them. They are usually part of the cheerleader squad or dance squad. It is a sports thing. We take sports very seriously.
Even though Americans and Europeans share many things, like commitment to democratic principles, a strategic alliance, and some of the highest standards in the world, there are still some very notable differences between them.
A 2016 study done by Pew Research Center was very revealing in that respect. First of all, it showed that Americans are more likely to believe they control their own destiny.
The research showed that a staggering 57% of Americans disagreed with the statement “Success in life is pretty much determined by forces outside our control.” The percentage was higher than in any other European nations polled.
The second interesting thing the Pew poll showed is that “Americans prioritize individual liberty, while Europeans tend to value the role of the state to ensure no one in society is in need.”
When it comes to religion, it turned out that over half in the US (53%) say religion is extremely important in their life, which is nearly double the share with the same view in Poland.
In France, for example, only 14% consider religion a very important aspect of their lives.
How else would you call them? Students wouldn't use the teachers first name.
Some schools are more strict than others and require them. My schools didn't require them. We just excused ourselves and went to the restroom when needed.
In 7th grade, I had a science teacher named Mr. Butler. He was VERY strict and formal, but also a very good teacher. You couldn’t just ask for a hall pass, you had to state the reason why. Saying you had to use the restroom wasn’t good enough. You had to say why you needed to. I remember one girl stood up and said loudly to him and the class it was because she started menstruating (couldn’t say period, pee, Pooh) and didn’t want it to bleed through her clothing. LOL After she did that, students no longer had to say any more detail.
Load More Replies...You DO NOT want to see some random weird kid walking down the hallway of an American school while classes are in session.
Growing up in Europe this thought never occurred to me. America is so messed up in that regard.
Load More Replies...Yep. My middle (and high) school was ridiculous about this. There was only one bathroom open at certain times of the day, and sometimes none. You had to walk around the school looking for it, and if you didn't have your ID or a "proper" hall pass, you couldn't go. By proper I mean last year my spainish teachr signed a piece of cardboard and let everyone take it around, and even though THEY KNEW IT WAS HIS SIGNATURE, I got sent to the office.
Yes, as a kid, I found it completely absurd. Sometimes the teachers would even say "no". They also forced us to stand and say the "Pledge of Allegiance" every morning - which I refused to do because I didn't want to pledge my allegiance to anything at 8 years old. They also completely glossed over the whole genocide of the Native Americans and 300+ years of slavery - not taught in school AT ALL. School sucked.
Where I went to school and where my kids go, yes absolutely, if you were caught in the halls without one you were in trouble.
my school literally doesn't trust kids so they give us 20 hall passes for the semester and that's it. use your bathroom trips wisely
Yes most places require hall passes so kids don't hang out skipping classes
Depending on your school, but we did have them. You just need whatever paper or item the teacher gives you so when some other teacher sees you in the hall and asks wtf why aren't you in class you can show them that you're accounted for. Though to be honest while my school had them we didn't actually use them much and nobody ever really yelled at you for being in the hall. Kids have to pee sometimes, you know?
I once worked at a school where you had to put you name down in a register when you wanted to use the bathroom during class.
Sometimes its good to show some discipline. If you since early age knows how to behave will be easier to know your boundaries and the others' too. We REALLY need it in Brazil...
I don't know why, you could only be excused one at a time in all schools I went to (SP/DF), it always worked fine and if you were just going around you were caught by a "bedel" and sent back to class or to the counselor
Load More Replies...We had a hall pass in Junior high. You got to go twice per term during class or else you had to go during five minute breaks. This suck when it your “time of the month” 😕 worst three years ever.
My high school biology teacher's hall pass was a taxidermy squirrel mounted on a branch.
I noped out of a college course on the first day for many reasons. One of them was the instructor required us to ASK FOR PERMISSION to use the restroom. We also had to take a hall pass which was two keys with "women" on one and "men" on the other. He kept the bathroom doors closest to his lecture room locked at all times for some bat s**t crazy reason. I was 26 years. I worked hard to pay for college, not high school. I refused to be treated like a child.
I had this in primary and secondary school in the U.K. My son uses one too and so do my nieces and nephews at their schools.. A pass to show staff you might run into on the way that you’re really going on the toilet and not just skipping class.
Never had this in my school in the UK, or my nieces schools and one of my nieces goes to private school. Non of my friends have ever had to have it as well
Load More Replies...Ok so some schools do that, the crazy thing is some places you just ask and the teacher can refuse and make you wait, which is stupid bcs how are you gonna learn with a full bladder? Idk if that's just the US tho.
