Why Are Little Kids in Japan So Independent? -- 2015 Article

bnew

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Why Little Kids in Japan Are So Independent

In Japan, small children take the subway and run errands alone, no parent in sight. The reason why has more to do with social trust than self-reliance.
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A schoolgirl walks through a Tokyo subway station.Toru Hanai / Reuters
Selena Hoy
September 28, 2015, 12:55 PM EDT

It’s a common sight on Japanese mass transit: children troop through train cars, singly or in small groups, looking for seats.

They wear knee socks, polished patent leather shoes, and plaid jumpers, with wide-brimmed hats fastened under the chin and train passes pinned to their backpacks. The kids are as young as six or seven, on their way to and from school, and there is nary a guardian in sight.

Parents in Japan regularly send their kids out into the world at a very young age. A popular television show called Hajimete no Otsukai, or My First Errand, features children as young as two or three being sent out to do a task for their family. As they tentatively make their way to the greengrocer or bakery, their progress is secretly filmed by a camera crew. The show has been running for more than 25 years.

Kaito, a 12-year-old in Tokyo, has been riding the train by himself between the homes of his parents, who share his custody, since he was nine. “At first I was a little worried,” he admits, “whether I could ride the train alone. But only a little worried.”

Now, he says, it’s easy. His parents were apprehensive at first, too, but they went ahead because they felt he was old enough, and lots of other kids were doing it safely.

“Honestly, what I remember thinking at the time is, the trains are safe and on time and easy to navigate, and he’s a smart kid,” Kaito’s stepmother says. (His parents asked not to publish his last name and their names for the sake of privacy.)

“I took the trains on my own when I was younger than him in Tokyo,” his stepmother recalls. “We didn’t have cell phones back in my day, but I still managed to go from point A to point B on the train. If he gets lost, he can call us.”

dissertation on Japanese youth. “[Japanese] kids learn early on that, ideally, any member of the community can be called on to serve or help others,” he says.


This assumption is reinforced at school, where children take turns cleaning and serving lunch instead of relying on staff to perform such duties. This “distributes labor across various shoulders and rotates expectations, while also teaching everyone what it takes to clean a toilet, for instance,” Dixon says.


Taking responsibility for shared spaces means that children have pride of ownership and understand in a concrete way the consequences of making a mess, since they’ll have to clean it up themselves. This ethic extends to public space more broadly (one reason Japanese streets are generally so clean). A child out in public knows he can rely on the group to help in an emergency.

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A young girl riding the Tokyo subway alone
tokyoform / Flickr

Japan has a very low crime rate, which is surely a key reason parents feel confident about sending their kids out alone. But small-scaled urban spaces and a culture of walking and transit use also foster safety and, perhaps just as important, the perception of safety.

“Public space is scaled so much better—old, human-sized spaces that also control flow and speed,” Dixon notes. In Japanese cities, people are accustomed to walking everywhere, and public transportation trumps car culture; in Tokyo, half of all trips are made on rail or bus, and a quarter on foot. Drivers are used to sharing the road and yielding to pedestrians and cyclists.

Kaito’s stepmother says she wouldn’t let a 9-year-old ride the subway alone in London or New York—just in Tokyo. That’s not to say the Tokyo subway is risk-free. The persistent problem of women and girls being groped, for example, led to the introduction of women-only cars on select lines starting in 2000. Still, many city children continue to take the train to school and run errands in their neighborhood without close supervision.

By giving them this freedom, parents are placing significant trust not only in their kids, but in the whole community. “Plenty of kids across the world are self-sufficient,” Dixon observes. “But the thing that I suspect Westerners are intrigued by [in Japan] is the sense of trust and cooperation that occurs, often unspoken or unsolicited.”
 

bnew

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Kids in US had a lot of freedom in the 70s and 80s. Atlanta Public Schools used to give kids tokens for Marta when I was in Middle School.

we use to have these and then student metrocards which allowed for 3 free rides & transfers. I use to go to school and after school go to different public libraries all around the city, arcades, shopping, etc and use the last fare to go home.

 

IrateMastermind

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Too many sickos in America. It’s degenerate land. Grown women can barely move around by themselves safely

i feel like it’s the same number of sickos but if a sicko did something in Boise it stayed in boise. Now it’s broadcast everywhere.

the real issue is there are too many lawyers and laws are too punitive. We legislate based on what if not what’s probably. If a kid gets kidnapped while riding the train the parents will get hammered when the probability of it is slim.
 

DaddyFresh

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i feel like it’s the same number of sickos but if a sicko did something in Boise it stayed in boise. Now it’s broadcast everywhere.

the real issue is there are too many lawyers and laws are too punitive. We legislate based on what if not what’s probably. If a kid gets kidnapped while riding the train the parents will get hammered when the probability of it is slim.
Crime is much lower in Japan. They actually care about honor, family name etc. America is full of nihilist
 

dora_da_destroyer

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My best friend growing up used to take BART alone from Oakland to SF for acting classes when she was 10/11/12…this was the 90’s…only feels like the past 20-25 years the US has tightened up on that, and in some spots, makes sense. I don’t like riding BART currently as an adult, so no way I put a kid on it alone
 

IrateMastermind

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Crime is much lower in Japan. They actually care about honor, family name etc. America is full of nihilist

i lived there for 6 years. Crime is underreported to give the appearance of safety. They don’t broadcast all the crime in the area. I think it’s a good idea tbh
 

acri1

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There's just more crime in America.

My parents didn't really want me using public transportation alone until I was in like 8th or 9th grade not because I wasn't capable, but because Detroit in the late 90s/2000s just wasn't very safe :yeshrug:
 

GrindtooFilthy

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I was flying internationally by myself at age 12, trust me this is a lot more normal than you guys realize in some other places in the world

also japan culture probably makes it way more safe to do so than america
 
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