ANNUAL CALENDAR
April

Club activities

THE FACTS
One of the fun things about going to middle school is joining and participating in a club. Clubs generally revolve around a sport or cultural activity; their activities are largely organized by the students themselves.

There are clubs for such sports as baseball, basketball, soccer, swimming, tennis, table tennis, badminton, and volleyball. Clubs for cultural activities include those for the visual arts, flower arrangement, tea ceremony, brass band, and drama.

Almost all students join one club or another; clubs usually meet after school, though some sports clubs require students to gather on weekends to participate in tournaments or have games with teams from neighboring schools.

Cultural clubs hold exhibitions, performances, and concerts during the school's cultural festival, usually held in the fall.

As soon as a new school year starts, clubs begin advertising for new members. They put up posters around the school and try to persuade nonmembers to join. For students who have just entered the school, the wide range of choices can be bewildering. So a few days after the entrance ceremony, a gathering is held where the activities and aims of the various clubs are explained.

In middle school, seventh graders gather in the school gym and listen to eighth and ninth graders explain what the club does. Those in sports clubs may talk about a recent game or describe what practices are like.


THE SCENE
Clubs at the Number 4 Matsue Middle School in Edogawa-ku, Tokyo, came up with ingenious ways of getting new students to join at the gathering. The visual arts club held an exhibition of works by club members, while the brass band held a concert. Other culture-related clubs displayed the certificates they have been awarded to date.

The athletic clubs showed new students their practice sessions. The baseball club played catch, and members of the basketball club made long jumpers. An unusual presentation was made by the swimming club, which performed demonstrations on stage, jumping "into" the wooden floor, "swimming" the crawl to the end of the stage, and then making a turn at the wall. This brought bursts of laughter from seventh graders.

The eighth and ninth graders spend a great deal of time and effort every year to try to persuade new students to join.

Photos: (Top) These club members work hard on their musical skills (Tokyo Metropolitan Government); (above) choral singing is another popular activity. (Tamaki Yamamoto)



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