You don't necessarily need a pass , but you definitely need permission. My son peed his pants a few times waiting on the teacher to answer him. Not cool
In Colombia South America, you couldn't go unless you had a health condition. Had to wait in between classes. Discipline was huge when I was growing up.
I myself am pretty weirded out about physical hall passes, but of course we need our teacher's permission before leaving the classroom under most circumstances. Are you telling us you just get up and walk away mid-sentence of the teacher?? I mean, that's pretty disrespectful, isn't it...?
I wanna just be able to leave whenever the lesson gets boring. OuO
Load More Replies...Substitute teacher here. My understanding is that we do this in order to deter kids from skipping class because we are responsible for supervising them. That said, probably less than half of the classrooms I sub in actually use passes. Most of the time you just ask the teacher's permission before leaving. I will almost always let you go unless the teacher's notes specifically tell me not to, although if multiple students have just gone I might tell you to wait until someone gets back and then catch my attention to let me know when you're leaving. Some teachers have a sign out sheet so if there's a fire drill you know who's out of the room and where they're supposed to be.
I think my elementary schools used them in the 1960s - early 70s, but my high school didn't. In high school, smoking in the restrooms was the major forbidden activity. There was a Boys' Vice Principal and Girls' Vice Principal who prowled the hallways, making unexpected visits to restrooms to pounce on offenders.
Had a friend once that was not the greatest student. He had to go and the teacher refused to give him a pass. He went in the trash can in the corner, facing away from everyone but still. Got suspended for a week. That's America for you.
We would just ask to be excused. If you asked CAN I go to the washroom, the teacher would ignore you until you asked MAY I go to the washroom.
We're "supposed" to use hall passes, but almost none of the students or teachers care about it (except for finals).
My school had them and some teachers didn't even care. If you needed to go, just say you were leaving the room so they would have -some- idea of where you went. LOL I had one video productions teacher who was chill and would cover for kids who snuck out of school to get fast food lunch. "I sent them out to get some footage from up there." The only time I ever needed to leave was because I got a severe nosebleed. It was one of the crankier teachers and I went up with my hand over my nose and said "I need to go to the restroom." "WHY DIDN'T YOU GO BETWEEN CLASSES?!" "Well *removes hand and reveals blood everywhere* I wasn't exactly bleeding then." The teacher freaked out and was like "Do you need the nurse? OMG. Go go go..."
The best is when your teacher has a giant, embarrassing, product you have to not only ask for but then be laughed at by everyone for having to walk to and from the bathroom with.
You need to receive permission to leave class for any reason, unless you're carried out on a stretcher.
A card that says that the teacher allowed you to leave class (to go to the bathroom or elsewhere).
Load More Replies...Yeah, you have to have a pass to go to the bathroom. They have hall monitors whose job it is to detect anybody in the hallways during lesson times and report them if they don't have a pass that allows them to be there.
But what if you have an empty spot in your schecule? You have to wait for the next class outside of the school building or something?
Load More Replies...My public school required it, and you'd better have a good reason for it.
It prepares our children to be accustomed to having zero control over their own lives. The brainwashing begins very early here.
All teachers use different things. It could be a handwritten note or it could be a laminated card or other random objects.
Load More Replies...No. They don't - at least the schools that I went to and my nieces and nephews don't (they are ages 4 - 17). In the past, students were made to recite the "pledge of allegiance" each morning, but I think this is something that has fallen by the wayside.
Some schools don't allow it, but at the schools I went to we were allowed to. It was fun! You can put magnets, quotes, pictures of loved ones.
What's so unusual with this? I'm Austrian and my children's friends never used my first name.
I think children all over the world have to feel "slightly suicidal" to do this.
The term "20/20" and similar fractions (such as 20/40, 20/60, etc.) are visual acuity measurements. They also are called Snellen fractions, named after Herman Snellen, the Dutch ophthalmologist who developed this measurement system in 1862.
I went to school in other countries aswell and boy did I write lines in detention. This is definitely not just an American thing. Yes, I was an exemplary student.
The weird part is that someone would give a rat's a*s about Americans microwaving water or how they eat bacon. Apparently no one has the same questions about Russians, Chinese, or even Lithuanians. Give it a rest Panda.
I think it's becase more people around the globe see American movies or TV shows than they see movies made by Russians, Chinese, or Lithuanians.
Load More Replies...Do Americans actually have that violent bullying culture at schools, with football players and cheer leaders on the social top and geeks on the bottom? Or senior students bullying first-graders? Please, tell me it's all a movie thing!
It's not as openly expressed as in movies, but unfortunately yes. Bullying is a huge problem. Most schools "anti-bullying programs" are some posters and maybe a talk about how bullying is bad every month or so. I remember in seventh grade I was just the kid everyone hated for no reason. It got pretty bad and I was already dealing with some stuff that comes with growing up, but I know the bullying was a huge part of it. I know of lots of other kids who have had to deal with bullying too. It's really sad, but the whole social cliques and bullying thing is very real.
Load More Replies...I think some of these have to do with a word meaning different things in different countries. Jelly in Europe, for example, I'm pretty sure is what we in the US would call Jello (which is a brand name of gelatin that caught on as the general term for that item). So, yea, we don't eat peanut butter and gelatin. Our jelly is a spread closer to jam but made from fruit juice instead of the fruit.
My jam (I am American) is made with the fruit. Jelly is made without seeds. Gelatin is Jell-O, or an additive to fancy desserts... So I figure we should call it "Fruit Goop" as my sister did!
Load More Replies...Some people yeah but hopefully they just die off. Natural selection
Load More Replies...I couldn’t finish I think they chose the stupidest people they could find to ask questions about American culture. Some of these questions are flat out idiotic
Yup, we really do all of that stuff. At least some of us do all of that stuff. The mom shut up thing varies from person to person. I didn't do it but my son unfortunately did. Question: what's the problem?
They're not problems. It's just curiosity when in other places people do different things. Not worse or better, just different. Also it's interesting to learn that something you do in a way can be done diferent. For example, I also keep my medecins in the bathroom and never wondered why (Oh!). Wanting to know about another person or culture is wanting to love it. ;)
Load More Replies...I really don't get the endless fascination here with American behavior. You can play this both ways. Do Australians really call ketchup "tomato sauce?" Apparently so. Do Americans give a f**k? No. Aussies are cool and can call s**t whatever they want
I mean America deserves to be ridiculed ngl (for the record I am in fact an American)
Load More Replies...I really don't get most of these questions, they are just normal everyday things, not anything hard to imagine or out of the ordinary.
Maybe they're asked by people to whom these things are neither normal, everyday, or ordinary.
Load More Replies...My only question is why did American's vote for a bell end like Trump?
Because the other end of the bell was Hillary Clinton.
Load More Replies...I have one: do Americans really live in dilapidated or unfinished houses? In the movies or on TV you so often see them living in houses that either have the stud walls exposed, or, if they move into another house, the wallpaper will be peeling off the walls, and they just leave it like that through the entire movie or season.
As a foreign exchange student I was completely weirded out by how american high school movies were actually mostly accurate: students are openly ranked by "popularity", the sports coach doubling as history teacher, the cop car circleing the school, the hysteria around prom queen, teenagers going to jail or wearing electronic bracelets, the cafeteria seating by castes (jocks, nerds, mean girls... the lowest rung even ate on the floor, even though there were available seats 0o), sports and clubs being more important than actual classes, the motivational posters everywhere... everything was real. Only the crazy parties were not :-(
Oh I beg to differ! Lol! Not so much now but in the 90s..we rocked the house!
Load More Replies...Ok, 2 questions: 1. Is this going to be posted every week? and 2. Are any Americans answering these questions?
This is my first time seeing and yes, I am answering some
Load More Replies...One thing I've seen many non-Americans ask is if we really have 2-3 months of summer break. The answer is yes.
Well, the schoolchildren do, adults get maybe a week off.
Load More Replies...Canadian here. Most of these are true for us as well. Not all, but many.
Ok as an American: 1: Some of my friends have no-shoes houses, but generally people can wear shoes in the house. 2: Yeah some people eat peanut butter and jelly but it's not as common as it is in media (also it's not allowed in some schools because of nut allergy rules) 3: Yeah, mostly high schools and colleges but school mascots are common. 4: Yes. One time I accidentally put my retainer in the garbage disposal. 5: Yeah cereal is a good quick breakfast 6: Yep, not in all schools but it's very common 7: I don't think people do this but I'm not sure, my house has a tap that dispenses hot water so we don't need to 8: Not in my school (I go to a private school) but in lots of schools. 9: Again, not in my school but it's pretty common 10: Not at my school but yeah that happens, Girl Scouts also has the pledge of allegiance 11: Of course how else can I be ✨ fabulous ✨ 12: Yep, sometimes but not always. I'm running out of space so ill make a second comment
22: Some people dip the crust in ranch but I don't know anyone who puts ranch on pizza that would be disgusting 23: I don't think so, I sure don't but I'm not an adult yet so. 24: Only the rude ones. 25: Yes they're doctors that do doctor things with your eyes. Doctors for your eyes. Eye doctors. 26: Yes 27: A lot of American homes don't have fireplaces, and if they do, it's a fake gas one, so real fireplaces are kind of exciting. 28: Yeah some people do, it kind of sounds stupid 29: Most schools do that, I'm not sure why 30: Yes? what do you guys say?
Load More Replies...I think I’m just weird because I don’t do most of these things... or they’re just in movies- no idea mates.
Articles in the past, with the same topic, as stupid as they are, at least had interesting questions, but this is just c**p
Sorry I find most of these if not all really stupid. Yes we Americans do different things that other countries dont do, and its made to sound like what people do in England, China or any other country is not strange to us. Like eating something called spotted d**k, at least in America most of us know not to put a d**k with spots on it in our mouths. These are always just so rude
America doesn't have roll on deodorant. That spun me out when I visited...
Do american really have no pin codes or biometrics linked to their money. Like anyone can just take your card and go buy a house.
At least half of these are not even close to being typical American things, and that's my opinion as a non-American.
Well..as an american..they are all yes for the majority of us!😂
Load More Replies...Also, I know that American school year begins in mid August like the Northern European countries because of the climate and tο us in the early September
Ahhh good. Its been a few days since we made fun of Americans. I was starting to think the world started to care about other s**t. I'm so glad we have post #12,789,566 being snarky about us.
Do Americans really comment to answer year-old questions that are reposted from another website?
Truth Monster & Kat Hoth~ Thank you! Nice to see the Panda Spirit revitalized!
There are rude people everywhere -- it's not polite to talk with food in your mouth, of course, but some people do.
Load More Replies...The weird part is that someone would give a rat's a*s about Americans microwaving water or how they eat bacon. Apparently no one has the same questions about Russians, Chinese, or even Lithuanians. Give it a rest Panda.
I think it's becase more people around the globe see American movies or TV shows than they see movies made by Russians, Chinese, or Lithuanians.
Load More Replies...Do Americans actually have that violent bullying culture at schools, with football players and cheer leaders on the social top and geeks on the bottom? Or senior students bullying first-graders? Please, tell me it's all a movie thing!
It's not as openly expressed as in movies, but unfortunately yes. Bullying is a huge problem. Most schools "anti-bullying programs" are some posters and maybe a talk about how bullying is bad every month or so. I remember in seventh grade I was just the kid everyone hated for no reason. It got pretty bad and I was already dealing with some stuff that comes with growing up, but I know the bullying was a huge part of it. I know of lots of other kids who have had to deal with bullying too. It's really sad, but the whole social cliques and bullying thing is very real.
Load More Replies...I think some of these have to do with a word meaning different things in different countries. Jelly in Europe, for example, I'm pretty sure is what we in the US would call Jello (which is a brand name of gelatin that caught on as the general term for that item). So, yea, we don't eat peanut butter and gelatin. Our jelly is a spread closer to jam but made from fruit juice instead of the fruit.
My jam (I am American) is made with the fruit. Jelly is made without seeds. Gelatin is Jell-O, or an additive to fancy desserts... So I figure we should call it "Fruit Goop" as my sister did!
Load More Replies...Some people yeah but hopefully they just die off. Natural selection
Load More Replies...I couldn’t finish I think they chose the stupidest people they could find to ask questions about American culture. Some of these questions are flat out idiotic
Yup, we really do all of that stuff. At least some of us do all of that stuff. The mom shut up thing varies from person to person. I didn't do it but my son unfortunately did. Question: what's the problem?
They're not problems. It's just curiosity when in other places people do different things. Not worse or better, just different. Also it's interesting to learn that something you do in a way can be done diferent. For example, I also keep my medecins in the bathroom and never wondered why (Oh!). Wanting to know about another person or culture is wanting to love it. ;)
Load More Replies...I really don't get the endless fascination here with American behavior. You can play this both ways. Do Australians really call ketchup "tomato sauce?" Apparently so. Do Americans give a f**k? No. Aussies are cool and can call s**t whatever they want
I mean America deserves to be ridiculed ngl (for the record I am in fact an American)
Load More Replies...I really don't get most of these questions, they are just normal everyday things, not anything hard to imagine or out of the ordinary.
Maybe they're asked by people to whom these things are neither normal, everyday, or ordinary.
Load More Replies...My only question is why did American's vote for a bell end like Trump?
Because the other end of the bell was Hillary Clinton.
Load More Replies...I have one: do Americans really live in dilapidated or unfinished houses? In the movies or on TV you so often see them living in houses that either have the stud walls exposed, or, if they move into another house, the wallpaper will be peeling off the walls, and they just leave it like that through the entire movie or season.
As a foreign exchange student I was completely weirded out by how american high school movies were actually mostly accurate: students are openly ranked by "popularity", the sports coach doubling as history teacher, the cop car circleing the school, the hysteria around prom queen, teenagers going to jail or wearing electronic bracelets, the cafeteria seating by castes (jocks, nerds, mean girls... the lowest rung even ate on the floor, even though there were available seats 0o), sports and clubs being more important than actual classes, the motivational posters everywhere... everything was real. Only the crazy parties were not :-(
Oh I beg to differ! Lol! Not so much now but in the 90s..we rocked the house!
Load More Replies...Ok, 2 questions: 1. Is this going to be posted every week? and 2. Are any Americans answering these questions?
This is my first time seeing and yes, I am answering some
Load More Replies...One thing I've seen many non-Americans ask is if we really have 2-3 months of summer break. The answer is yes.
Well, the schoolchildren do, adults get maybe a week off.
Load More Replies...Canadian here. Most of these are true for us as well. Not all, but many.
Ok as an American: 1: Some of my friends have no-shoes houses, but generally people can wear shoes in the house. 2: Yeah some people eat peanut butter and jelly but it's not as common as it is in media (also it's not allowed in some schools because of nut allergy rules) 3: Yeah, mostly high schools and colleges but school mascots are common. 4: Yes. One time I accidentally put my retainer in the garbage disposal. 5: Yeah cereal is a good quick breakfast 6: Yep, not in all schools but it's very common 7: I don't think people do this but I'm not sure, my house has a tap that dispenses hot water so we don't need to 8: Not in my school (I go to a private school) but in lots of schools. 9: Again, not in my school but it's pretty common 10: Not at my school but yeah that happens, Girl Scouts also has the pledge of allegiance 11: Of course how else can I be ✨ fabulous ✨ 12: Yep, sometimes but not always. I'm running out of space so ill make a second comment
22: Some people dip the crust in ranch but I don't know anyone who puts ranch on pizza that would be disgusting 23: I don't think so, I sure don't but I'm not an adult yet so. 24: Only the rude ones. 25: Yes they're doctors that do doctor things with your eyes. Doctors for your eyes. Eye doctors. 26: Yes 27: A lot of American homes don't have fireplaces, and if they do, it's a fake gas one, so real fireplaces are kind of exciting. 28: Yeah some people do, it kind of sounds stupid 29: Most schools do that, I'm not sure why 30: Yes? what do you guys say?
Load More Replies...I think I’m just weird because I don’t do most of these things... or they’re just in movies- no idea mates.
Articles in the past, with the same topic, as stupid as they are, at least had interesting questions, but this is just c**p
Sorry I find most of these if not all really stupid. Yes we Americans do different things that other countries dont do, and its made to sound like what people do in England, China or any other country is not strange to us. Like eating something called spotted d**k, at least in America most of us know not to put a d**k with spots on it in our mouths. These are always just so rude
America doesn't have roll on deodorant. That spun me out when I visited...
Do american really have no pin codes or biometrics linked to their money. Like anyone can just take your card and go buy a house.
At least half of these are not even close to being typical American things, and that's my opinion as a non-American.
Well..as an american..they are all yes for the majority of us!😂
Load More Replies...Also, I know that American school year begins in mid August like the Northern European countries because of the climate and tο us in the early September
Ahhh good. Its been a few days since we made fun of Americans. I was starting to think the world started to care about other s**t. I'm so glad we have post #12,789,566 being snarky about us.
Do Americans really comment to answer year-old questions that are reposted from another website?
Truth Monster & Kat Hoth~ Thank you! Nice to see the Panda Spirit revitalized!
There are rude people everywhere -- it's not polite to talk with food in your mouth, of course, but some people do.
Load More Replies...